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Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs - Politics - Nairaland

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Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by valentineuwakwe(m): 12:24am On Feb 19, 2021
All the immediate past Service Chiefs who appeared on Thursday for screening as non-career ambassadorial nominees were united in their lamentations for insecurity in the country which got worsened under their watch from November 2015 to January 2021.

This is even as the former Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt – General Yusuf Tukur Buratai (rtd), declared that it may take Nigeria 20 years for total elimination of Boko Haram insurgency.

They were all screened by the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs.

First to lament the worsening security situation in the country was the immediate past Chief of Defence Staff, General Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin (rtd), who attributed the problem to the over 1,000 forest reserves in the country not well managed and secured by respective state governments.

He added that the problem at hand requires a well galvanized national approach for it to be surmounted since it is more of an asymmetric cum hybrid warfare as against the conventional ones that can easily be confronted and defeated.

He said: “I want to say that the solution to insecurity is multi-pronged. We talk about conventional warfare and asymmetric warfare. We are talking about hybrid warfare where everyone is involved.

“It is not about kinetics. Kinetics gives only 35 per cent success rate in any war we are fighting. It is a national approach that must be properly galvanized for us to actually surmount the insecurity.


I will say three years ago, I conducted a research on the forests in the country. I realized we have over 1,000 forest reserves. I sent the team to Kenya. They went to Kenya and brought out a paper and I said then, three years ago that our next crisis will be in the forest.

“Some governors were invited and we told them because most of the forests are the prerogative of states. The states took over all the forest reserves. I told them that we have to protect the forests. We have to send troops to protect the forests.

We did the research in 2018 for six months. I said that the next problem we are going to have is in the forests. But again, it is with us right now. It requires a multifaceted approach.

“Everyone has to come on board for us to be able to address the insecurity situation. You can never have enough weapons, personnel and so on but there are issues we must address and then it has to be all about the nation”.

Also giving reasons for the unabated problem of insecurity in the country, particularly, the Boko Haram Insurgency in the North East, Buratai while facing the committee reiterated that it may take the country 20 years to eliminate Boko Haram Insurgency.

He disclosed that through indoctrination, the Boko Haram insurgents are winning more and more communities to their side, aside the problem of ungovernable spaces in the area and in fact, across the country.

He said: “My state (Borno), is an epicentre, where this indoctrination has penetrated so deep. They (insurgents) have won the communities to their side. That is why they (communities) keep Boko Haram. So it is complex, it requires a whole of government approach to solve this, military action or activity is just one aspect.

“One mistake that we have been making is that only the military can solve this. It is not. There are political, social, economic aspects that need to be addressed.

Development should be progressive, there should be roads everywhere, there should be employment, schools and hospitals all over.

“Yesterday, I counted five local government areas in Borno State that do not have good access roads.

“In northwest, north central, there are so many ungovernable spaces, which the insurgents are penetrating. The places don’t have schools, hospitals and so on and education is very fundamental.

“Unless these things are done, this insecurity will continue because the truth must be told. It may take another 20 years for the country to surmount the problem of Insurgency and that is the truth.”

The story was not different when the former Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Abubakar Sadique, former Chief of Naval Staff , Vice Admiral Ibok – Ete Ibas and former Chief of Defence Intelligence , Air Vice Marshal Mohammed Sani Usman , appeared before the Committee.

Specifically, the former Intelligence Chief lamented over lack of synergy among the various security agencies, as one of the reasons for the lingering security challenges the country is facing.

However, after the separate screening carried out on the five nominees, the chairman of the Committee , Senator Adamu Muhammad Bulkachuwa (APC Bauchi North), said the committee will submit on the exercise to the Senate next week.

https://dailypost.ng/2021/02/18/insecurity-why-we-couldnt-defeat-boko-haram-ex-service-chiefs/

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Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by festacman(m): 12:33am On Feb 19, 2021
TAKEAWAYS
1. The Boko Haram war is war by mainly Bornu people against themselves and their own communities. It is a senseless adventure.

Unless they stop this madness, many more soldiers will die unnecessarily and yet many more people including public servants, lawmakers and top military commanders are set to keep smiling to bank.

2. Boko Haram has won over more and more communities to their side, due to lack of government presence and public amenities such as roads, hospital, school, etc.

This is a common problem all over Nigeria with most rural areas totally not part of what is happening in State capitals until campaign time. Visionary governors needed to be elected.

3. Nigeria has over 1,000 forest reserves that are not well-monitored and protected by State Governors since forest management falls under their purview.

A national conference on forest reserves protection is needed ASAP as Boko Haram insurgents, bandits, Fulani kidnappers and ESN volunteers all use these thick forest reserves canopies as bases.

63 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Ever8090: 12:50am On Feb 19, 2021
It will take Nigeria 20 years to defeat indigency...



But the man with this cap said Boko haram have been technically defeated..

So this idiots knew the had no solution to the problem but refused to Stepdown long ago?..

130 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by osamz007: 12:52am On Feb 19, 2021
ALL OF UNA COMBINE DEY MAD

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Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Karemarealty288(m): 1:07am On Feb 19, 2021
Why is Burutai technically embarrassing Lie Muhammed......this is why Obasanjo said " In the military, Failure cannot be reinforced".

This Government will be replace by these words

Catastrophic Failure
Habitual Failure
Environmental Failure
Draught of Truth
Abysmal Failure
Bombastic Failure
Egocentric Failure
Nepotistic Failure
Common Sense absenteeism
Governmental Failure
Perpetuated Failure
Generational Failure
Climatic Failure
Redundant Failure
Divisive Failure
Reinforced Failure
Bomboclatic Failure
Scrotumatic Failure
Dundeecratic Failure
Cowdungatic Elements.
Topographic Parasites.
Unredeemable Failure
Rugatic Orgasm
Herdsmenocracy
Righteous Bandits
Boko Launderers

91 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Nobody: 1:33am On Feb 19, 2021
Mnhh...
Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Litmus: 2:30am On Feb 19, 2021
Even a retard wouldn’t be stupid enough to regurgitate that old Western prescription calculated to trap Africa in perpetual strife and conflict. Poverty is impossible to eradicate since poverty is relative. You'll never be able to build enough schools, hospitals, roads, jobs or amenities to satisfy those that say they are fighting the state due to poverty.

4 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by laiperi: 2:36am On Feb 19, 2021
When I saw "20 years", I gave up.


General Yusuf Tukur Buratai (rtd), declared that it may take Nigeria 20 years for total elimination of Boko Haram insurgency

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Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Kayberg: 2:53am On Feb 19, 2021
What shall we say?
Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by daddytime(m): 3:12am On Feb 19, 2021
Idiots....

The only word they learnt in all their looting service years is kinetics.

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Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by big7: 3:44am On Feb 19, 2021
Can someone kind enough to summarise all what this failed ijiots said. I don't have enough patience to read through the shi.t

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Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by udemzyudex(m): 3:44am On Feb 19, 2021
Too much rambling without going straight to the point.

28 Likes 1 Share

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by budaatum: 4:07am On Feb 19, 2021
Litmus:
Even a retard wouldn’t be stupid enough to regurgitate that old Western prescription calculated to trap Africa in perpetual strife and conflict. Poverty is impossible to eradicate since poverty is relative. You'll never be able to build enough schools, hospitals, roads, jobs or amenities to satisfy those that say they are fighting the state due to poverty.

Poverty of knowledge is the problem. It is exemplified by the lack of infrastructure as no schools. People who are uneducated are impoverished and disempowered and that's why boko haram gets a hold of them.

If I were in charge, I'd flood the place with Quran and Bible in their local language then add other books on top. Boko Haram can not deceive those who learn to read for themselves.

3 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by CodeTemplar: 4:22am On Feb 19, 2021
Typing . . .
Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by CodeTemplar: 4:30am On Feb 19, 2021
budaatum:


Poverty of knowledge is the problem. It is exemplified by the lack of infrastructure as no schools. People who are uneducated are impoverished and disempowered and that's why boko haram gets a hold of them.

If I were in charge, I'd flood the place with Quran and Bible in their local language then add other books on top. Boko Haram can not deceive those who learn to read for themselves.
You have a point about BH not being able to indoctrinate those who read for themselves. Just few days ago some supposedly learned Christians were applauding a pastor who barely travel or has a large ministry but with three jets. The bible is now like a constitution that's too technical for then to read and make informed judgements from. If I may ask, what is BH currently fighting for? Get the answer to that and juxtapose it with their pattern of operations and attack and funding and affiliations then see if still makes sense.

5 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by CodeTemplar: 4:31am On Feb 19, 2021
They are talking crap. If the communities lack schools, whose fault is it? Is it the fault of taxpayers or oil producing communities in ND or their local leader who have been funded for the past 60 years with allocations? They are eyeing more allocation via insurgency. That's why the military who are paid to fight have suddenly become priests who can pronounce constitutional forgiveness on repentant terrorists. They want an amnesty that will be managed by them. These are offshoots of our demonic structure of taking one region's resources and sharing to 5 other regions(NE, NC, NW, SW, and SE). Since the formula for sharing factors in problem size a lot, regions are contended maintaining problems and using it to push for more allocations while they steal half of it at leadership level. It is like employing thieves to rob your neighbor in exchange for half of the loot.

8 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by CodeTemplar: 4:38am On Feb 19, 2021
Litmus:
Even a retard wouldn’t be stupid enough to regurgitate that old Western prescription calculated to trap Africa in perpetual strife and conflict. Poverty is impossible to eradicate since poverty is relative. You'll never be able to build enough schools, hospitals, roads, jobs or amenities to satisfy those that say they are fighting the state due to poverty.
You made a valid point in stating that poverty is relative. Jesus puts it in another way and said the poor will always be among us. A wise man puts it that all fingers are not equal. That's why o
I don't support the idea of giving out oil money to solve some local problem in borno. Their politicians see people who are passionate about reaching out to the poor among them as 'magas' so to say. They specialize in telling us about their poor population to attract more allocation since we re-share resources by problem size in Nigeria. 100 years from today they will still be using lack of schools and amenities to justify their misdeeds but billionaire leaders and ex-leaders will keep emerging out of them.

4 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by CodeTemplar: 4:46am On Feb 19, 2021
. .
Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by CodeTemplar: 4:50am On Feb 19, 2021
festacman:
TAKEAWAYS
1. The Boko Haram war is war by mainly Bornu people against themselves and their communities. It is a senseless adventure.

Unless they stop this madness, many more soldiers will die unnecessarily and yet many more people including public servants, lawmakers and top military commanders are set to keep smiling to bank.

2. Boko Haram has won over more and more communities to their side, due to lack of government presence and public amenities such as roads, hospital, school, etc.

This is a common problem all over Nigeria with most rural areas totally not part of what is happening in State capitals until campaign time. Visionary governors needed to be elected.

3. Nigeria has over 1,000 forest reserves that are not well-monitored and protected by State Governors since forest management falls under their purview.

A national conference on forest reserves protection is needed ASAP as Boko Haram insurgents, bandits, Fulani kidnappers and ESN volunteers all use these forest reserves as bases.
Ondo state tried to manage theirs locally and sensibly but were attacked by northern elements for it. All you wrote is invalidated by this simple pattern. Didn't they see Yankari or Sambisa before heading thousands of kilometres south? The issue of kidnappers(mostly herdsmen) using forest as hideouts is a well planned one among their commanders. All the kidnappers can be flushed out in 2 month because they are isolated and in many forest reserves. Same way they could isolate lekki protesters and subdue them with force is how they will simply isolate and subdue the forest criminal or amnesty hopefuls rather. The Army that could sacrifice innocent flag wielding and anthem singing souls can decide to use to few kidnapped victims among them as collateral damages so to speak. The collateral damages can be reduced by helping families raise ransoms just before each camp is hit. They don't want insurgency to end. They want an amnesty that will be supervised by military men and serve as an income stream to top military men. Under democracy, this is the new coup pattern.
That's why you see them vouching for repentant BH members instead of doing what they love doing to civilians.

5 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Monogamy: 6:25am On Feb 19, 2021
You guys at yet to tackle Bokoharam and bandits activities yet you want to start another war in SE?

Nigeria military should have a rethink

1 Like

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Racoon(m): 6:39am On Feb 19, 2021
Imagine this set of the most clueless service chiefs talking shit.How can the CDS said the army should be sent to guard forests? Is that what the army was created for?

How did the military arrived @ the decision to rehabilitate the so called "repented terrorist" when in the military parlance, they always say "the only good terrorist is the dead terrorist"?

1 Like

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by mosdii(m): 6:51am On Feb 19, 2021
And they are about to made ambassadors. Nigerian military is gone

5 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by NoSentiment: 7:18am On Feb 19, 2021
Bunch of failures

3 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Maxymilliano(m): 7:27am On Feb 19, 2021
Bunch of failures angry

1 Like

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by cosmatika(m): 7:32am On Feb 19, 2021
U all are foools.
U can't defeat boko haram cos u always leave the fight you are to face and be pursuing IPOB and innocent civilians.
May BH & bandits keep using u guys as suya

8 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by tillaman(m): 7:32am On Feb 19, 2021
What shall we say to these things??
20 years right
Why always the north
This marriage (Nigeria) has to be dissolved
Make we share our garri abeg
long live Oduduwa republic
Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by dimexy247(m): 7:32am On Feb 19, 2021
Bollocks

1 Like

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Sultty(m): 7:34am On Feb 19, 2021
Buhari is a terrorist. if the Senate are insane will there be made ambassadors, there are not worthy

1 Like

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by Bluethong1(f): 7:34am On Feb 19, 2021
You all would rot in hell! After making money from the war in expense of people's life.


You come here to lament. May you and your family never know peace for putting us into this horrible situation we find ourselves right now.

4 Likes

Re: Insecurity: Why We Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram – Ex-Service Chiefs by MorataFC: 7:34am On Feb 19, 2021
Ok

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