The US Embassy in Nigeria announced this week that Nigeria’s military had cancelled specialised training by American soldiers on fighting Boko Haram militants.
A former US ambassador said the move was puzzling, given the Nigerian
military’s struggles to defeat the terrorist groups, which had taken
control of parts of the country’s North-east.
Since April, US soldiers have been training a battalion of about 600
Nigerian troops on how to take on Islamic extremist group, Boko Haram.
The Americans have also provided non-lethal equipment like vehicles and
uniforms.
The acting defence and army attaché at the US Embassy in Abuja,
Lieutenant Colonel John Cantwell, told the Voice of America (VOA) he was
not clear why the Nigerians decided to stop the training.
“No, we did not receive any specific reason as to why they wanted to
cancel the training. But their notification was in response to a request
that we had sent to them requesting their intention regarding moving
forward with the third phase of training,” he said.
Boko Haram has scored numerous successes in its campaign to control and
implement Sharia law across north-eastern Nigeria - terrorising the
population, bombing, killing and kidnapping thousands of people,
overrunning bases and seizing territory from Nigeria’s military.
That is why former US Ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell said Nigeria’s move to cut the training short was baffling.
“What on earth were the Nigerians thinking of to simply cancel a
training program. And to me that is a complete mystery, because I do not
see how it advances their own interests in any way,” he said.
Nigeria military spokesman, Major General Chris Olukolade, declined to
be interviewed, but in a text message called the cancellation a “purely
strategic action,” and did not explain further.
Nigeria’s military has battled Boko Haram for nearly five years and
there have been numerous reports of soldiers being outgunned by the
militants or simply running away.
Nigerian troops played vital roles in peacekeeping missions in Liberia and Sierra Leone during those countries’ wars.
But Campbell said since a 1990 coup attempt against then-military ruler
General Ibrahim Babangida, recent civilian administrations have
preferred to keep the military weak.
“In other words, how do you reduce the coup-making potential of the
military? Well, what you do is starve it for resources. So I think that
accounts, in part at least, for the transformation of the Nigerian
military from being, by far, the best in Africa to one which now, if
news reports are to be credited, regularly runs from firefights with
Boko Haram,” he said.
Nigeria’s ambassador to the United States recently laid the blame for
the military’s failures on Washington. In a speech last month, he
criticized the United States for not providing Abuja with more weapons
support.
But Campbell said US hands were tied by federal law. International
rights groups have repeatedly criticized Nigeria’s military for killing
and torturing civilians, charges the Nigerian ambassador dismissed in
his speech.
Meanwhile, a law known as the Leahy amendment prohibits the US from
supporting militaries that are thought to be involved in human rights
violations.
“American military training of Nigerians, at this particular point in
time, is inherently highly limited. It is limited by the Leahy
amendment, amongst other things. Nevertheless, it made no sense to me at
all that the Nigerian side, would terminate a training programme,” said
Campbell.
US officials said they would continue other training with the Nigerian military.
http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/nigerian-military-training-cancellation-baffles-us-experts/195764/
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