₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,326,909 members, 8,428,604 topics. Date: Wednesday, 17 June 2026 at 05:09 PM

Toggle theme

Akpomeme's Posts

Nairaland ForumAkpomeme's ProfileAkpomeme's Posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (of 31 pages)

PoliticsRe: ubu Is 1 + 1 by akpomeme(m): 9:36pm On Dec 27, 2013
Ah!!!! Today na market day?
PoliticsRe: How Did APC Change From "PDP" Politicians Are Corrupt To "GEJ" Is Corrupt? by akpomeme(m): 12:06pm On Dec 27, 2013
E-rats are so typical!!! Why avoid a fish in a trap... It is in your interest to bash GEJ but what we need to understand is: since when did PDP defecting members become progressive and only GEJ now the culprit?

Your ogas at the top are using you and your passion to see a better Nigeria to sell same crap with another brand name to Nigerians.

Until IBB, Buhari, Danjuma, OBJ and their likes are out of the picture, what ever name you want to give a party and you want power in Nigeria, you must play to their rules otherwise they will brand you badly in he eyes of the people.

2011 GEJ used the new media to reach out to voiceless Nigerians which became his strength. Unfortunately, that medium has been hijacked by the powers that be and they will stop at nothing to destroy Jonathan and his legacy because he would not let them control him in any form or shape.
PoliticsRe: Why Is There ''south South'' But No '' North North'' In Nigeria? by akpomeme(m): 7:55am On Dec 27, 2013
citizenY: Gosh!!!!! How I miss Muyiwa,/ Becommrich.
The map demon is still out there!! He only comes out on nairaland market days..
PoliticsRe: Why Is There ''south South'' But No '' North North'' In Nigeria? by akpomeme(m): 7:53am On Dec 27, 2013
Why is their north central and no south central in Nigeria... Asshole
PoliticsRe: OBJ's Letter: Al-Mustapha Challenges Obasanjo To Public Debate Over Allegations by akpomeme(m): 7:49am On Dec 27, 2013
moneybag100: Bloody Murderer!
Like Obj. He is not saying he is any better but telling baba to keep quite or he will be exposed.
PoliticsRe: 2015 Elections: Al-qaeda Doles Out $500 Million To Boko Haram by akpomeme(m): 4:05am On Dec 27, 2013
Back page please; where the sun don't shine...
RomanceRe: Letter To A Nairalander I Have A Huge Crush On by akpomeme(m): 9:47pm On Dec 26, 2013
But I don't have a problem with u crushing on guys...
PoliticsCNN Showing Now - Leading Women In The World by akpomeme(op): 6:37pm On Dec 25, 2013
Watch our Amazon, as CNN proudly presents our Honourable Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison - Madueke as one of the Leading Women of the world. An interesting profile from the unique perspective of the world's first female Leader in the Oil & gas sector. Program will air at 18:30hrs today, 25th Dec, 2013. Must watch!!
PoliticsRe: Obasanjo Faces Investigation 24 Hours After Jonathan’s Reply by akpomeme(m): 2:24pm On Dec 24, 2013
papparatzzi2013: Bode Geoege went to prison because of his corruption at NPA.

Which judge will sentence someone to prison because he said Mr President is an Ex-Convict. Was he wrongly convicted. Was he not corrupt.

What a logic?

That is Mr President having a gut, when you can send your corrupt friends and political associates to the prison. Not a committee setting president.
All Nigerians can easily go to prison... From bribing police officers to the highest looters in the country, so dont open your trap and talk about corruption. Obj can go to jail to for same reason and even worse - treasonable utterances ...
PoliticsRe: Obasanjo Faces Investigation 24 Hours After Jonathan’s Reply by akpomeme(m): 1:58pm On Dec 24, 2013
papparatzzi2013: GEJ should try it nah?

his case will be worse than that of morsi.
The laws of the land will kick in... Bode George is no more a convict. Obj made sure that George went to prison for calling him an ex convict, now Bode will look forward to calling OBj double convict....
PoliticsRe: Obasanjo Faces Investigation 24 Hours After Jonathan’s Reply by akpomeme(m): 1:16pm On Dec 24, 2013
While I don't want to see obj arrested for his foolish utterances, I can't help but agree that my Yoruba brothers can rake sha... I remember obj raking that abacha can't arrest him and he ended up begging. Al Mustapha is obj's boggie man... Diya, Bamayi etc begged and cried for Abacha's mercy but denied and raked initially...
Initial gra gra no get value. At most Obj will be cautioned if no evidence is found. Oga ejor tinz episode go soon enter for his highly treasonable utterances....
PoliticsRe: Obasanjo Faces Investigation 24 Hours After Jonathan’s Reply by akpomeme(m): 12:53pm On Dec 24, 2013
Fear don catch una... Abacha did arrest obj at the airport and nothing happened, while obj was in prison he turned born again, came out and became God on earth... Never take the glory of God off God. You can't play God and expect God himself not to be jealous. Unceremoniously all that baba was ever known for that he cherished more than his family and friends will be taken away from him.
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 7:36am On Dec 24, 2013
At Obj's age, Nelson Mandela retired from politics .... Why must this man be such an attention seeker...
TV/MoviesRe: Another Young Nigerian Makes Short Film, Puts Nollywood To Shame by akpomeme(m): 7:24am On Dec 24, 2013
What was he sorry for? I am guessing he was the rapist as well.
PoliticsRe: Advertising Guru, Sesan Ogunro, Murdered In Lagos by akpomeme(m): 6:55am On Dec 24, 2013
I am sure we have some young armed robbers on nairaland... These vapid nuisances must know that it is bad enough to be a thief and worse off a killer!!!

There is no excuse for your actions because you are a disgrace to your family, your friends, your generation and to God.
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 11:44pm On Dec 23, 2013
Why Seun will not let anyone post on this report is curious... I have posted a couple of comments after this exposë but non will appear on this thread... Smh
PoliticsRe: OBJ Vs GEJ: Jonathan’s Response Shallow, Disappointing — Northern Elders by akpomeme(m): 11:37pm On Dec 23, 2013
Smelly pussies oozing of disgust. Tolerated vapids who don't know when to open their mouths. Useless set if people who could not do anything for common northerners while in office joining issues with the man who built almajiri schools for everyday northerner; this they could not do since inception...
PoliticsRe: Soyinka - APC’s Visit To Obasanjo: Nigeria Heading For Shipwreck by akpomeme(m): 11:20pm On Dec 23, 2013
Still a mad old prof (MOP), your son is an APC commissioner... So because perceived progressives are consulting with elders of this country you think they are a shipwreck ... How about your daughter that Ameachi has been bleeping for free or for your daughter's love for money that you never provided for... MOP is senile!!!
PoliticsRe: Boeing 747 Wing 'cuts' Johannesburg Airport Building, At Least Four Injured (PHO by akpomeme(m): 6:05pm On Dec 23, 2013
Please they should sack Stella Oduah angry she is responsible for it too undecided, yes I said it, only if it had happened here.. APC e-rats and ants would have attacked in a vapid manner... angry
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 5:57pm On Dec 23, 2013
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 5:53pm On Dec 23, 2013
Gej response is an eye opener and a reminder to all those who feel they are Landords of Nigeria that they are not.., iyabo to his dad; you don't own Nigeria.
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 10:37am On Dec 23, 2013
Aigbofa: If Obasanjo killed Murtala according to GEJ, maybe GEJ should also fess up and tell us how he killed Yar' Adua.
Did you not read iyabo's letter to her dad? Ode!
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 9:28am On Dec 23, 2013
shymexx: Lmao.

Someone please tie this derange monkey down. What kind of man stalks another man? - flaming phaggot.

Ooops, I forgot you were part of the Anambra homoerotic parade - gay-pride muthaphucka!
Fani Kayode, there are rules on nairaland... If you need your meth or coke, have it, think straight and come back to continue doing the bidding of obj...
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:21am On Dec 23, 2013
The the subject of ousting foreign leaders has been discussed relatively openly in Washington over the past few years. A series of papers presented at a conference on "Worldwide Threats," published in April of 1992 by the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO), addresses such delicate matters as "Intelligence for Low Intensity Conflicts."

The unclassified GOA document deals with operations ranging from planned political coups and "strategic sabotage" to document seizures and the protection of escape networks. And it affirms that American officials, depending on the particular conflict situation, intend either to be involved in the prevention or the promotion of foreign coups.

"Biographical summaries are the basis of successful operations to unseat or sidetrack key personnel who plan and implement insurgencies, coups, transnational terrorism, and drug smuggling activities that adversely affect U.S. interests," the document says. "Motivations, habit patterns, friends, other important contacts, tactics, strengths, and weaknesses are particularly important. So are locations, movement, and personal security measures."

Even more interestingly, however, the report makes clear the fact that the United States is still very much involved in the business of ousting unfriendly governments, offering this fairly obvious precaution: "U.S. leaders cannot knowledgeably support or oppose any foreign coup that affects U.S. interests unless they are well informed about potential successors, especially their attitudes toward the United States and expected programmes compared with those of incumbents."

Whether or not Obasanjo acted on behalf of the United States in his recent attempt to bring down Nigeria's military government, one thing is certain: the United States intends to remain engaged in the oil-rich west African nation. And the 19-year-old Country Plan for Nigeria that was issued the year of Muritala Mohammed's assassination is still timely today when it says, "USIS has a particularly significant role to play in stimulating increased American influence in Nigeria, now of considerably heightened importance to U.S. strategic and economic interests.... [U.S. operatives will seek to promote] attitudes which are sympathetic to assuring U.S. access to Nigeria's energy resources on reasonable terms..."



This report is the work of the staff of the Baobab Press, a Washington-based consortium of professional journalists involved in investigative reporting about issues of concern to the developing world. For further information, please contact: Baobab Press, Post Office Box 43345, Washington, DC 20010, U.S.A.
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:21am On Dec 23, 2013
A Matter of Timing
The sequence of events that occurred in February of 1976 seems even more bizarre if one looks at what happened at the very top level of government -- the White House.

In the fall of 1975, Ford selected a new Director of Central Intelligence, who was sworn in to office on January 30, 1976 -- exactly two weeks before the coup that brought Obasanjo to power -- over the objections of many of the same legislators who had labored to uncover abuses by the secret agency. The new CIA chief had a reputation as being the nation's most enthusiastic supporter of foreign population control measures in the 1960s and early 1970s, both as a member of the House of Representatives and as Nixon's envoy to the UN, and he later engineered the oil-motivated massacre of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. His name: George Bush.

It was not until 18 February 1976 -- five days after Mohammed was killed and more than two weeks after Bush took charge of the CIA -- that President Ford signed the long-awaited Executive Order 11905 on the subject of "United States Foreign Intelligence Activi- ties." The directive stated: "No employee of the United States Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, political assassination." By then, of course, Obasanjo had been safely installed as Brig. Mohammed's replacement.

Old Habits
Although the assassination ban is still technically in force, it does nothing to hinder actions against foreign government which stop short of murder -- U.S.-aided coups, for example. In fact, over the past several years, the government has been surprisingly open about advocating the removal of several leaders -- Cuba's Fidel Castro and Saddam Hussein in Iraq, to name just two.

Within weeks of embarking on a "humanitarian" invasion of Somalia, the U.S. military freely admitted that its real mission was to contain the rise to power of certain political factions. And no sooner had American troops been put in place to restore democratically-elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in Haiti, then journalists discovered that the very Haitian military bosses who had ousted Aristide in 1991 were on the CIA's payroll before, during and after Aristide's overthrow.

Ironically, a key actor in the Haiti-CIA saga was none other than Obasanjo's prestigious colleague at the Leadership Forum, Robert McNamara. Indeed, McNamara was part of a group of U.S. foreign policy elites who met with Aristide immediately after his election, portraying him to U.S. officials as another Fidel Castro -- and "vehemently anti-American."

The decision to restore Aristide to power may have been motivated in part by a desire to stem the flow of Haitian refugees to the U.S. But it is more likely the action seemed desirable from the U.S. vantage point because the U.S. could then preside over the election that would ultimately usher him out of office, and his successor would then owe his stability to American troops. Indeed, the influence gained by merely having a hand in a change of leadership could be enough to explain Obasanjo's pro-U.S. tendencies -- even if no conclusive evidence were ever found to link him directly to the CIA prior to Mohammed's assassination.
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:20am On Dec 23, 2013
Obasanjo's Curious Alliances
To track the careers of the high-ranking U.S. policy makers of the 1970s into the present time is to follow a sequence of bizarre coincidences -- or perhaps something far more sinister. It is here that Obasanjo's ties to the "inner circle" in Washington and New York become apparent.

At the time of Mohammed's assassination, the United States Ambassador to Nigeria was Donald Easum, who enjoyed a cordial relationship with Henry Kissinger, then U.S. Secretary of State.

After leaving his overseas post up through the early 1990s, Easum headed an outfit called the African-American Institute, which is headquartered across the street from United Nations in New York. The African-American Institute is an establishment created in 1954 with CIA money to promote an "exchange" of ideas between the United States and the people of Africa. It is essentially the "liberal" face of CIA-inspired meddling in Africa's internal political institutions.

Although Easum was the chief of AAI, Obasanjo could easily be called its most visible African. Obasanjo is an AAI trustee, and heads its prominent African Leadership Forum. He was specially honored at the AAI Sixth Annual Awards Dinner in November, 1989. Among those serving on the advisory board of Obasanjo's Forum is the Vietnam war era Defence Secretary and one-time World Bank president, Robert McNamara.

In June of 1990, McNamara was charged with planning a four-day World Bank conference in Lagos, at which population control was the only agenda. The birth reduction programme, as the Kissinger-era National Security Council paper shows, was aimed at crushing Nigeria not only militarily but also economically. Larger populations produce more wealth, and more wealth in the hands of Nigerians would mean less dependence on western "development" institutions and heightened regional influence. So obvious was the ploy that the Bank itself dared not make such a pronouncement. Instead, it sent for Obasanjo.

During its planning and implementation, the Lagos conference was a well-kept secret, and World Bank press officers referred inquiries to Obasanjo's office in New York. After the meeting, however, Obasanjo publicly called upon Nigerian leaders to implement mandatory birth curbs barring families from having more than three children.

And while Obasanjo was in Lagos demanding that compulsory birth control be foisted on unsuspecting Nigerians, Easum's African American Institute was busy building a shadowy political network to make it a reality. Under a tightly-worded contract between AAI and the Agency for International Development, the Institute agreed to be instrumental in producing "a policy climate conducive to the successful execution of a national family planning effort [in Nigeria] and to strengthen federal, state, and local government capability in strategic planning in order to efficiently mobilise and execute an effective and self-sustaining national family planning programme."

Another outfit with extensive ties to Washington's "secret establishment" is the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a right-wing geopolitical "think-tank" whose most conspicuous team member is Henry Kissinger.

Obasanjo's footprints can be found all over CSIS. On 15 December 1987, the former Nigerian leader delivered the CSIS David M. Abshire lecture -- an annual event of no small importance which takes its name from the Center's ambitious founder and head. Abshire was the first director of the Board for International Broadcasting and is a member of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board.

The Intelligence Advisory Board, established by presidential decree in October of 1985, is a select group of individuals chosen by the president and authorised to "continually review the performance of all agencies of the Federal government that are engaged in the collection, evaluation, or production of intelligence or the execution of intelligence policy." It makes recommendations directly to the president and, when approved by the president, "to the Director of Central Intelligence, the Central Intelligence Agency, and other government agencies engaged in intelligence and related activities."

Indeed, Abshire's CSIS publishes and sells materials written by Obasanjo, including a small paperback book titled, "Forging a Compact in U.S.-Africa Relations," which is based on Obasanjo's 1987 lecture.

And roughly four years ago, Obasanjo was the featured speaker at a Washington conference on "Sudan and Nigeria: Reli- gion, Nationalism and Intolerance," which was sponsored by the government-controlled (and deceptively-named) U.S. Institute for Peace. There he presented a rambling talk that called for a "mental decarbonisation of the generality of the people in both countries [Sudan and Nigeria]" -- something his militaristic audience may well have interpreted as a veiled reference to wholesale brainwashing.
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:19am On Dec 23, 2013
The Assassination Inquiry
Even as the U.S. government was preparing for the possibility of full-fledged petroleum sanctions that could impinge on the nation's "vital interests" and planning its long-range population reduction scheme, yet another development destined to shake the Washington hierarchy was taking shape.

Congress, in response to growing distrust of government among the American public, began holding hearings into abuses by the CIA. Of particular interest was the matter of political assassinations and plots to overthrow foreign heads of state. And there was abundant evidence of CIA involvement in such actions in Africa.

The Agency's role in the 1961 murder of Patrice Lumumba, for instance, was first revealed publicly by the former chief of the CIA's Angola division, John Stockwell, in a landmark book titled In Search of Enemies: A CIA Story. In that 1978 expose, Stockwell asserts that the Congolese leader had been eliminated to preserve "a half-billion- dollar investment in Zairian mineral resources," which the west felt would end up in the wrong hands if Lumumba controlled the vast central African nation.

In his book, Stockwell also recalls a conversation with a fellow U.S. operative who told of "driving about town after curfew with Patrice Lumumba's body in the trunk of his car, trying to decide what to do with it." According to Stockwell (and confirmed in testimony given before Congress), Richard Helms, CIA director from 1966 to 1973, had ordered the destruction of numerous records re- lating to the assassination of Lumumba.

Stockwell also reveals in the same book that, "the CIA station in Ghana played a major role in the overthrow of Kwame Nkrumah in 1966."

Formerly secret State Department records have also revealed that the United States worked closely with British colonial rulers in the early 1950s as part of a plot aimed at "breaking the back" of the Mau Mau movement and, in particular, at getting independence leader Jomo Kenyatta "out of circulation without due process of law," in the words of a top secret October 1952 cable from Nairobi to Washington. More recently, published reports have suggested that an American diplomat, working as a CIA contact, engineered the capture by South African police of Nelson Mandela in August of 1962.

One outcome of the hearings -- held in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate __ was that, by January 1975, strong pressures were brought to bear upon the White House to issue an Executive Order barring foreign assassinations. And that very month, then-President Gerald Ford, Nixon's successor in office, openly acknowledged that disclosure of the CIA's involvement in assassination conspiracies "would blacken the reputation of every President after Harry Truman." But oddly, the year passed without any such presidential directive.
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:18am On Dec 23, 2013
The Population Dilemma
A related theme of the time that took on astonishing urgency behind closed doors in Washington was the matter of population control. If Nigeria's population was arguably sufficient to successfully repel a military attack by the world's largest army, it certainly made the country fairly immune to the political pressures urged by USIS and other government bodies, as well.

Thus, in the waning days of the OPEC oil embargo, Nixon's Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger sent an urgent memorandum to the Department of Defence, the CIA, the State Department, the Agency for International Development, and other branches of government active in the so-called "third world." Under the heading, "Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests," the communique requested guidance on planning a population control strategy that could be used as a point of reference through the year 2000. Specifically, the agencies were asked to respond to the National Security Council with an analysis of the "international political and economic implications of population growth" in developing regions.

The final report, completed seven and a half months later in December of 1974, recommended that the most intense efforts to prevent births be concentrated in large countries of "special U.S. political and strategic interest." Not surprisingly, it was populous, oil- rich nations like Mexico, Indonesia and Nigeria that headed the list.

The task of controlling population was to be accomplished through a devious, complex, and forceful plan of action under which multinational institutions like the United Nations would be used to "front" for the United States in an attempt to deflect suspicions of ulterior motives. The World Bank, said the lengthy report. would be particularly useful because of its ability to order changes in domestic development policies. The study also suggested that food aid be tied to birth control promotion where leaders were reluctant to address the population "problem." Ultimately, however, the strategy would depend on the ruin of the emerging oil economies, since neither conditional aid and credit nor even coercive diplomacy work very well against self-sufficient nations.

Most importantly, the National Security Council document made clear the fact that high rates of population growth are to long term advantage of less-developed regions. It noted, too, that those nations with abundant natural resources would generally pose the greatest threat to U.S. hegemony, since they are uniquely well situated "to cope with population expansion." Said the study, "Nigeria falls into this category. Already the most populous country on the continent, with an estimated 55 million people in 1970, Nigeria's population by the end of this century is projected to number 135 million. This suggests a growing political and strategic role for Nigeria, at least in Africa south of the Sahara."
PoliticsRe: CIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:17am On Dec 23, 2013
Pondering a Military Invasion
To appreciate fully Obasanjo's curious connections to western insiders, one must first look at the circumstances under which Mohammed was murdered, at the political context of the times, and at other key players in the events of the 1970s.

The OPEC oil embargo of 1973 and 1974 presented the wealthy nations of the northern hemisphere with the most serious crisis they have faced in recent history. Unlike any other event of the 20th century, the action impressed upon western leaders their vulnerability to collective action by resource-rich states in the southern hemisphere. In fact, the oil boycott accomplished something that two "world wars" and a half-century-long East-West confrontation never even touched: it altered the distribution of wealth between north and south.

Moreover, the embargo came at a time when the U.S. was still stinging from the humiliation of its military defeat in Vietnam, and when American political institutions were under siege from within. Anti-war protests convulsed the country from coast to coast. A civil rights movement, massive in scope, challenged the old class structure, while riots in urban centers diverted the attention and resources of government. In the midst of this upheaval, Congress launched an unprecedented investigation into CIA misdeeds around the world. And even as all these events combined to shake the political establishment, a scandal of historical proportions began to unfold which would eventually force then-President Richard M. Nixon from office.

It is also worth noting that the OPEC action would have been even more devastating to the U.S. and its western allies if it had been complete. But as Nigeria's head of state, Yakubu Gowan opted to permit shipments to the U.S. throughout the boycott.

It is not entirely surprising, then, that just one month after the nationalist Muritala Mohammed took office, an elaborate "feasibility study" was presented to Congress which explored the options for a military invasion of the oil-rich Nigerian coast. The detailed military document -- called "Oil Fields as Military Objectives" and dated August 21, 1975 -- was prepared to provide background to legislators in the event that the U.S. "vital interest" was threatened by a repeat of the OPEC sanctions.

Among other things, the Congressional report noted that Nigeria would offer little more than "token resistance" to a U.S. invasion -- primarily because it was considered unlikely that the Nigerians would learn of the pending attack in time to sabotage the oil fields. Moreover, said the Congressional report, transit routes from Nigeria to the eastern U.S. are relatively direct -- without "bottlenecks, such as the Suez Canal and Strait of Hormuz, [to] interfere with traffic flow." Nigerian oil wells, the study's writers concluded, could "pump enough petroleum to maintain the U.S. economy at a reduced pace if we conserved a million barrels a day," and offered the additional advantage of having "essential refinery capacities" already in place.

Of particular military significance was the fact that the potential for Soviet involvement on the Nigeria front was considered low. "Outsiders would find it difficult or impossible to oppose U.S. actions [to seize Nigerian petroleum installations]," the document insisted. "No intervening obstacles impede passage ... to the United States or its principal allies."

But there were important drawbacks, as well. "Parachute assaults, for example, would be impractical," the document warned. "Nigeria's fields are in mangrove swamps and rain forest similar to those that frustrated U.S. forces in Southeast Asia." Worse yet, it continued, Nigeria's oil-rich coastline was densely populated, making guerrilla warfare a certainty and mandating "special tactics, tools, and techniques" on the part of the invader.
PoliticsCIA In Nigeria:the Obasanjo Curious Connection by akpomeme(op): 9:16am On Dec 23, 2013
http://www.dawodu.com/cia1.htm

THE U.S. CONGRESS INVESTIGATES THE MURDER OF FOREIGN LEADERS BY THE C.I.A. AND CALLS FOR A PRESIDENTIAL DECREE TO END THE PRACTICE. MEANWHILE, THE ECONOMY GOES INTO A TAILSPIN BECAUSE OF RISING OIL PRICES AND A NEAR-COMPLETE OIL EMBARGO AGAINST THE WEST. JUST WHEN PUBLIC PRESSURE MOUNTS FOR A REFORM OF THE GOVERNMENT'S SECRET OPERATIONS OVERSEAS, THE GOVERNMENT OF THE SINGLE-MOST IMPORTANT OIL SUPPLYING NATION FALLS INTO NATIONALIST HANDS. THE PRESIDENTIAL ORDER IS PREPARED AND SIGNED -- BUT NOT UNTIL FIVE DAYS AFTER A COUP PUTS NIGERIA FIRMLY UNDER 'FRIENDLY' RULE. WAS IT COINCIDENCE OR CONSPIRACY? SUSPICIONS STILL LINGER....

At the time of the infamous 1976 coup that put Olusegun Obasanjo in power, there was little in the way of concrete evidence linking him to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. But over the years that followed, Obasanjo became a highly visible part of a complex network developed by the United States government to wage political and economic warfare against Nigeria.

A series of formerly-secret cables between Lagos and Washington, along with other documents from government and private sources, reveal ties between Obasanjo and at least two groups working closely with the CIA -- and also make it appear likely that the recent plot to overthrow the Nigerian military government originated in Washington.

Destabilisation Campaign
When Muritala Mohammed was killed on 13 February 1976, suspicions were widespread that the CIA had a hand in assassination. This much is reflected in a secret report prepared by the U.S. Information Agency, the propaganda office that oversees VOA broadcasts and U.S. Information Service (USIS) installations around the world. The USIS 1976 Country Plan for Nigeria, declassified only five years ago, acknowledged that the political climate in Nigeria following Mohammed's assassination had been one of "uncertainty, distrust and suspicion." It further advised, "Charges of U.S. (CIA) backing for the attempted coup were prevalent [and] the Chancery and all USIS posts were physically attacked."

The USIS document leaves no doubt about American intentions toward Africa's most populous nation. Indeed, the same confidential report called Nigeria "the primary external source of crude oil for the United States," and repeatedly stressed the need for increased American influence.

Many of the State Department's Nigeria cables for the months prior to the assassination of Brig. Muritala Mohammed are still classified. Others, which have been released to investigators in recent years, are inconclusive. But the record nonetheless illustrates the paranoia that existed in the United States at the time about access to oil and about Nigeria's growing capability to influence the rest of the continent.

A 26 September 1975 communique complains, for instance, that Nigeria had supplied several thousands of dollars to leaders of the then-banned African National Congress in Lusaka. Another, written in January of 1976 and classified as "confidential," cited rhetoric heard with increasing frequency from Nigerian leaders about the "uncompromising supremacy of Nigeria's national interest," as well as opposition to what Mohammed himself had reportedly described as "blackmail and vicious propaganda" from the west.

Perhaps worst of all was the unpardonable sin committed by Mohammed when he declined an official visit by U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger which was proposed for May of 1976.

U.S.intelligence-gathering operations likewise escalated at an alarming pace during Mohammed's rule. In a 20 January 1976 cable from Lagos to Washington, for example, U.S. Ambassador Donald Easum warned:

"If Nigeria wants to use oil as a political weapon to promote its foreign policy, this would not necessarily involve further nationalisation. But could mean FMG is considering ways it might assert greater control over which consuming countries get Nigerian oil, depending on positions those countries take on foreign policies issues of interest to Nigeria. We understand several other possibly important papers/addresses delivered at senior officers meeting, reportedly including Un/Ife scholar's advocacy of Nigeria's using oil weapon. We and consul Ibadan will attempt obtain relevant papers and will report further if warranted."

And yet another secret dispatch, written less than two weeks before Mohammed was killed, hints that U.S. officials were prepared to sabotage Nigeria's booming economy. Nigeria, wrote Ambassador Easum on 2 February 1976, "desires to play leadership role, [and will] require modern army if its power (within African context) is to be credible. Further, it likely that given foreseeable internal political realities, Nigeria will maintain relatively large army for some time to come."

The same telegram listed a series of modern weapons likely to be acquired by the Nigerian government, and asserted the belief that a "civilian government might exercise a more restraint." But it ended on an even more bitter note:

"One development would act as a constraint on Nigerian arms purchases: a sharp drop in the price of petroleum. Defence budget would presumably have to be cut proportionately with fall in revenue if government were to meet minimum developmental and social demands on its resources. Easum."
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 9:10am On Dec 23, 2013
shymexx: ^^^Ignored. No time for primitive people today. undecided

======================================================

Another excerpt from the speech that nailed his coffin:

Mr. Chairman, when I contemplate the evils of apartheid, my heart bleeds and I am sure the heart of every true blooded African bleeds. . . Rather than join hands with the forces fighting for self-determination and against racism and apartheid, the United States policy makers clearly decided that it was in the best interests of their country to maintain white supremacy and minority regimes in Africa

Africa has come of age. It’s no longer under the orbit of any extra continental power.
It should no longer take orders from any country, however powerful. The fortunes of Africa are in our hands to make or to mar. For too long have we been kicked around: for too long have we been treated like adolescents who cannot discern their interests and act accordingly.

For too long has it been presumed that the African needs outside ‘experts’ to tell him who are his friends and who are his enemies. The time has come when we should make it clear that we can decide for ourselves; that we know our own interests and how to protect those interests; that we are capable of resolving African problems without presumptuous lessons in ideological dangers which, more often than not, have no relevance for us, nor for the problem at hand."
Bro your folly knows no bounds...
PoliticsRe: Is GEJ Insinuating Obasanjo Killed Murtala Mohammed? by akpomeme(m): 8:42am On Dec 23, 2013
I-pledge:
I am very dissapointed with ther responses am seeing here,what Gej i s trying to say is that Nigerian have been battling with corruption Ƨ̣̣̣̇̇̇̇☺ many years ago and various steps have been taken. To reduce it.But i dont know y the op gave it this title and some human being are supporting baseless point.






The rest is for the mod to decide,i will not teach you your work
Who told you it is baseless.... You need to read up more...

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (of 31 pages)