Talk of a "new world order" or "multipolar world" is regular fare on dozens of Facebook pages analysed by AFP across Sahel countries in west Africa -- most spreading pro-Russian and some pro-Chinese content.
The original BRICS bloc -- Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa -- last year admitted Iran, United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Ethiopia to the group.
One 16,000-strong Facebook group created in March 2023 is dubbed "BRICS+Africa for a multipola world", proclaiming in its description: "The multipolar world is coming together with Africa, the continent of the future".
Posts show Russian President Vladimir Putin welcoming UAE president Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, or hail the reported deployment of North Korean soldiers to back Russia in Ukraine.
Most pages are run by people in Niger, Burkina Faso or Mali.
- 'Global majority' -
The chatter echoes Moscow's "overarching story opposing the 'global majority' to the 'Western minority'," said Maxime Audinet, a researcher at the French Defence Ministry's IRSEM think-tank.
"Criticising forms of dependency imposed by the 'West' and promoting a 'new world order' through organisations like BRICS and the G20 -- of which Russia wants to be the spokesman -- is part of a genuine strategy to woo the global South," Audinet told AFP.
The plan was laid out in a weighty report last year by Russian political theorist Sergey Karaganov, reshaping Moscow's foreign policy and emphasising Africa as a space to compete fiercely with Western powers.
Several Sahel countries are now run by military juntas that have sought closer ties with Moscow.
"Criticism of the French presence (in the Sahel) has been very useful for years, but now France is gone the narrative is shifting," Audinet said.
Influence operations run by the Wagner group, which has sought to sway west African opinion since 2018, have been taken over since the death of the mercenary outfit's founder Yevgeny Prigozhin.
They are now part of a press agency called "African Initiative", which several experts said is run by a former member of Russian intelligence.
More open support for Russia comes from figures such as Ivorian former minister Ahoua Don Mello, vice-president of the "International Alliance for Strategic Projects BRICS".
He promotes a pan-Africanism freed from colonial domination and a new shared currency to replace the existing CFA franc which has ties to Paris.
- 'Sharing talking points' -
Chinese Facebook is riddled with posts highlighting Beijing's tens of billions of dollars in investments in Africa. French-language offerings from Chinese state media such as Xinhua and RCI have targeted mostly African audiences for the past decade.
They willingly "shore up Russian propaganda", "sharing talking points" with outlets like Russia Today and Sputnik, said Selma Mihoubi of Paris' Sorbonne University.
Some content is simply copy-pasted between Chinese and Russian media under content-sharing agreements between the two nations.
"Moscow and Beijing don't align on everything, and even compete with each other in Africa, but there is a real will to speak with one voice on questions like the 'new world order'," Mihoubi said.
Some of the west African juntas also use the content to burnish their image.
In Burkina Faso "multiple disinformation campaigns are run locally, without being kicked off by the Russians", said an expert on disinformation in the region, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Dozens of accounts in July launched a coordinated campaign spreading false reports that Burkina's military leader Ibrahim Traore had joined the BRICS.
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