Friday 20 March 2015

Don’t Claim Early Victory Against Boko Haram – Experts Warns Jonathan

Experts warned against any premature declaration of victory, with Boko Haram still proving capable of carrying out deadly hit-and-run strikes and indications  of coalition lapses.

Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan on

Friday said the military hopes to
recapture towns seized by Boko Haram within a month, in what would be a swift victory after six years of bloody conflict.

Jonathan, who is seeking re-election on March 28, said Boko Haram was getting weaker and weaker every day. “I’m very hopeful that it will not take us more than a month to recover old territories that hitherto have been in their hands,” he told the BBC.

Nigeria has claimed major gains against the Islamists with the help of coalition partners Cameroon, Chad and Niger, achieving in just over one month what for years it had failed to on its own.

Two out of three of the worst hit
northeast states Yobe and Adamawa have been declared cleared while the third, Borno, is expected to be liberated soon, the military said this week.

Major towns such as Bama and Dikwa are among some 36 localities recaptured, with just three said to be still in rebel hands.

National security advisor Mike Omeri
said on Wednesday that the final
onslaught was under way. More than 13,000 people have lost their
lives in the conflict and the main
opposition candidate, former military
ruler Muhammadu Buhari, has
campaigned hard on the government’s security record.

Mark Schroeder, vice-president for Africa analysis at security risk consultants Stratfor, said announcing victory before March 28 made political sense for Jonathan as part of the election campaign.

“The risk he runs, however, is that the
insurgency is not really defeated, only disrupted temporarily and for political posturing. It would be akin to the Mission Accomplished declaration by US President George W. Bush in 2003 that was a premature symbol of victory in
Iraq. Clearly, Iraq is still today struggling with an Islamist insurgency,” he told AFP.

Until this year, Nigerian troops had
appeared unable even unwilling to tackle the better-armed militants, who have allied themselves with the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq.
Nnamdi Obasi, senior Nigeria researcher at the International Crisis Group, attributed the sense of urgency to the prospect of defeat by Buhari.

“That urgency facilitated the delivery and deployment of new military hardware, including assets more relevant to counter- insurgency operations,” he said.

Improvement had been seen in command and deployment structures, including the use of senior officers to lead combat operations, Special Forces and co- operation with local vigilantes.

He also said that the involvement of
foreign military contractors, many of
them South Africans, to provide technical expertise might also have made a difference. “Offensives by the military forces of neighboring countries have helped to overstretch the insurgents and thus undermine their ability to withstand Nigerian military offensives,” he added.


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