Turkiye’s drive in Africa: Where ambitions meet reality
As the US and France pull back from Africa, Turkiye is pushing forward with humanitarian projects, a growing military footprint, and arms exports. Yet Ankara’s ambitions remain constrained by political realities and contested outcomes.
10.08.2025
By Aidan J. Simardone
Source:https://thecradle.co/articles/turkiyes-
Turkiye’s modern engagement with Africa began decisively in Somalia. In 2011, as
famine ravaged the Horn of Africa and Al-
Aid was delivered remotely, often siphoned off by warlords, leaving a vacuum. The famine killed an estimated 260,000 people, half of them children under five, and cemented Somalia’s status as a failed state in western eyes.
Somalia: The gateway to the Gulf of Aden
Then-
By 2014, Somali forces had regained much of the country from Al-
Turkiye rebuilt Mogadishu’s port and airport, opened the Recep Tayyip Erdogan Hospital, restored key roads, and in 2017 established Camp TURKSOM – its first overseas military base. Nearly 5,000 Somali soldiers have since been trained there under joint Somali–Turkish command.
In early 2024, Ethiopia’s move to recognize Somaliland threatened to destabilize the Horn of Africa. Turkiye brokered the Ankara Declaration, reopening dialogue and leading to the restoration of diplomatic relations between Somalia and Ethiopia.
That same year, Turkiye and Somalia signed a 10-
Somali leaders described the agreement as part of a broader effort to protect the
country’s territorial waters and economic zone from illegal fishing and foreign encroachment.
While some portray this as giving Ankara “control” over the Gulf of Aden, a vital
maritime corridor through which roughly one-
That year, Somalia also signed an offshore exploration agreement with the Turkish Petroleum Corporation (TPAO). Contrary to some misinterpretations, the deal does not grant ownership of Somali oil. Instead, it allows TPAO to recoup up to 90 percent of annual production revenues until it recovers costs for seismic surveys, offshore drilling, and other operational expenses.
Given Somalia’s unstable security environment, these costs could take years – possibly decades – to recoup, delaying the point at which Somalia gains the majority of revenue. With estimated reserves of 30 billion barrels, comparable to some OPEC members such as Nigeria, the potential stakes remain high for both parties.
Libya: Maritime ambitions and political limits
Before NATO’s 2011 regime-
Western-
After Gaddafi’s violent fall from power, Turkiye and Qatar backed the Islamist-
Today, Turkiye still maintains roughly 3,000 troops in Libya.
In 2019, Ankara signed a maritime delimitation deal with the GNA, forming part of Turkiye’s ‘Blue Homeland’ doctrine aimed at asserting control over eastern Mediterranean waters, although this is largely rhetorical rather than operational. Enforcement has been limited by strong geopolitical pushback and unresolved legal disputes.
The agreement came as plans were drafted for Israel to create a natural gas pipeline to supply Turkiye’s foes, Southern Cyprus and Greece.
With a Libyan-
In June, Libya’s National Oil Company (NOC) signed a memorandum of understanding
with TPAO to conduct a geological and geophysical study of four offshore areas, while
the rival eastern administration has reportedly agreed to review the 2019 maritime
deal. Last month, the GNA enhanced its military ties with Turkiye, extending Ankara’s
security role and formalizing its long-
Sudan: Playing both sides, leaning to one
Sudan’s 2023 civil war pitted the UAE-
In January 2025, Somalia agreed to let SAF troops train at Camp TURKSOM, and in April,
SAF leader Abdel Fattah al-
SAF support aligns with Turkiye’s other goals in Africa and West Asia. The LNA is
one of the only actors supporting the RSF. With a SAF victory, Turkiye could use
Sudan as a proxy to fight the LNA across the Sudanese-
Turkiye is also fighting a proxy war with the UAE in Syria, with the former backing
the Al-
A SAF victory could position Turkiye along the Red Sea, but its 99-
The Sahel: Cautious partners in a bigger game
The Confederation of Sahel States (CSS) – Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger – formed
after anti-
Russia is their primary security partner. NATO-
Trade with Mali has also surged from just $5 million in 2003 to $165 million in 2022, and Mali’s Security Minister has now received an invitation from Turkiye’s Interior Minister.
Unsurprisingly, Turkiye’s assistance to the CSS has yielded limited results, as Al-
The much-
Amid these setbacks, Niger allegedly suspended intelligence cooperation with Turkiye in June, though the two resumed talks a month later and agreed to expand military cooperation. Burkina Faso withdrew exploration rights for two Turkish mines last year, only to sign new cooperation deals soon after.
For Ankara, the CSS relationship still delivers strategic value, from access to uranium
and gold to acting as a NATO member conduit for western interests now seeking indirect
entry into the bloc’s anti-
Neo-
From Mogadishu to Tripoli to Khartoum, Turkiye’s African footprint is growing, but mainly in unstable states and contested arenas. It is far from controlling Africa’s sea lanes or replacing western hegemony.
Domestic controversies, from Somali legal scandals to Libya policy criticisms, weigh
on Ankara’s credibility. In the Sahel, Moscow remains the preferred partner for anti-
Turkiye’s drive in Africa blends humanitarian outreach, military positioning, and
selective alliance-
The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of The Cradle.