Opinion
Third World As Theatre For Third World War?
On June 28, 1914, a Serbian patriot assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand, of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in the city of Sarajevo; that sparked the First World War, which involved more than thirty countries. Serbia, Russia, France, Britain, Italy and the US were Allies opposed by the Central Powers made up of Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire. The war dragged till 11am on November 11, 1918 when the guns were silenced; in other words, the war ended on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. The Second World War was between the Allied Forces of US and Europe (except Italy) on one hand and the Axis Powers of Nazi Germany, Japan and Italy on the other hand. The war spread across Europe and dragged on for six years during which Europe was devastated until the defeat of the Axis Powers in 1945.
In the recent past, US and Russia put their newly produced war machines to test in the skies and streets of Damascus and Syrian suburbs. Thus, Syria was reduced to rubbles. This snuggles to the maxim: “when two elephants fight, the grasses suffer”. Currently, the US is engaged in a proxy war with Russia and Ukraine is living with its devastating reality. How that will pan out is anyone’s guess. Today, Sub-Saharan Africa is being primed for a war that may lead to Third World War. Buoyed by alleged Russian assurances, Mali, Niger, Chad, Guinea have cancelled the post-colonial treaty entered into with France, which depends on this subregion for critical minerals. Meanwhile, the US perceives Niamey’s overt flirtation with Moscow as a threat to democracy and capitalism. So for US, it is an ideological issue. Therefore, economy and ideology present the common grounds for France and US to collaborate to keep Niger in line.
Irrespective of the battered Nigerian economy and widespread frustration of Nigerians, Abuja is posturing as the arrowhead against Niger in violation of extant Niger-Nigeria treaties. Meanwhile, burdened by foreign indebtedness, Nigeria can barely fund its military to deal with domestic threats. Yet, Nigeria is on the verge of being nudged by US and France into going to war in defence of their interests and risk confrontation with Russia. Have the gods made Nigerian leaders mad? Nigeria should know better than go to war on behalf of parasitic predator world powers to enforce democracy. What happened to the principle of ‘Non interference’ which the West preaches. Obi Aguocha MHR prays thus: “May our Government be properly guided”. Tinubu should know that centrifugal forces in our national life are currently at their most intense.
Proponents of disintegrative nationalism are eager to move ‘to their tents’ if a political cataclysm of national proportions erupts. Tinubu needs to study Nigeria’s experience during its intervention in Chad in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Suffice to summarise that experience thus: the West encouraged Nigeria to intervene in Chad. Nigeria did and was left high and dry. Political pundits hold that the dismal outing spurred the coup of December 1983. Incontrovertibly, international merchants of mass murder are of the same nationality with the countries that are encouraging ECOWAS to go to war for democracy, which is barely practised in the subregion. Like vultures, the West seeks to depopulate the continent to the delight of the likes of Bill Gate and hand the region’s resources to the West. From slave trade through Berlin Conference, which ushered in colonialism, to neocolonialism and the current façade of imperialism called globalisation, Europe and America have always had their predator-vulture-eyes zoomed in on the resources of Africa.
During Second World War, Adolf Hitler of Nazi Germany gave Ferdinand Porsche marching orders to produce an air-cooled engine in forty-eight hours to enable Nazi forces to cross Sahara desert, annihilate the people and take over the resources of West Africa. When OPEC embarked on what the West called petro-dollar war in the early 1970s, President Richard Nixon deployed US submarine to the coasts of Nigeria to cow Nigeria into not cooperating with OPEC. Confronted about that obvious infringement of international law, Nixon said thus: “Any decision against US interest is a declaration of war”. President George Bush I once said that “We need Africa without the Africans” and in referring to Africans, Henry Kissinger suggested that “we should get rid of the useless eaters”.
It is now public knowledge that syphilis, AIDS and COVID-19 were cultured in the laboratories of the West for biological warfare targeted at Africans. The West is fixated with Project Eugenics. US invested over $100 million constructing a drone base in Niger, which it stands to lose with Niger’s flirtation with Russia. Again, France procured 33 per cent of her uranium from Niger for the past three decades while the US got 14 per cent of its uranium from Russia. With the Russian source in jeopardy, US is looking towards Niger to fill that gap. So, for US and France, their source of uranium is at stake along with US drone base. On the other hand, two Russian White Swan Strategic Supersonic Nuclear Bombers made a symbolic landing in South Africa recently just to make a point in the global power equation,
Amid this turmoil, Paris insists it must be business as usual. Investigative journalist, Alex Rubinstein, holds that the future of Western economies relies on the exploitation of West Africa. Therefore, the West is waging a survivalist war. He concludes that what is at risk in West Africa today is a regional proxy war that has the potential of precipitating world war. A tweet credited to Femi Fani-Kayode holds that Burkina Faso and Mali have deployed fighter jets to Niger to assist in the event of an invasion. The tweet furthers that Russian Wagner forces have been deployed to Niamey to assist the junta in the event of an attack. Meanwhile, ECOWAS commanders say the D-Day for an attack “has been set”. West Africa is a ticking time bomb. Given the above, the leaders of AU and ECOWAS should be conscious and cautious of the resilience and resolute mindset of imperialism. Diplomatic solutions should be sought. They should not allow the Third World to become the theater of Third World War.
Osai is a Professor of Development Studies, Rivers State University.
Opinion
Man and Lessons from the Lion
Opinion
Marked-Up Textbooks:A Growing Emergency
Opinion
Humanity and Sun Worship

-
Sports5 days ago
CAFCL : Rivers United Arrives DR Congo
-
Sports5 days ago
FIFA rankings: S’Eagles drop Position, remain sixth in Africa
-
Sports5 days ago
NPFL club name Iorfa new GM
-
Sports5 days ago
NNL abolishes playoffs for NPFL promotion
-
Sports5 days ago
NSF: Early preparations begin for 2026 National Sports Festival
-
Sports5 days ago
Kwara Hopeful To Host Confed Cup in Ilorin
-
Sports5 days ago
RSG Award Renovation Work At Yakubu Gowon Stadium
-
Politics4 days ago
Rivers Assembly Resumes Sitting After Six-Month Suspension