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Friday, October 7, 2016
Why can’t Nigeria’s president defeat Boko Haram?
President Buhari meets with a woman rescued from Boko Haram.
EPA
Muhammadu Buhari, a disciplinarian former military leader, came
to power in Nigeria with a specific mandate to improve on his inept
predecessor’s inability to confront the Islamist terror group Boko
Haram, which has torn a terrifying path across the country. Even after the world rallied to help Nigeria rescue the 276 schoolgirls the group kidnapped
in 2014, little if any headway was made, and Goodluck Jonathan, then
the president, was duly turfed out of office in a reassuringly orderly
election.
Buhari’s victory was a chance to turn the tide.
But 15 months after he took the helm, Boko Haram has not been defeated –
and the huge majority of the 276 kidnapped schoolgirls remain
unrescued.
There are three main reasons for this, each of which speaks to
Nigeria’s general position of decline and incapacity, of corruption and
squandering. Buhari has made no real progress with society at large and
scant progress with his military.
Goodluck Jonathan did provide large sums of money to re-equip his
floundering soldiers on the frontline with Boko Haram. They had been
outgunned and out-manoeuvred by an enemy with faster vehicles and
greater firepower. But of the funds earmarked for the fight, plenty
never reached the soldiers at the front; large sums were apparently
stolen by corrupt generals who were willing to let their men die.
Still, even if the funds had reached the front, they wouldn’t
necessarily have been used to buy the right equipment. The Nigerian
army’s performance in West African mulitateral missions has earned it a
reputation for being rough and indiscriminate – its strategies relying
principally on heavy bombardment. In the thick forests where Boko Haram
has some of its strongholds this makes little sense – especially given
the army has little to no precise intelligence on where its enemy is. Weapons seized from Boko Haram in Borno State.EPA
Reconnaissance equipment and aerial heat-seeking capacity would
depend on helicopters, drones and aircraft, and the military is not well
supplied with those. Buying armoured cars is of no use so long as Boko
Haram has lighter, faster vehicles.
Even with the right equipment, military strategy is critical – but
there’s no evidence that Buhari’s generals are adequately schooled in
modern counterinsurgency tactics. And even where there is some genuine
leadership, discipline among the frontline troops can be appalling.
Wiping out the villages they are sent to protect doesn’t exactly win
hearts and minds.
Soldiers from other national armies are fighting Boko Haram along
their borders with Nigeria. But their countries are generally not in
meltdown and Boko Haram does not control vast swaths of their
territories – nor do their local political figures need to invoke the
threat of Boko Haram to leverage their positions.
Things fall apart
This fits into a more general malaise that is eating away at Nigerian society, and which Buhari seems equally unable to address.
Something is rotten in Nigeria – and something peculiarly Nigerian at that. Violence has ticked up again in the Niger Delta,
the Christian-Islamic divide is as great as it was when Buhari took
office, and his painstakingly chosen cabinet has no great
accomplishments to its name.
Everyone who seeks power still seems to be serving vested interests
or pursuing personal gain. There is, in many respects, no longer a
Nigeria. The name describes little more than a nation-sized slush fund.
All the while, the catastrophic insurrection in the north goes on.
The army periodically claims Boko Haram is defeated or on the verge of
defeat – and Boko Haram then proves it isn’t. In many ways, it seems
better organised and more resilient than the army or the government
itself.
On all current indications, Buhari’s return to power is a sad
disappointment, and those who want to give him more time find it hard to
argue their case. The anguished parents of missing schoolgirls, those
who’ve fled shattered villages, and those maimed in suicide bomb attacks
are all still wondering why he’s taking so very long even to get
started. continue
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