It has been reported through information gathered from a
senior military source at Nigeria’s Defense Headquarters that the country’s
military high command has formally decided to discard the “peace talks” between
the Federal Government and Boko Haram.
“As far as the military authority is concerned, the
activities of the [Federal] government’s Committee on Dialogue and Peaceful
Resolution of the Security Challenges in the North, led by Alhaji Kabiru Tanimu
Turaki, have not achieved the expected result. We are now using new strategies
in our operations against Boko Haram,” the source said.
The senior military officer said the military was now
re-strategizing its operations and tactics in view of its
discovery that the Boko Haram sect was re-grouping and
plotting a renewed insurgency with the aid a foreign terrorist network.
The source said the military has made it known to the
Presidency that the amnesty committee now constitutes a distraction to their
counter-insurgency response. “As those who have to fight [Boko Haram] on the
ground, we think that the amnesty panel somehow undermines aspects of military
operations. That is why the panel can no longer be considered in regards to the
situation at hand,” he stated.
He said that Nigeria’s Chief of Defense Staff as well as the
heads of the Army, Navy, Air Force, the police and the director-general of the
Department of State Security have been briefed on the new development. “They
are all on board, and they have all agreed that we need to re-strategize in
order to contain the new moves Boko Haram is making.”
According to the source, “From our findings and [the]
reality of the situation, there cannot be dialogue with these Boko Haram
elements. They are only the domestic face of an international terror group that
is well-funded, and with organized units charting their interests. That is why
we have to re-strategize and continuing our military operations without letting
the dialogue stand in our way.”
The source added that mixing politics and insurgency
challenge questionable policy. “It is not healthy and it greatly undermines
military response to an issue that is threatening the sovereignty of the
Nigerian state. Boko Haram, from our frank findings, is a domestic face of a
global terrorism network. They have organization and tactical support. On what
basis do you now dialogue with them?”
Asked to elaborate on the international dimension of Boko
Haram, the source said: “During the first and second week of the state of emergency,
we dismantled their camps and captured their bases in border areas with Niger
Republic, Chad and Cameroon. Their coming back in Malum Fatori and other areas
shows they have been mobilized beyond the borders of [Nigeria]. They were well
armed and more sophisticated than ever before. It is clear they are a local
face of something outside, and we must not politicize. Rather we have agreed
that the issue should now be faced squarely.”
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