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From Disinformation to Regime Change: Hybrid Influence and the New Politics of Destabilisation in Africa

From Disinformation to Regime Change Hybrid Influence and the New Politics of Destabilisation in Africa
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In recent years, the character of geopolitical competition in Africa has shifted in subtle but profound ways. Power is no longer projected only through formal diplomacy, development aid, or conventional military cooperation. Instead, influence increasingly travels through narratives, media ecosystems, covert political networks, and deniable security structures. Within this evolving landscape, Russia has emerged as a central actor employing hybrid strategies that move gradually from information manipulation toward deeper forms of political intervention. Disinformation campaigns circulate through social media platforms, community radio, cloned news websites and tightly coordinated messaging designed to erode trust in Western partners, weaken confidence in incumbent governments, and magnify existing social grievances. Testimony from Central African journalist Ephrem Yalike, who described his own involvement in such efforts within the Central African Republic, offers a rare glimpse into the concealed machinery behind these narratives. Significantly, the messages seldom appear overtly foreign as they are usually translated into familiar political language, carried by domestic actors/middlemen and framed through the emotionally resonant themes of sovereignty and anti-colonial resistance. In doing so, external influence acquires the texture of something local and authentic, even as it quietly reshapes the emotional atmosphere of public debate. The shift from narrative persuasion to political destabilisation becomes clearer when information operations converge with organised structures on the ground. Within this evolving architecture, disinformation serves as the opening movement of a broader strategic sequence. By steadily weakening institutional trust and intensifying perceptions of crisis, control over narrative space can soften resistance to political disruption, encourage elite fragmentation, and render mass protest more imaginable, thereby transforming stories into instruments of power.

Allegations emerging from Angola offer a striking illustration of how the movement from disinformation to attempted political disruption may unfold in practice. Prosecutors describe a network of foreign and domestic actors whose activities, they argue, extended far beyond propaganda into efforts aimed at shaping party leadership struggles, cultivating social unrest, and ultimately creating conditions that could enable the overthrow or reconfiguration of the existing political order. According to the indictment, several individuals, including Russian nationals and Angolan collaborators, were arrested and accused of crimes ranging from espionage and terrorism financing to corruption, illegal currency transfers, and public incitement. Whether these accusations are ultimately upheld in court remains a matter for judicial determination. Yet the narrative presented by prosecutors reveals a deeper anxiety about the changing nature of political interference in the contemporary era. Central to the concern is the claim that influence structures connected to the Wagner Group did not vanish after the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin in 2023, but instead reassembled under new organisational forms that appear outwardly civilian. These entities, purporting to operate as research initiatives, political consultancy platforms, or cultural projects, allegedly served as cover for coordinated propaganda, cyber operations, and elite networking. This pattern mirrors the testimony provided by Ephrem Yalike, who described his own role in Russian-backed disinformation campaigns in the Central African Republic. Yalike’s account revealed how seemingly legitimate media and cultural operations were mobilised to shape narratives, marginalise dissenting voices, and create conditions for political manipulation. His evidence demonstrates that information warfare is rarely a standalone tactic; it is the opening phase of a longer, carefully orchestrated political project. By shaping narratives, identifying sympathetic elites, and mapping institutional vulnerabilities, networks like those alleged in Angola can gradually construct a social and political terrain in which destabilisation and potential regime change becomes possible.

What makes this especially concerning is not only the alleged presence of foreign actors, but the method through which influence is exercised. Rather than dramatic coups or overt military intervention like we have witnessed recently in the Sahel, the process described is incremental, ambiguous and deniable. It operates through relationships, funding channels, media ecosystems, and the quiet cultivation of political fractures. This subtlety makes detection difficult and response even harder. States are often structured to defend against visible threats like armed rebellion, insurgent groups, bandits, invasion, or open subversion, yet far less prepared to confront slow transformations of perception, loyalty and legitimacy occurring beneath the surface of ordinary political life.

There is also a broader continental implication. For instance, when hybrid influence strategies can embed themselves within domestic political competition, then sovereignty itself becomes more fragile. External power no longer needs to seize the state directly; it can instead reshape the environment in which political outcomes are decided. Elections, protests, leadership contests and policy debates may all become arenas indirectly conditioned by actors operating beyond national accountability. The danger, therefore, lies not only in regime change but in the gradual erosion of autonomous political decision-making. At a deeper level, these developments reflect a transformation in how power functions in the twenty-first century. Control over territory is increasingly complemented, sometimes even replaced by control over information, networks, and perception. Influence travels through stories, data flows, and institutional partnerships as much as through soldiers or weapons. In such a world, the boundary between persuasion and coercion becomes difficult to define, and political stability depends as much on informational integrity as on military strength.

In conclusion, the Angolan allegations, regardless of their final legal outcome highlight a critical shift in contemporary geopolitics. They suggest that the pathway from misinformation to regime destabilisation is no longer theoretical but structurally plausible within modern hybrid conflict. For African states, the challenge is therefore not only to guard borders or manage elections, but to protect the deeper foundations of political trust, institutional legitimacy, and narrative sovereignty. The future of democratic stability may hinge on whether societies can recognise and resist forms of power that arrive quietly, speak the language of partnership, and transform politics without ever appearing to do so.

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