Battle of Tessalit

Battle of Tessalit
Part of the 2012 Tuareg rebellion
Date18 January – 11 March 2012
(1 month, 3 weeks and 1 day)
Locationsurroundings of Tessalit, Mali
Result MNLA victory
Belligerents

 Mali

  • Malian Army

 Azawad

  • MNLA
Ansar Dine
AQIM
Commanders and leaders
Mali Didier Dakou
Mali El Haji Ag Gamou
Mali Ould Meydou
Mali Kassim Goita
Azawad Bayes Ag Dicknane
Abou Al-Tayyib
Strength
~800 regular soldiers
107 vehicles
6 BRDM
several helicopters
600 fighters
30 vehicles (?)[1]
Casualties and losses
32-49 soldiers dead
20+ wounded
62-71 captured
21 vehicles destroyed
6 vehicles captured
2 BRDM-2 captured
1 BRDM-2 destroyed
7-17 fighters dead
6-8 wounded
7 captured
1 vehicle destroyed

The Amachach military base in Tessalit was defended by roughly 800 Malian soldiers commanded by Colonel Kassim Goita, with 1,500 refugees being mostly Tuareg women and children. The International Committee of the Red Cross was sent to help evacuate civilians and military families, but despite the approval of the MNLA, Malian authorities delayed the operation and it was never executed as a humanitarian source. Other Malian military forces in the region of Tessalit were led by Colonels' Didier Dacko, Ould Meydou, and the well respected Tuareg commander El Hagi Ag Gamou.[2]

Timeline

On 18 January, Tessalit itself came under attack by both MNLA and Ansar Dine rebels. According to Malian soldiers, fighters from AQIM were present.[3]

On 22 January, the MNLA announced they had surrounded the Malian army base in Tessalit and expected all foreign military trainers to evacuate the premises. The Amachach military camp is located about fifteen kilometers from Tessalit itself. In a separate clash with the Malian army, two rebels were killed and a vehicle destroyed. By then, the number of MNLA fighters reached around 600 with reinforcements arriving from Libya and Niger.[1]

On 10 February, the Malian army launched an offensive to relieve the garrison in Tessalit, after a two-week-long siege. The army deployed 107 all-terrain vehicles, six BRDM armored vehicles, and combat helicopters piloted by foreign mercenaries. The MNLA became aware of Malian army movements in the area, launching their own offensive, eventually meeting the Army in the village of Tinsalane, 20 kilometers south of Tessalit. According to the MNLA, the planned transport convoy carrying Malian soldiers from the towns of Kidal and Anefif to strengthen the garrison of Tessalit, was ambushed by a brigade of the MNLA. After several hours of fighting, Malian forces fled, leaving 17 dead and 14 prisoners, including their commander Yusuf Ag Bougara, along with six vehicles destroyed and four captured. According to residents of In-Kahlil located along the border with Algeria, dozens of rebel vehicles filled with injured fighters were accepted in Algerian hospitals. The Malian government announced the same day, that the army defeated the rebels killing a hundred and capturing 50 which differs from the MNLA's previous claim of only losing four men. The overall outcome of the confrontation is disputed over with both sides, but it seems to have been more in favor of the rebels, as a month later Tessalit fell.[2][4]

On 29 February, the Malian defenders of Amachach military base launched several raids of their own in an attempt to break the rebel siege, with some elements of outside reinforcements. The MNLA cited that none of their fighters were killed during the clashes where the Malian army sustained losses. Clashes continued through 1 March, when the Malian army attacked MNLA positions surrounding the base, but failed in any way to diverge the rebels from the siege.[5]

On 2 March, the MNLA announced that a total of 32 Malian soldiers have been killed, 20 wounded, and three vehicles destroyed in clashes over the past two weeks, leaving only seven dead and seven taken as prisoners in their ranks.[6]

On 4 March, the Malian army launched a second attempt to break the rebel siege of Tessalit, by sending reinforcements backed by combat helicopters. The attack was eventually repulsed after twelve hours of fighting, but a helicopter was able to reach the Amachach military base to help collect the dead and wounded soldiers, with some bodies already in a state of decomposing.[7] On 8 March, according to local sources in the town of In-Khalil, eight MNLA combatants died of the wounds they received in clashes with the army, with a ninth being taken to an Algerian hospital in Bordj Badji Mokhtar.

On 10 March, in the early evening, the MNLA launched their final assault on camp Amachach. Fighting continued until 11 March, when the Malian army fled their military base, leaving behind hundreds of weapons, mortars, rocket launchers, machine guns, and even tanks. Around 57 Malian soldiers, five officers (two commanders, two lieutenants, and one captain) were captured, with 10 vehicles and two BRDM's recovered. An important military arsenal along with a BRDM were both destroyed. The Malian army talked that their forces made a strategic withdrawal and evacuation of the Amachach military camp to shelter to civilians who had sought refuge and to prevent a massacre.[8]

Aftermath

After the rebel victory, the Malian army retreated to Gao taking with them close to 800 people, mostly Black Africans with only 30 being Tuareg. The MNLA released a statement promising that they will treat their prisoners according to the Geneva Conventions of 1949, with a sick Malian soldier being handed over to Algerian authorities for care and 20 military families were handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross. The Malian government responded to their defeat by calling on the International Community, saying that the humanitarian situation is deteriorating with crimes being committed by the rebels against civilians. In the statement it also indicated, that the army fled Tessalit in part that it was unnecessary casualties to continue the prolonged battle.[7][8]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Mali Tuaregs say they control major military base
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Heavy fighting in north Mali, casualties reported". Reuters. 7 February 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  3. "Malian forces battle Tuareg rebels". News24. South African Press Association. 4 March 2012. Archived from the original on 23 November 2012. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  4. "Malian soldiers battle Tuareg rebels in northeast: sources". Gulf-times.com. Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 23 November 2012. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  5. http://www.nord-mali.com
  6. http://www.mnlamov.net
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Mali govt forces fail to lift garrison town siege". Reuters. 5 March 2012. Archived from the original on 23 November 2012. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Tuareg rebels take Mali garrison town, say sources". Reuters. 12 March 2012.

Coordinates: 20°15′26″N 0°59′28″E / 20.2572°N 0.9911°E