Opinion
Whither The War On Insurgency?
The recent Boko Haram ambuscade of a geological survey team at the Lake Chad Basin is a manifestation that the war against the insurgents in the North East of the country is far from declining.
It was reported that the attack on the Frontier Exploration Services/Surface Geochemistry Sampling team asphyxiated several lives including those of five lecturers of the University of Maiduguri in Borno State.
Also exterminated were about 15 soldiers, 11 members of the civilian joint taskforce and some officials of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), while three other persons were abducted. In all, not less than 27 lives perished.
The team was assailed on their way back from a scheduled exploratory activities. As Major-General John Enenche, Director of Defence Information, disclosed in his press briefing on the onslaught, the vehicles conveying the exploratory team were isolated and destroyed.
Despite the difficulties of asymmetrical wars globally, the reverses which our military has suffered in the war against Boko Haram in recent times repudiate its operational strategy.
The entire scenario suggests a high level malicious disruption and infiltration of our military and security ranks for the benefit of the insurgents.
It reveals that the terrorists may have penetrated our security organisations and are now able to launch offensives at will, despite the outstanding efforts of our military and civilian authorities.
Though the incident is agonising, it is contenting that both the authorities of UNIMAID and NNPC have shown sufficient judgment of the situation and are not into blame game and name-calling.
Indeed this is not the time to despair or retreat. It is not a time to knuckle under the blackmail of the insurgents and threaten a strike action as the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has done over the abduction of the lecturers. Rather, it is a moment for the federal government to redeploy its arsenals and re-strategise on the campaign against the terrorists.
It is tragic that our security organisations have been unable to adequately infiltrate the ranks of the insurgents. Therefore, to maintain their recent gains in this war and effectively reduce the ability of the terrorists to launch attacks, our security forces have to always be ahead of the insurgents in their strategies, tactics and plans.
The military must be able to anticipate and nip the intrusions of the Boko Haram sect in the bud. This will definitely require a very sophisticated and adaptable counter-insurgency plan.
Also, our military requires well motivated men and adequate materials. Sequel to this latest blitz, the United States government quickly approved the sale of some attack military aircraft to the Nigerian government.
Belated as some of these actions may seem, they are gratifying or congenial in our quest to utterly dominate our territories and discomfit the insurgents.
But we shouldn’t be deluded into thinking that the exercise will be easy. No, it won’t. There will be reversals of the kind we recently had. The challenge is to constantly re-evaluate our strategies and support the military to success. We must not lose sight of this goal.
No efforts should be spared to uncover the abducted persons and ensure their quick release and safe return to their work and families.
A recent video published by the Boko Haram Islamists showing three kidnapped members of an oil exploration team after the recent ambush is enough to move the government and Nigerians to act fast on their release.
I support the action by the NNPC and the authorities of the Petroleum Ministry in procrastinating all exploration activities until the security situation in the affected region significantly improves.
We shouldn’t forget that the search for crude oil in the Lake Chad region has been on for more than 12 years without success. Much as one isn’t opposed to oil exploration in the region, the claim that oil is fast losing global relevance should be kept in perspective as well.
But since oil remains the most imperative product of our economy and its mainstay at the moment, exploration may perdure, but not at the expense of human lives.
Arnold Alalibo
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