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Biden and Buhari
The Presidency on Sunday said that the United Statesâ policy and support to Nigeria have been inconsistent over the years, especially as regards the provision of military equipment to fight the decade-long insecurity in the Sahel region.
It also berated the US policy experts and think tanks for their perennial attempts at predicting the countryâs collapse; which, it said, does not paint a true picture of a country that has enjoyed 23 years of steady democracy 29 years since its last coup.
Citing the delayed delivery of 12 Super Tucano jet fighters for the Nigerian Air Force, the Presidency noted that the reasons given for the delayâpoor interreligious relations between Christianity and Islam in the countryâwere compounded by constant lobbying of US Congress by the opponents of the Nigerian government including the Catholic Bishop of Diocese of Sokoto, Mathew Kukah, whom it accused of projecting a warped picture of Nigeriaâs 23-year-old democracy to the global community.
These were contained in a statement signed on Sunday by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, titled âPredicting Nigeriaâs collapse is a perennial pursuit of US think tanks and policy experts.â
The statement partly read: âIt is a pity therefore that US policy and support towards our country, including during the Buhari administration, has been so inconsistent.
âIn 2015 the then newly-elected Buhari government requested US military support in the form of Super Tucano jet fighters for the Nigerian Air Force. The Nigerian military, security, and intelligence services repeatedly made this request. The US administration of the time concurred: the delivery of such jets would help deliver a critical turning point in Nigeriaâs struggle against jihadist terrorists across the Sahel.
âYet two years later, that jet delivery was rescinded, the reasons given that unless Nigeria improved its religious relations between Christianity and Islam then US support would not be forthcoming in this, and many other areas.
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âSuch views were compounded by the constant lobbying of US Congress by the opponents of the Nigerian government who had lost the previous election, and many of their southern religious supportersâincluding Bishop Mathew Kukah, the Catholic Bishop of Diocese of Sokoto, who, unsurprising, provides a supportive quote for the dustcover of the new edition of Campbellâs book. (Kukah even took to addressing the US Congress himself, briefing his audience on the history of coups in Nigeriaâwithout, of course, mentioning that none had occurred since 1993, some 29 years ago).
âFortunately, now today under a new US administration these jets have been delivered, and with it, a serious blow against the terroristsâwith the supreme leader of Islamic State in West Africa and scores of other leaders of the group eliminated in airstrikes.
âIt is also inconsistent to preach the need for stability but needlessly delay sharing military equipment in the form of jets – not least when it is now proven they would have helped Nigeria much earlier defeat the terrorists who threaten our country.â
The Presidency also lamented that despite glaring contrary evidence predictors of Nigeriaâs state collapse have continued to bet big on their word.
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It said, âIn 2005, a US National Intelligence Council paper âMapping Sub-Saharan Africaâs Futureâ floated the idea there could be a military coup in Nigeria. However, for the last 29 yearsâclose to a generationâthere have been none.
âSince the return of democracy in 1999 there have been six general elections, four elected presidents, four transfers of powerâincluding one in 2015 between the winning opposition candidate and the losing incumbent president seeking re-election.
âYet despite all the evidence to the contrary, the collapse predictors keep doubling down on their bets. Most recently retired former US Ambassador to Nigeria 2004-7 John Campbell has updated his book, of which the first edition said:
ââWhile Nigerians often claim they are masters of dancing on the brink without falling off, the disastrous administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, the radical Islamic insurrection Boko Haram, and escalating violence in the delta and the north may finally provide the impetus that pushes it into the abyss of state failure.â
âIt didnât of course, quite the opposite: Jonathan was defeated at the 2015 general election with power peacefully transferring to the victor, President Muhammadu Buhari.â
According to Shehu, the people of Nigeriaâthe majority of which were born after the last coup of 1993âand who have known nothing their whole lives except democracy and elected government are living proof that democracy is here to stay.
âThough often negative, Campbell does however consistently express an important view that it is in the interests of the United States to encourage democracy and security in Nigeria. The government of Nigeria concurs.
âIt is all very well to claim it is in the United Statesâ interests to help Nigeria become an even-better democracy and stable country. It is quite another to forever avoid mentioning the last coup which was 29 years ago, and that since 1999 Nigeria has enjoyed 23 unbroken years of democratically elected governments and peaceful transition between them,â the Presidency stated.
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