Anton Gerashchenko Profile picture
Ukrainian patriot. Advisor to Internal Affairs Minister (2021-2023). Institute of the Future founder. Support volunteer translators https://t.co/nWSASMUo29

Feb 20, 5 tweets

What are Russia’s real interests in Africa? Let’s break it down.

Russia often talks about "anti-colonial solidarity" with Africa. In reality, its policy follows a classic colonial model - using manipulation, destabilization, coercion, and systematic extraction of resources.

In this model, Africa is not a partner but a territory for exploitation:

• first, dependency and fear are created;
• then local elites are hooked on "security services";
• and finally, control is converted into concessions, quotas, and export flows.

Independent journalists show that Russian influence structures in African countries aim to create political turbulence and the managed degradation of institutions. Russia supports forces that turn states into closed, controlled, and unsafe spaces for citizens - places where access to strategic assets can be "rewritten" in exchange for fear and weapons.

This fits a material logic: Africa holds about 30% of the world’s mineral reserves, including cobalt (over 70% of global production in the DR Congo), as well as significant deposits of gold, manganese, bauxite, lithium, and rare earth metals. Control over these resources provides both profit and geopolitical leverage. And that is exactly what Russia wants.

The systematic nature of this approach is well illustrated by the ecosystem of influence structures described by journalists - the so-called "Company": a network of political technologists, media managers, information operations specialists, and intermediaries working simultaneously in Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East. Its function is not only to promote pro-Russian narratives, but also to cultivate loyal elites, discredit Western partners, organize information attacks, and create conditions for political turbulence.

Information destabilization here is the prelude to economic penetration: first, the balance of influence is shifted, and then deals for extraction, logistics, or military presence are facilitated.

Notably, in the Central African Republic, where Russian mercenaries operate with impunity, timber, gold, and diamonds make up the bulk of exports - precisely the sectors easiest to "capture" through concessions, site security, and logistics control.

Official data compiled by the World Bank is telling: in 2022, the CAR’s extractive sector contributed only 0.6% of GDP, while accounting for 46.5% of exports. In monetary terms, that’s roughly CFAF 25.5 billion in gold exports and CFAF 8.9 billion in diamond exports, but government revenue from extraction amounted to only CFAF 2.0 billion. This is typical of a colonial-style economy: resources exist, but rents "leak" through the shadows, corruption, and external beneficiaries.

Russian schemes operate like "dirty value chains": extraction in high-risk areas ➡️ shell companies and intermediaries ➡️ "cleansing" of origin through third jurisdictions ➡️ monetization on the global market.

The U.S. Treasury, when grounding sanctions, explicitly noted that the Prigozhin-linked company Midas retained preferential access to the Ndassima gold mine in the CAR, whose reserves experts valued at over $1 billion. The Blood Gold Report estimates that since 2022, the Kremlin has earned over $2.5 billion from African gold (including operations in Mali, Sudan, and the CAR), using smuggling and corporate schemes to turn "blood gold" into cash.

This is the 21st-century colonial formula: control of security and information ➡️ control of the resource ➡️ control of the money.

Marine resources are a separate story.

African countries lose around $11.2 billion annually due to illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing; approximately $9.4 billion of those losses occur in West Africa alone.

According to the IUU Fishing Risk Index, Russia consistently ranks among the states with the highest risk indicators for illegal fishing, second only to China. Dozens of Russian trawlers operate within the exclusive economic zones of countries stretching from Morocco to Namibia.

In December 2025, Moscow concluded a fisheries agreement with Morocco - a country that itself loses around $500 million annually due to the illegal exploitation of marine resources.

Under previous arrangements, up to 10 Russian trawlers were permitted to catch as much as 140,000 tons of small pelagic fish (such as sardines and mackerel) per year in exchange for roughly $7 million in annual payments - a negligible sum compared to the real scale of extraction.

Similar agreements are in place with Sierra Leone (up to 40,000 tons annually); Russian vessels also operate off the coasts of Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania, Namibia, Nigeria, and Senegal.

Allegations include AIS signal shutdowns, at-sea transshipment to conceal the origin of catches, and quota violations. More than half of fish stocks from the Strait of Gibraltar to the mouth of the Congo River are already biologically unsustainable. This amounts to a form of colonial-style exploitation that directly undermines the food security of entire societies.

Finally - the human resource, the most cynical component.

Alongside resource extraction, Russia has been using Africans as expendable manpower.

Investigative reporting describes how men from African countries are recruited under false pretenses - allegedly for civilian jobs such as security, construction, or other "contract work" - only to be coerced into fighting against Ukraine.

New data presented in Kenya’s parliament indicate that more than 1,000 Kenyans may have been recruited for Russia’s war against Ukraine, often through so-called "employment agencies" and corrupt intermediaries. Reports also point to a broader pattern involving nationals from dozens of African countries.

Ukraine regularly documents the deaths or capture of foreign nationals fighting on Russia’s side, including individuals from African states.

So, Russia’s strategy in Africa is not "solidarity," but a neo-colonial package: information operations + support for authoritarian regimes + coercive security patronage + resource exploitation + cynical trafficking in human lives.

First, weaken institutions and entrench elite dependency. Then lock in the agreements. After that, siphon rent for years into the center of the imperial project - leaving donor countries with environmental damage, shadow economies, and internal conflicts.

Thank you to Léa Peruchon and Eloïse Layan, Sofía Álvarez Jurado, as well as ADF for their outstanding investigations.

Share this Scrolly Tale with your friends.

A Scrolly Tale is a new way to read Twitter threads with a more visually immersive experience.
Discover more beautiful Scrolly Tales like this.

Keep scrolling