The Defence and Foreign Affairs latest report published by the
International Strategic Studies Association (ISSA) based in the United
States of America, has stated that the deaths of a former Chief of Air
Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Sabundu Badeh (retd.) and a former Chief
of Administration of the Nigerian Army, Major General Idris Alkali,
“were not a coincidence”.
ISSA is a Washington-based
non-governmental organisation with a worldwide membership of
professionals involved in national and international security and
strategic policy.
President of ISSA, Gregory Copley, told ThisDay
that their analyses were not released to the public but to governments
that the organisation has affiliation with.
The report
released over the weekend and obtained by the newspaper stated that
corruption among top military chiefs appointed by President Muhammadu
Buhari is the reason Nigeria is losing the war against Boko Haram
terrorists.
It stated that at present, the Nigerian government
had completely and comprehensively lost control of the engagement with
Boko Haram and could show no instance when the government presently had
tactical, theatre, strategic, or information dominance of any aspect of
the conflict.
It reads in parts, “It is fair to say that the
Nigerian intelligence community itself is no longer sure what groups
even comprise ‘Boko Haram’, nor has it addressed the international
logistical, ideological, and support aspects contributing to the ongoing
viability of the groups.
“The conflict will almost certainly
prove the undoing of the present government of President Muhammadu
Buhari at the February 16, 2019, presidential elections.
“Despite
this, the only significant engagement which the Nigerian military
leadership — up to and including the National Security Adviser,
Maj.-Gen. (rtd.) Mohammed Babagana Monguno – seems to prioritise is the
fight to stop the leakage of information about massive corruption,
running into the equivalent of several billions of dollars, in the
purchase by senior military officers of major military capital goods and
military consumables, including the troops’ own food.
“The
conduct of the war in the North is tied to the corruption in the
military, and Buhari — ring-fenced by his own team — is unable to tackle
the issue.
“His poor health does not help, but he had always
(even as a military president, taking office on December 31, 1983) been
indecisive and vindictive.
“This ongoing set of characteristics
mean that the coming months will be dramatic, even more than the dying
days of the preceding administration of President Goodluck Jonathan.
“It
is significant that Buhari, who received the findings of the commission
as much as a year ago, has refused to allow it to be made public and
he, through National Security Adviser Monguno, has attempted to have the
commission disband.
“However, it is believed that Monguno and
Buhari are aware that copies of the report are beyond their reach and
could be released unofficially if further attempts are made to
assassinate commission members.
“The commission, investigating
defense procurement from 2007 onwards, made significant strides which
were initially accepted by the Buhari government, until the scope of the
inquiry went beyond the period relating to the former government of
Pres. Goodluck Jonathan, and began to show corruption patterns extending
into officers still serving under President Buhari.”
The report
stated that the death of a former Chief of Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal
(retd.) Alex Sabundu Badeh (who became Chief of Defence Staff), and that
of a former Chief of Administration of the Nigerian Army, Major General
Idris Alkali, on September 3, 2018 were not a mere coincidence .
It
said, “Given the upsurge in momentum by ‘the highest levels of
government’ to stop the findings becoming public from the corruption
commission on defense procurement, it is plausible that the attribution
of a criminal ‘kidnapping-attempt-gone-wrong’ against the Air Chief
Marshal was a convenient excuse to ensure that the victim — Badeh —
could not divulge in court the pattern and details of corruption which
has grown even more rampant in the current generation of defense
leadership.
“On September 3, 2018, the retired Chief of
Administration of the Nigerian Army, Maj.-Gen. Idris Alkali, was also
killed, ostensibly by a gang of youthful protestors who set up a
roadblock near Jos, the capital of Plateau State. His body was
discovered on October 31, 2018. And his death was blamed on ‘an irate
mob’, who were protesting in the Du-ra-Du community against the
September 2, 2018, killing of 11 members of their own community.”
The
report further stated, “No significant economic or political progress
can be achieved in Nigeria until the issue of the Boko Haram insurgency
is resolved. Other insurgencies are also expected to emerge, or
re-emerge, particularly in the Niger Delta. And while other pending
internal security issues are important, it is on the BH issue that the
prestige, credibility, and reliability of Nigeria is assessed by the
international community. Thus, all questions of the viability of Nigeria
as a candidate for inward foreign direct investment (FDI) and
international cooperation are dependent on a resolution of the BH
issues.
“Domestically, resolution of the BH issue is a
pre-requisite to enabling issues of intra-Nigerian regional equity
imbalances to be addressed. Moreover, the credibility of the Federal
Government as an arbiter of justice is assessed by the domestic
electorate and the world community.”
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