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Key Points
  • FLA fighters claim to have shot down a Russian Africa Corps Mi-24P helicopter near Gao, Mali, on July 4 or 5, 2026.
  • No Russian or Malian government source has confirmed the loss amid renewed coordinated attacks across five Malian towns.

Russia has lost another attack helicopter in Africa, this time to Tuareg rebel fighters in Mali rather than to the war in Ukraine that has already cost Moscow dozens of similar aircraft.

The Azawad Liberation Front, a Tuareg-led rebel coalition known by its French acronym FLA, claimed its fighters shot down a Mi-24P, a Soviet-designed attack and transport helicopter NATO calls the Hind, operated by Russia’s Africa Corps during fighting around a military convoy near the northern Malian city of Gao.

The claim emerged during a renewed wave of coordinated attacks that swept across Mali on July 4 and 5, 2026, though no Russian or Malian government source has confirmed the loss, and the claim fits a pattern of unverified reports that has repeatedly muddied real-time coverage of this specific conflict. Africa Corps is the rebranded successor to the Wagner Group mercenary network, reorganized directly under Russia’s Ministry of Defense after Wagner’s founder died in a 2023 plane crash, and it has provided the backbone of Russian military support to Mali’s ruling junta since French forces withdrew from the country in 2022.

The claimed helicopter loss emerged alongside a broader FLA statement asserting that its fighters had repelled a Russian military convoy retreating from Gao, suffering what the group described as major losses before withdrawing, a claim that, if accurate, would suggest FLA and its jihadist ally JNIM intend to press their advantage against Russian and Malian forces reportedly still holed up in the nearby town of Anefis.

Whether that pressure translates into the kind of decisive confrontation some observers have speculated could follow remains entirely unclear, and readers should treat any prediction about what happens next in Anefis as speculation rather than an established outcome, since the battlefield situation across northern Mali has shifted repeatedly and unpredictably throughout 2026.

This week’s fighting represents the second major coordinated offensive FLA and JNIM have launched together this year, following an April 25, 2026 assault that captured the strategic town of Kidal, killed Mali’s defense minister, Sadio Camara, and, according to an FLA spokesperson at the time, also brought down a helicopter near Gao, a claim some other reporting from that period identified as an Mi-35, a modernized export variant of the same Hind family.

Paweł Wójcik, an open-source analyst who has closely tracked the Sahel conflict, reported that abandoned Russian equipment was again found littering the desert following this round of fighting, adding that the losses appeared sizeable based on what he had reviewed.

The claimed helicopter loss emerged alongside a broader FLA statement asserting that its fighters had repelled a Russian military convoy retreating from Gao, suffering what the group described as major losses before withdrawing, a claim that, if accurate, would suggest FLA and its jihadist ally JNIM intend to press their advantage against Russian and Malian forces reportedly still holed up in the nearby town of Anefis.

Whether that pressure translates into the kind of decisive confrontation some observers have speculated could follow remains entirely unclear, and readers should treat any prediction about what happens next in Anefis as speculation rather than an established outcome, since the battlefield situation across northern Mali has shifted repeatedly and unpredictably throughout 2026.

This week’s fighting represents the second major coordinated offensive FLA and JNIM have launched together this year, following an April 25, 2026 assault that captured the strategic town of Kidal, killed Mali’s defense minister, Sadio Camara, and, according to an FLA spokesperson at the time, also brought down a helicopter near Gao, a claim some other reporting from that period identified as an Mi-35, a modernized export variant of the same Hind family.

Paweł Wójcik, an open-source analyst who has closely tracked the Sahel conflict, reported that abandoned Russian equipment was again found littering the desert following this round of fighting, adding that the losses appeared sizeable based on what he had reviewed. Defence Blog

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