By Nile Bowie
While the Sahel security crisis continues to
deteriorate following Tuareg rebels’ declaration of an independent state in
Mali’s troubled northern territory [1], recent events in Nigeria indicate a potential
for increased regional instability. Boko Haram, a Salafist organization seeking
to overthrow the secular administration of Nigerian President Goodluck
Jonathan, has recently killed 38 civilians in a suicide car bomb targeting
nearby churches holding Easter services in the northern city of Kaduna [2]. As
part of an ongoing campaign of sectarian violence, the group has strived to
implement sharia law through the establishment of an Islamic State in northern
Nigeria [3]. The group’s belligerent acts of violence claimed more than 500
lives during 2011 [4], prompting President Jonathan to call the current security crisis more dire than that experienced
during 1967’s Biafran civil war, adding that jihadi sympathizers have
successfully infiltrated his government
and security agencies [5].
The group has claimed responsibility for
the August 2011 bombing of the United
Nations headquarters in the Nigerian capital, Abuja [6], and its adoption of
sophisticated tactics indicate that Boko Haram is receiving arms and training
from abroad. Mainstream outlets can now be seen readying public opinion for an
increased presence in Africa under the Right to Protect Doctrine (R2P) by
warning of increased terrorist attacks in Europe, following shifts in Islamist
activity away from Iraq and Afghanistan, to the "ungoverned spaces"
of the Sahel [7]. While the
ongoing War on Terror provides the needed justification for the US Africa
Command (AFRICOM) to expand its base of operations throughout the Sahel and the
troubled regions of east and central Africa, the modus operandi of Boko Haram
indicates foreign nurturing in numerous mediums.
The Nigerian Tribune has reported that
Boko Haram receives funding from different groups from Saudi Arabia and the UK,
specifically from the Al-Muntada Trust Fund, headquartered in the United
Kingdom and Saudi Arabia’s Islamic World Society [8]. During an interview conducted
by Al-Jazeera with Abu Mousab Abdel Wadoud, the AQIM leader states that
Algeria-based organizations have provided arms to Nigeria's Boko Haram movement
"to defend Muslims in Nigeria and stop the advance of a minority of
Crusaders" [9]. It remains highly documented that members of Al-Qaeda
(AQIM) and the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) who fought among the Libyan
rebels directly received arms [10] and logistical support [11] from NATO bloc
countries during the Libyan conflict in 2011. While top AFRICOM General Carter
Ham claims terrorist networks pose a "real challenge" to the United
States [13], warning of the threat posed by Al-Qaeda and the stock of chemical
weapons they obtained after raiding Gaddafi’s weapons bunker [12], the
confirmed reports accusing the US of arming and training Islamist terrorist
groups remain safely neglected in official Pentagon press statements.
While NATO's
Supreme Allied Commander, Admiral James Stavridis openly acknowledged the
presence of Al-Qaeda fighters among Libya’s rebels [14], the New Yorker has
recently confirmed that the US has trained members of the Iranian opposition
group Mujahideen-e-Khalq in Nevada [15], a US State Department listed terrorist
organization (#29) [16] responsible for
the recent assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists [17]. As the UN warns
that weapons such as rocket-propelled grenades and explosives from Libya
may reach Boko Haram [18], armed Tuareg fighters in northern Mali have been
seen operating in army issue Toyota Hi-Lux technical trucks [19], armed with
mortars, machine guns, anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons originally belonging
to the LIFG, al-Qaeda affiliated Libyan rebels [20]. UN reports also disclose
that Boko Haram members from Nigeria and Chad had received training at Al-Qaeda
camps in Mali in 2011 [21].
Nigerian recruits were reportedly trained
in an earlier incarnation of AQIM, referred to as the Algerian Groupe Salafiste
pour la Prédication et le Combat (GSPC) [22], and superficial aspects of Boko
Haram’s operations reflect Nigeria’s 1982 Maitatsine uprisings, a
fundamentalism movement countering perceived government oppression [23]. As
sectarian violence continues unimpeded, the prospects for a civil war between
Nigeria’s economically dominant Christians in the South and marginalized
Muslims in the North remains ever present. Although most Nigerians find
themselves less divided by religious differences and more victimized by the
nations notoriously corrupt political institutions, outside forces funding Boko
Haram’s deplorable campaign of violence are bent on exploiting tension between
Nigeria’s two largest religious groups.
A divided and warring Nigeria ultimately
serves the interests of the United States as cited by Zbigniew Brzezinski, top
adviser to Barack Obama and leading US foreign policy theoretician. Brzezinski,
who co-founded the Trilateral Commission and openly credits himself with the
creation of the Afghan Mujahideen [24], has influenced policy that encourages
the division of existing nation-states by the succession and emergence of
microstates, based on all cultural, ethnic and religious peculiarities. Author
and historian Dr. Webster G. Tarpley writes, “For Africa, Brzezinski recommends
the so-called ‘micro-nationalities’ concept, which means that national
boundaries established in the 19th century should be swept aside in favor of a
crazy quilt of petty tribal entities, each one so small that it could not hope
to resist even a medium-sized oil multinational” [25].
Following the mass exodus of Chinese
business interests during the Libyan conflict, a shattered Nigeria would
ultimately create conditions where China’s growing cooperation with Abuja can
be challenged and ultimately, disrupted. China has provided extensive economic,
military and political support to Nigeria, an important source of oil and
petroleum for Beijing. In addition to sponsoring Nigeria for a permanent seat in
the UN Security Council [26], China has invested in Africa’s booming
telecommunications market by building and launching a geostationary commercial
satellite, owned by Nigeria and operated in Abuja, [27] as a gesture of
increased partnership between the two nations. In 2010, China and Nigeria
signed a $23 billion deal to construct three fuel refineries in Nigeria, adding
an extra 750,000 barrels per day of domestic refining capacity [28].
While Algerian intelligence confirms a
direct link between Boko Haram and western-financed AQIM [29], Boko Haram
spokesman Abu Qaqa claims to have visited Mecca with Boko Haram leader Abubakar
Shekau, where the group received financial and technical support from Al-Qaeda
in Saudi Arabia (AQAP) [30]. While US officials acknowledge the presence of
Al-Qaeda within the militant Syrian opposition [31], the Saudi Arabian Monarchy
and other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) have created a
multimillion-dollar fund to pay salaries to members of the rebel Free Syrian Army,
to encourage soldiers to defect from the Syrian military and join opposition
ranks [32], as part of an ongoing regime change program. A recently released
subcommittee report issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security
entitled “Boko Haram: Emerging Threat
to the US Homeland” [33] further indicates the long-term objectives of
counter terrorism operations in the region. The document reiterates the
importance of sensitive resources within the Niger Delta region, and calls for
using extrajudicial assassinations and unmanned aerial drone bombardments to
combat the growing threat of Boko Haram in northern Nigeria.
The United States Army War College in
Carlisle, Pennsylvania conducted a series of African war game scenarios in
preparation for the Pentagon’s expansion of AFRICOM under the Obama
Administration. One scenario tested the US Africa Command’s capacity to respond
to a disintegrating Nigeria on the verge of collapse amidst civil war, by
sending 20,000 US troops to battle vying rebel factions seeking to control the
Niger Delta oil fields [34]. At a press conference at the House Armed Services
Committee on March 13, 2008, former AFRICOM Commander, General William Ward stated
that AFRICOM would operate under the theatre-goal of “combating terrorism” to prioritize the issue of America’s
growing dependence on African oil [35]. At an AFRICOM Conference held at Fort
McNair on February 18, 2008, Vice Admiral Robert T. Moeller openly declared the
guiding principle of AFRICOM is to protect “the free flow of natural resources from Africa to the global market”,
before citing China’s increasing presence in the region as challenging to
American interests [36].
In 2007, US State Department advisor Dr.
J. Peter Pham commented on AFRICOM’s strategic objectives of "protecting
access to hydrocarbons and other strategic resources which Africa has in
abundance, a task which includes ensuring against the vulnerability of those
natural riches and ensuring that no other interested third parties, such as
China, India, Japan, or Russia, obtain monopolies or preferential
treatment." [37] As covertly supporting terrorist organizations to achieve
foreign policy aims appears to be the commanding prerequisite of foreign policy
operations under the Obama Administration, Boko Haram exists as a separate arm
of the US destabilization apparatus, aimed at shattering Africa’s most populous
nation and biggest potential market. As Russia and China continue to assert
themselves in the UNSC against calls to intervene on behalf of Syria’s militant
opposition, the international community must adequately investigate the sources
responsible for orchestrating insurgent activity in the Sahel and reprimand
those parties accordingly.
Notes
[1] Triumphant Tuareg rebels fall out over al-Qaeda's
jihad in Mali, The Telegraph, April 07, 2012
[2] Suicide Bomb Attack in Divided Nigeria Damages 2 Churches, The New York Times, April 8, 2012
[3] Who are Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamists? BBC, January 11, 2012
[2] Suicide Bomb Attack in Divided Nigeria Damages 2 Churches, The New York Times, April 8, 2012
[3] Who are Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamists? BBC, January 11, 2012
[4] Nigeria stunned by Kano attacks that killed more than
150, Los Angeles Times, January 21, 2012
[5] Nigeria's
Goodluck Jonathan: Officials back Boko Haram, BBC, January 8, 2012
[6] Abuja
attack: Car bomb hits Nigeria UN building, BBC, August 26, 2011
[7] Mali's coup matters in London, too, The
Guardian, April 3, 2012
[8] Boko Haram’s funding traced to UK, S/Arabia, The Nigerian Tribune, February 13, 2012
[9] Al-Qaida makes a move on troubled Nigeria,
UPI, June 17, 2010
[10] France defends arms airlift to Libyan rebels,
Reuters, June 30, 2011
[11] Surveillance and Coordination With NATO Aided Rebels,
The New York Times, August 21, 2011
[12] Top US General warns of coordination between
al-Qaeda-linked African terror groups, The Telegraph, March 01, 2012
[13] Statement of General Carter Ham U.S. Army Commander,
United States Africa Command, AFRICOM, February 29, 2012
[14] Libya: al-Qaeda among Libya rebels, Nato chief fears,
The Telegraph, March 29, 2011
[15] Our Men in Iran? The New Yorker, April 6,
2012
[16] Foreign Terrorist Organizations, Bureau of
Counterterrorism, U.S. Department of State, Janurary 27, 2012
[17] 'US operated deep in Iran, trained assassins',
YNET News, April 8, 2012
[18] Spiking Arms Proliferation, Organized Crime,
Terrorism, Part of Fallout from Libyan Crisis Afflicting Sahel, Security
Council Told, United Nations, January 26, 2012
[19] Arab Spring Bleeds Deeper into Africa,
Asia Times March 24, 2012
[20] Qaddafi’s Weapons, Taken by Old Allies, Reinvigorate
an Insurgent Army in Mali, The New York Times, February 5, 2012
[21] Arms from Libya could reach Boko Haram, al Qaeda: U.N.
Reuters, Jan 26, 2012
[22] An Interview With Abdelmalek Droukdal, The
New York Times, July 1, 2008
[23] Is Nigeria al-Qaeda’s new frontier? Geneva
Centre for Security Policy, March 20, 2012
[24] How Jimmy Carter and I Started the Mujahideen,
Counterpunch, January 15, 1998
[25] Obama: The Postmodern Coup: Making of a Manchurian
Candidate, Dr. Webster Griffin Tarpley, Progressive Press,
2008
[26] UN
Security Council: China Backs Nigeria, AllAfrica, October 29, 2004
[27] China Builds And Launches A Satellite For Nigeria,
The Washington Post, May
14, 2007
[28] Nigeria
and china sign $23bn deal for three refineries, BBC, May 14, 2010
[29] Algeria says Nigeria's Boko Haram tied to al Qaeda,
Reuters, November 13, 2011
[30] Boko Haram vows to fight until Nigeria establishes
sharia law, The Guardian, January 27, 2012
[31] Al-Qaeda infiltrating Syrian opposition, U.S.
officials say, The Washington Post, February 17, 2012
[32] Saudi Arabia, Gulf countries to fund Free Syrian Army,
The China Post, April 2, 2012
[33] Boko Haram: Emerging Threat to the US Homeland,
United States Department of Homeland Security, 2011
[34] Africa:
U.S. Military Holds War Games on Nigeria, Somalia, AllAfrica, August
14, 2009
[35] Ibid
[36] Ibid
[25] China and the Congo Wars: AFRICOM. America's New
Military Command, Centre for Research on Globalization, November 26,
2008
Nile Bowie is an independent writer and photojournalist based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; he regularly contributes to Tony Cartalucci's Land Destroyer Report and Professor Michel Chossudovsky's Global Research Twitter: @NileBowie

