Goodluck Jonathan |
As President
Muhammadu Buhari inquires into the Boko Haram war expenditures under the last
administration, it has emerged that Nigeria’s traditional allies in the West
deliberately frustrated former President Goodluck Jonathan’s efforts towards
ending terrorists’ activities in the country.
A
security source disclosed in Abuja that Nigeria, under the leadership of
Jonathan, wrote 25 letters to the United States of America and other Western
nations, seeking to acquire state of the art weapons to deal decisively with
the terrorists.
However,
they all turned down the requests, the source said.
“What
was most painful was the fact that Nigeria was not begging to be given those
weapons as gifts. We were ready to pay for them but they turned
their backs on us when we needed them most.
“The
same people who made all the promises about assisting us to bring an end to the
Boko Haram attacks and bring back the abducted Chibok girls did everything they
could to frustrate our efforts”, he added.
According
to him, the scandal that broke out over the botched South African arms deals
was the culmination of the worst that a frustrated sovereign nation could face.
Two
attempts by foreign contractors engaged by the nation’s highest security
authorities to buy arms from South Africa and Israel were stopped and over $24
million of Nigeria’s hard earned foreign exchange seized by South African
authorities in two separate instances in that country.
It
was learnt that though the funds were eventually released to Nigeria, the harm
had been done and the purpose stopped mid-stream.
It
was learnt that when it became very clear that the nation’s long-standing
traditional allies were not prepared to assist, Nigeria had to turn to Eastern
Europe and Asia for weapons.
“A
conclusion was reached that the nation would suffer more devastation should she
continue to beg those we regarded as our friends when things were going on well
with us. It was at that point that the nation had to look elsewhere,
especially towards the East and Asia”, the source said.
Nigeria’s
Ambassador to the US who died in Washington, last week, Prof Adebowale
Adefuye, captured the mood of the then government and most Nigerians when
he addressed the American Council on Foreign Relations, in
November last year.
“The
US government has up till today refused to grant Nigeria’s request to purchase
lethal equipment that would have brought down the terrorists within a short
time,’’ “We find it difficult to understand how and why, in spite of the US
presence in Nigeria with their sophisticated military technology, Boko Haram
should be expanding and becoming more deadly.
“There
is no use giving us the type of support that enables us to deliver light jabs
to the terrorists when what we need to give them is the killer punch.
A friend in need is a friend indeed. The true test of friendship is in
times of adversity,” he said.
America’s
only excuse for refusing to sell the much-needed weapons to Nigeria was that
Nigerian troops were reportedly not adhering to the fundamental human rights of
the terrorists, in the prosecution of the Boko Haram war.
The
security source who spoke with Vanguard said the alternative arms sources in
Eastern Europe and Asia did not only receive Nigeria with open hands, “we also
got other forms of ‘technical assistance’ as those who provided some of the
equipment also entered into agreement with us to have some of their military
personnel join our troops for the purposes of ensuring optimal performance of
all the equipments.
“We
didn’t want a situation where we would get to the war theatre and have any of
the equipment breakdown without the expertise to promptly fix it”.
The
source said that Some of the expatriates seen among the troops were with them
to provide such requisite technical assistance.
According to him, the successes recorded from the last months of Dr. Jonathan
in office and the current onslaught against the terrorist were due mainly to
the arrival of various equipments from countries other than Western nations
that call themselves Nigeria’s traditional allies.
He
observed that President Buhari’s panel would discover at the end of its sitting
that it was not possible for the Jonathan administration to have reduced Boko
Haram to the level it left it without having to bend backwards on several
fronts to secure the right weapons and technical expertise.
Source:
Vanguard
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