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Who Are The Nigerian Real Enemy? by equalgarden(m): 11:59pm On Jan 31, 2020 |
Keep up with the news by installing RT’s extension for Firefox. Never miss a story with this clean and simple app that delivers the latest headlines to you. RT live search Menu mobile youtube HomeOp-ed US targeting of Nigeria: Is it really about terrorist problem or is America fearful of Africa’s first superpower emerging? Darius Shahtahmasebi Darius Shahtahmasebi is a New Zealand-based legal and political analyst who focuses on US foreign policy in the Middle East, Asia and Pacific region. He is fully qualified as a lawyer in two international jurisdictions. 30 Jan, 2020 16:21 US targeting of Nigeria: Is it really about terrorist problem or is America fearful of Africa’s first superpower emerging? © Getty Images / Construction Photography / Avalon / Anadolu Agency 542 Follow RT on RT The US is punishing Nigeria amid a current humanitarian crisis where the West African nation is grappling with a violent terrorist problem in the form of Boko Haram; a terrorist entity that the US indirectly helped rise to power. The Trump administration is considering expanding its travel ban to include five more countries, including Nigeria. While there is opposition to the plan, it is still unclear to what extent this ban will go, as it may only target certain government officials, or certain types of visas. As the media notes, Nigeria works together with the US in areas such as counter-terrorism and the intention came as a surprise to the Nigerian government, who will have to look for ways its officials can meet with investors. It is therefore difficult to discern the official reason that has led the US to consider adding countries like Nigeria onto its hit-list, though a White House spokesman has defended the travel ban by saying it “has been profoundly successful in protecting our country and raising the security baseline around the world.” As far as Nigeria is concerned, Trump did once say that if Nigerians came to the US, they will never “go back to their huts” in Africa. Furthermore, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) has been making it incredibly difficult for vital humanitarian aid to reach Nigeria over the past year. A relatively new clause in all grant contracts now requires the recipient agencies to have approval of a USAID Agreement Officer in advance “to individuals whom the Recipient affirmatively knows to have been formerly affiliated with Boko Haram” or Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS), as combatants or non-combatants. RT Families displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency line up for food being distributed by International Medical Corps in northeast Nigeria's Borno state on January 29, 2018 in Maiduguri, Nigeria. © Getty Images / International Medical Corps / Margaret Traub This restriction goes against the core principles that govern humanitarian aid, one of which states that aid must be provided on need and can’t be influenced by other considerations. I’m reminded of an episode of Boston Legal in which a humanitarian-aid worker, charged as a terrorist and held at Guantanamo Bay, says under cross examination “When you’re trying to do aid work in a Taliban-controlled area, deals have to be made.” The US appears to be targeting Nigeria in more ways than one, though this latter development has not been highlighted by the mainstream media. So are these latest moves simply due to Trump’s profoundly racist remarks, or is there something else at play here? Hitting Nigeria where it hurts Nigeria is facing one of the world’s gravest humanitarian crises as a result of a conflict which has dragged out for approximately ten years. As a result of the relentless violence perpetrated by the terror outfit known as Boko Haram, 7.1 million people are in need of life-saving assistance, and 1.8 million people have been uprooted from their homes (the majority of whom are women and children). In total, the conflict in Nigeria has killed at least 27,000 civilians. Even as I type, communities in the West African nation are still being targeted by violent attacks. Nigeria was already struggling with a pending humanitarian crisis before the conflict erupted over ten years ago. Six states in north east Nigeria were already lagging behind the rest of the country in terms of their socioeconomic development. The situation affecting these states now has been described as “famine-like.” According to the UN, insecurity in parts of Nigeria has played a major role in the reduction of humanitarian aid. Essentially, the new USAID requirements are making an already delicate situation even worse. For those of you who are unsure about this as a conclusion, consider that humanitarian funding to southern Somalia dropped by 88 percent from 2008 to 2010 after the US added Al-Shabaab to its designated terror group list, criminalizing the provision of anything that might be considered material support. As far as we can see, once the US puts restrictions on humanitarian aid that go against the very principles guiding the flow of humanitarian aid, we can expect to see less and less of it. Also on rt.com Blaze rips through Lagos street market as traders race against time to save their goods (PHOTOS, VIDEOS) The US role in the Nigerian situation One could argue that the effect US foreign policy has on ordinary Nigerians is an unintended consequence of America’s reluctant duty as the world’s superpower police force to strangle and eradicate terrorism throughout the African continent. Though, this assertion would have to be tested against the available evidence, particularly when it comes to the US’ role in the region. Nigeria’s deadly terror group Boko Haram was not always the fully-fledged menace it is today. It was only after a major US-NATO venture in North Africa that terror groups such as Boko Haram began to thrive. After the US toppled Muammar Gaddafi’s leadership in Libya, his armories were looted and the proceeds were spread rampantly across the country. In an article published by The Week entitled ‘Who’s financing Boko Haram?’ Peter Weber noted that Boko Haram’s weapons “have shifted from relatively cheap AK-47s in the early days of its post-2009 embrace of violence to desert-ready combat vehicles and anti-aircraft/anti-tank guns.” A UN report conducted in early 2012 that the weapons Boko Haram was starting to acquire were being smuggled from Libya. Statistically, the terror group is now far more deadly than the terror network IS. As secretary of state under the Obama administration, it was Hillary Clinton who repeatedly refused to place Boko Haram on the US official list of terror organizations, despite the fact that the CIA, the FBI and the Justice Department requested her State Department to do so multiple times. When taken at face value, it makes little sense for the US to punish a country facing a crisis that the powers-that-be in Washington contributed to quite significantly. But what else have we come to expect from a country that allegedly closely works with Al-Qaeda, even to this day? Also on rt.com China sees Trump’s trade war as an opportunity to boost ties with Africa Why target Nigeria? We can never know for sure the reasons that Nigeria is in the crosshairs of the US foreign policy establishment, but we can always speculate based on what we know about the West African nation and the overarching geostrategic concerns that typically govern US foreign policy. Nigeria is Africa’s largest oil producer and its largest economy, beating out South Africa for the top spot. Despite the many real issues plaguing the country, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has already projected that its gross domestic product could expand by 2.5 percent this year. Its population is growing more than twice the speed of the world average and in just a few decades it will surpass that of the US. Whether or not this will be a positive development for the country remains to be seen, but the nation is showing a lot of signs that lead to countries like China and India outputting rapid economic growth over the last few years. Nigeria’s largest export is no longer oil, but its people, who have sent back home roughly $40 billion in remittances. While Trump is picturing people from “shit-hole countries” exploiting the West and refusing to return to their “huts,” these people also obtain advanced qualifications and have spent half a billion dollars per year in the process. Also on rt.com Russia to bring back to life Nigeria’s major steel plant project, abandoned for decades To put it simply, Nigeria has the potential to become Africa's first superpower. If there’s one thing the last few decades has taught us, it’s that the US hates to see African nations developing on their own accord. If you examine the reasons why the US targeted Libya for regime change and turned it into a failed state in the first place, it will become apparent that having strong, financially dependent countries in this region is not an option for the US war machine. Combine Nigeria’s potential for success and its close relations with US economic foes like China and what we have is a regime-change accident waiting to happen. Of course, the US can turn up the pressure incrementally, beginning with travel bans and bans on humanitarian aid rather than resorting to an all-out war to contain its future rivals. But what happens if Nigeria begins to copycat China’s economic success over the next few decades and develops closer relations with American adversaries. Will we continue to see an increased US military presence in Nigeria, and to what end? My bet is that if the US has its way – and given the measures the US has recently taken – Nigeria will continue to struggle with issues like terrorism and poverty for years to come. Think your friends would be interested? Share this story! The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT. oped 542 RT Trends: Nigeria news social follow RT on Twitter From Our Partners US targeting of Nigeria: Is it really about terrorist problem or is America fearful of Africa’s first superpower emerging? 'To Meghan Markle' is now a verb, and for some reason it doesn't mean ‘to play victim despite sitting pretty' US targeting of Nigeria: Is it really about terrorist problem or is America fearful of Africa’s first superpower emerging? Spectators injured as fireworks display goes wrong, hits crowd at Indian temple (VIDEO) Conversation(80) Please read the RT Community Commenting Rules here Best Log In If there is oil, America thinks it belongs to them. Libya, Syria, Iraq, Venezuela, Mexico, Yemen, Nigeria. These are the countries America has had its murderous hands on to the detriment of its citizens. Oil is in abundance in the South China se which America is intent on claiming as its own. Reply 15 I like Nigeria, shows toughness and resistence, I hope they really emerge into a superpower, if only to make US cry. Reply They'd like that oil in the South China Sea but the problem is that the PRC is in the way Reply Typical US policies, create chaos then wait for someone else to clean up the mess so they can take credit, wrong. Reply 10 Important to note how the US Regime's covert operators are aiding and abbetting terrorist groups to perpetuate suffering in this African region. There cannot be peaceful coexistence on our planet until this heinous regime is brought to an end. World governments must apply collective effort to bring democracy back to the suffering people of the USA. Reply 9 I totally agree but we have to free ourselves. Which sane country would come to America's aid? Our 'democracy' assures half the population will always be dissatisfied. We think the impeachment process is legit. Trump won't get impeached and he will get reelected, unfortunately. Reply It is all about the oil in Nigeria. Most Americans couldn't find it on the map even if the map was labelled. Heck I'd be surprised if you said it was next to Wakanda they'd agree. Reply 8 Nigeria has oil. 'nuff said. Reply 6 Oil will soon be phased out anyway. Cheap labor replaced with robots. So I'm not sure if there's any country out there who will be able to replicate China. Reply I just wish all of those Nigerian Princes that need help smuggling $25Mil out of the country would stop emailing me about sending them a $3000 check for the processing fee of transferring the $25Mil to my account. I keep telling them to just take the $3000 out of the $25Mil and send me the difference. I guess they're not as slick as they think they are. Reply 5 Interestingly enough 'clever' europeans fall for the scam to make it worthwhile Reply 1 The problem in Africa is the same as everywhere else, fighting the money masters. Africans have been under the thumb of European financiers for over 100 years, just like in USA. It's just that most people are clueless in the US. They can't even recognize who their enemy is ffs. Reply 5 Lol Nigeria a superpower ,that's comedy gold right there ,why don't you tell us how much america is taking advantage of wakanda to lol Reply 6 France population is 66.9M, Population of Britain is 66.87, Italy 40m+ plus Greece 10m+ NIGERIA IS 206M, more than all the above countries put together... for how long more would the most populous black nation be held down? Nigerians are everywhere even in your country! So the USA and the western hegemonies must keep them subservient! Bokoharam is a foreign creation to keep Nigeria in need of their destructive humanitarian assistance. Reply 6 They should start collecting back those expats, they're all criminals. We can't stand them anymore. They're only good for target practice. Reply yet Nigeria has the GDP of Eire (5 million people) showing the "success" of the Kremlin mass crrptn model Reply Even other Africans hate the Nigerians. They have the worst reputation in Africa. Reply 4 So you are saying that Nigeria is the france of africa? Interesting Reply Africa will be nothing without Nigeria. Everyone in Africa also wants to have one or two things doing with Nigeria. Reply 3 TermsPrivacy Add Spot.IM Subscribe to RT newsletter to get stories the mainstream media won’t tell you From Our Partners Podcasts All podcasts Director of Zaha Hadid Architects on SophieCo. Visionaries US targeting of Nigeria: Is it really about terrorist problem or is America fearful of Africa’s first superpower emerging? Union puts out ‘guidelines’ for sex scenes in response to #MeToo, but do these changes mean anything besides PR? 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Re: Who Are The Nigerian Real Enemy? by equalgarden(m): 12:03am On Feb 01, 2020 |
Re: Who Are The Nigerian Real Enemy? by popsy2(m): 12:04am On Feb 01, 2020 |
Lengthy. Abridge ! |
Re: Who Are The Nigerian Real Enemy? by equalgarden(m): 12:34am On Feb 01, 2020 |
To me i don,t believe in the article To my knowledge and my expirience as a nigerian 1, we are the enemies of ourselves 2, Ethnics 3, Tribalism. 4.Religions differences 5, Lack of education in the part of the country 6, politicians greediness . 7,Quota mark 8.Get rich quick syndrome that lead to lazyness 9. Poverty 10. Unrightousness. |
Re: Who Are The Nigerian Real Enemy? by equalgarden(m): 12:44am On Feb 01, 2020 |
Proverb 14:34 Righteousness exalt a nation, sin is a reproch to any people. |
Re: Who Are The Nigerian Real Enemy? by TooMuchStuff: 1:05am On Feb 01, 2020 |
Fulani Fulani Fulanis |
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