Notwithstanding the promises of an end to the Françafrique era, France remains the desired external security actor in francophone Africa. The purpose of this thesis is to examine the discursive legitimation strategies of Emmanuel Macron on France's military activism in Mali, inquiring 'How did the French President Emmanuel Macron discursively legitimize France's military presence in Mali before the announcement of the end of Operation Barkhane?'. The aim is further to explore the construction of the French Self and the Malian Other in the legitimation discourse, asking 'How did Macron construct a French 'Self' and a Malian 'Other' in his discourse as legitimate reasons for maintaining the intervention?'. By applying an interpretivist, poststructuralist discourse analysis to official statements published between 2017 and 2021, the thesis concludes that Macron's discursive legitimation strategies remain approximately similar, yet the greater emphasis on rhetorical themes of equal partnership, non-interference in internal affairs, democracy and an ever-increasing multilateralism have taken place in the face of Paris' damaged legitimacy. Focusing on the construction of the Self and the Other affirms that Macron constructs the Malian Other as significantly different from the French Self even though the country is seen as capable of transformation and cooperation, requiring the compliance of Western advice.
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