Opinion
Is This Military Intelligence?
While Nigerians were
basking in the euphoria of Children’s Day celebration, Tuesday, May 27, the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, announced to the press that the Nigerian military had discovered where the abducted Chibok girls were kept, but he ruled out the option of using force to rescue them for fear of endangering their lives.
Good news! You may say, but my pen jotted down the news with great difficulty. Don’t forget that few days after the abduction of the over 200 Chibok school girls, the defence headquarters had told the press that the military had recovered the girls remaining 8 more to be recovered; a report that turned out to be false and could only be pardonable if it had been told on April 1.
The same Tuesday, May 27, the United States said it did not have independent information to confirm Nigeria’s claim to know the whereabouts of the kidnapped girls. Whatever the phrases: “Independent information” and Nigeria’s claim” may mean in the Americans’ context, they both heighten my fears as to the credibility of the news from the security chief.
It is either that the United States is being diplomatic about releasing security details that are capable of countering their efforts at the long last or the Nigerian military decided to relieve itself by feeding the anxious public with the information they would want to hear otherwise, how could the Nigerian military, which is supposed to be in a joint venture with that of the United States, have information as vital as the discovery of the whereabouts of the girls without unveiling same to its US counterparts? Is announcing to the public that they have seen where the girls are kept, an informal way of calling on the captors for a relocation or is it also part of military intelligence?
This is probably why many event watchers and analysts conclude that this whole story of Chibok abduction has a political undertone. Matters of seriousness are obviously being trivialised in a bid to prove to the spectators that they are not resting on their oars.
In as much as the public may appear so inquisitive about the daily efforts of the government at recovering these girls, cautious and conscious efforts must be made by the security agents to avoid divulging information that would betray their effort at last, unless we are not being sincere in the whole game.
On a second thought, if the report of the security chief is anything to go by, the use of force to rescue the girls actually would not be in the interest of our collective desire to have these girls back safe and alive, this I think is where military intelligence comes to play so that all the efforts over the days would not turn futile by endangering their lives in a bid to rescue them, that is, if the military does not announce strategies it has designed to rescue these girls.
While I still count on the might of the Nigerian military in curbing the menace of the insurgents and the eventual recovery of the abducted girls, I am amazed at the reports about killing of Nigerian military personnel by the insurgents right inside states believed to be under state of emergency.
Just on Tuesday, May 27 a few minutes after 5.00pm gunmen suspected to be members of the Boko Haram sect attacked a security base in Buni Yadi, the headquarters of Gujba Local Government Area, killing about 24 soldiers and 21 police officers according to residents’ report. BBC Hausa service reports that attackers came in ten Hilux vans, an armoured tank and several motorcycles, an attack that also touched some parts of the traditional ruler’s residence and several other buildings. “They also raided the local government secretariat and burnt most of the vehicles inside the complex,” reports added.
I recall that on February 25, this same community of Buni Yadi came under severe attack by the Boko Haram sect, killing about 59 students of the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi. About 24 buildings of the school were also burnt down.
I think that with the level of insecurity in the country and the call as well as demand on the military to guard their loins and combat the insurgents squarely, every possible arrangement must have been put in place to check this enigma. The impunity with which the insurgents walk in and out of the country, unleashing mayhem on their victims unhurt, leaves much to be desired.
After the visit of some military officials to Boko Haram camps in Borno State, recently the Director of Defence Information, Major General Chris Olukolade, had said that the Nigerian military is satisfied with the pace of its operations against Boko Haram extremists in Borno State, claiming that security forces have sustained the momentum of their onslaught against the terrorists, notwithstanding the reactions from the insurgents.
If the claims of Major General Olukolade that (“the military had moved close to where the insurgents are, it shows that the military had taken over the land”) be founded, then one expects the insurgents to be fighting from the outskirts of the country not right in the heart of the country under the watchful eyes of the military.
Perhaps, there is the need to re-evaluate our strategies, establish our struggles on truth and not falsehood and possibly report events as they are. Who knows where our help could come from? I would suggest that the information management department of the Nigerian military should always sieve the information it releases to the public from that which it needs as a working tool so it would not be seen to be pulling down its structures with its own hands.
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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