David Axelrod |
Barack Obama |
Dr. Goodluck E. Jonathan |
Obama Accused of Obstructing Battle Against Boko Haram to Frustrate President Jonathan Administration and Promote His Political Adviser and Campaign Strategist David Axelrod’s Consultant to General Buhari
According to reports from Accurancy
Media there are signs that President Obama is frustrating the battle Against
Boko Haram to floor President Jonathan’s government, thereby promote the
services of David Axelrod’s his adviser engaged by the opposition party as
their political and campaign adviser.
When the notorious Islamic terrorist
group, Boko Haram, kidnapped 278 school girls from the town of
Chibok in northeastern Nigeria last year, Michelle Obama began a Twitter hashtag campaign, #BringBackOurGirls. But
behind the scenes, the Obama administration was undermining Nigeria’s efforts
to take the battle to the terrorists. Obama refused to sell Nigeria arms and
supplies critical to the fight, and stepped in to block other Western allies
from doing so. The administration also denied Nigeria intelligence on Boko Haram from
drones operating in the area. While Boko Haram was kidnapping school girls, the
U.S. cut petroleum purchases from Nigeria to zero,
plunging the nation’s economy into turmoil and raising concerns about its
ability to fund its battle against the terrorists. Nigeria responded by cancelling a military training agreement between
the two countries.
The Nigerian presidential election
is coming up Saturday, March 28, 2015. AKPD, the political consulting group
founded by Obama confidante David Axelrod, is assisting Retired Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, a Muslim
presidential candidate from Muslim-dominated northern Nigeria, where Boko Haram
was spawned and wields the most influence. Buhari is well-known throughout the
country, having led as “Head-of-State” following a military coup in 1983. He
was dislodged following another coup in 1985.
Democracy is a recent phenomenon in
Nigeria. With the exception of two short periods from its independence in 1960
to 1966, and the second republic from 1979 to 1983, the country was ruled by a
string of military dictatorships between 1966 and 1999.
Under the All Progressives Congress
(APC) banner, Buhari is putting up a stiff challenge to the sitting president,
Dr. Ebele Goodluck Jonathan who hails from Nigeria’s Christian south. Buhari was
also the North’s presidential candidate in the last election held in 2011.
Axelrod is credited as the force
behind President Obama’s election victories in 2008 and 2012. He served as
Obama’s Senior Advisor until 2011. A well-placed Nigerian interviewed for this
report who asked to remain unidentified says that influential Nigerians within
and outside the government believe Obama deliberately undermined the war effort
and sabotaged the Nigerian economy to make President Jonathan appear weak and
ineffectual, and thus bolster the electoral prospects for AKPD’s client,
Buhari.
The prominent daily Nigerian
Tribune cites an activist group, Move on Nigeria, complaining that the U.S. is fueling tension in
Nigeria and has “continued to publicly magnify every challenge of the Nigerian
government.”
An anti-Buhari Nigerian blogger
writing in the Western Post went further:
In the last year, Nigeria sought aid
from the White House for many initiatives, including the fight against Boko
Haram.
The Obama administration refused to
do anything but play [sic] lip service to Nigeria’s requests. However,
it used public and private channels to internationally magnify every failure
Nigeria’s government experienced.
In the last year, since the
involvement of Axelrod’s firm, relations between the two nations have
significantly deteriorated, with the US refusing to sell arms to Nigeria, a
significant reduction in the purchase of Nigeria’s oil, and the cancellation of
a military training agreement between Nigeria and the USA.
In turn, the Buhari-led Nigerian
opposition used the U.S. government’s position as validation for their claim
that the Nigerian government was a failure.
Nigerian officials seeking to
purchase weapons, especially Cobra attack helicopters, were outraged at Obama’s
refusal to allow these transactions. Nigeria’s ambassador to the U.S.,
Professor Adebowale Adefuye, stated publicly that:
The U.S. government has up till
today refused to grant Nigeria’s request to purchase lethal equipment that
would have brought down the terrorists within a short time on the basis of the
allegations that Nigeria’s defence forces have been violating human rights of
Boko Haram suspects when captured or arrested.
We find it difficult to understand
how and why, in spite of the U.S. presence in Nigeria, with their sophisticated
military technology, Boko Haram should be expanding and becoming more deadly.
Another official quoted in the
Nigerian newspaper ThisDay, stated:
The U.S. government has frustrated
Nigeria all the way in our war against terrorism despite its public statements
in support of Nigeria, as it fights the Boko Haram insurgents in the
North-east… They want us to fight Boko Haram with our arms tied to our backs.
They have blocked us from procuring
the helicopters and would not provide us with intelligence despite the fact
that they have several drones and sophisticated aircraft overflying the
North-east of Nigeria from bases in Niger and Chad where the Boko Haram
fighters and movements are clearly in their sights.
Retired Col. Abubakar Umar, a former
military governor, concluded that the Americans “have decided to turn a blind
eye to what is happening in Nigeria.”
Former Head-of-State, Retired Gen.
Yakubu Gowon publicly stated last November that America is no friend of Nigeria.
After exhausting all avenues, the
Nigerian government finally turned to Russia, China and the black market to obtain needed arms, and as a
result has gone aggressively on the offensive against Boko Haram, retaking some 40 towns occupied by the group and killing at least 500 terrorists. According to
recent accounts, Boko Haram has gone to ground in the northeastern border
regions. But whereas the border states of Niger, Chad, Benin and Cameroon formerly took a hands-off approach, they
have now joined in the effort to destroy the group, pledging a total of 8,700 troops. Most recently, Boko Haram has been cleared of its northeastern strongholds in Borno,
Yobe and Adamawa.
U.S. Excuses
The Obama administration has said it
is barred from supplying weapons by the so-called Leahy Amendment which forbids foreign states that
have committed “gross human rights violations” from receiving military aid.
However this did not stop the U.S. from sending Special Forces
to Uganda—another country accused of such violations—to assist in capturing
Lord Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony. Nor did it prevent Obama from
supporting al Qaeda-linked rebel groups in Libya, who later went on to attack
the Benghazi mission, and have now joined ISIS. The Syrian “moderates” the
administration claimed to back are also allegedly joining with ISIS.
In fact, Obama supported the Islamic
radicals who destabilized states throughout the Middle East, including Tunisia,
Libya and Egypt, and did little to prevent Iranian-backed Shiites from
overthrowing Yemen—a key ally in the War on Terror. And despite claims that the
U.S. “does not negotiate with terrorists,” the administration did so in secret with the Taliban for years, most
notoriously over the release of Bowe Bergdahl.
The U.S. State Department is
currently negotiating a deal that will enable Iran to obtain the bomb, and it
just declared that Iran and its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah, are not terrorists. The administration even claims
Iran has been an ally in the War on Terror! Finally, Axelrod’s client, Buhari,
has been accused of human rights abuses during his
time as chief-of-state.
To top it off, Secretary of State
John Kerry made a mockery of the administration’s pretext by hinting in January
meetings with both Jonathan and Buhari that the Obama administration might
allow weapon sales after the
election. If the U.S. was so concerned about human rights
violations, how could a mere election change that? Given the perception that
Buhari has Obama’s implicit support, this sends an unmistakable message.
The administration also rationalized
its decision to cut purchases of Nigerian oil by claiming that output from
domestic oil fracking has reduced America’s dependence on foreign oil. But that
begs the question: why have U.S. oil imports from other nations increased at
the same time? Nigeria was formerly among America’s top five oil supplying countries, and America its
largest customer. Nigeria relies on oil revenues for 70 percent of its budget. America’s decision to
look elsewhere has been catastrophic for Nigeria’s economy.
A Deutsche Bank analyst noted that the decline in Nigeria’s oil sales to
America “proceeded much faster than for the U.S.’ other major suppliers,” and
concluded that singling Nigeria out this way had to be driven by politics.
Nigeria is not the only country
where Obama is using oil as a foreign policy weapon. The U.S. has not renewed its 35-year-old agreement with
Israel to provide emergency supplies of oil, despite booming U.S. oil
production. The agreement expired in November 2014. At the time, the State
Department claimed to be working on renewing the agreement,
but has yet to do so.
U.S. Media AWOL
There is not a single article
mentioning Axelrod’s assistance to Buhari in any U.S. “mainstream” media
outlet. Only the Washington Free Beacon ran a story.
A Google search of “New York Times,
Nigeria, Axelrod,” found only one Times article titled Nigerian Soldiers Noticeably Absent in Town Taken from Boko
Haram. There was no mention of Axelrod or his relationship to
Nigeria’s Muslim candidate, Buhari. Rather, it criticized Nigeria’s
participation in the recent multi-country effort to remove Boko Haram from its
northeastern Nigerian holdouts, quoting Chadian foreign minister, Moussa Faki
Mahamat, who said, “The Nigerian Army has not succeeded in facing up to Boko
Haram.”
There are however, many flattering
articles about Axelrod, like the Times review of his book, Believer.
NBC News reported on the oil issue, quoting Peter
Pham, the Atlantic Council’s director of its Africa Program, who characterized it
as “a sea change in [Nigeria’s] relations with the United States, a sea change
in its geopolitical position in the world.”
NBC also noted Nigerian ambassador
Adefuye’s complaint about U.S. refusal to provide weapons to Nigeria, and how
both issues impacted Nigeria’s ability to fight Boko Haram—but there was no
mention of Axelrod’s assistance to Buhari.
Buhari Connected to Boko Haram?
Boko Haram is a virulently
anti-Western Islamist movement. Its name, roughly translated, means “fake education is forbidden,” but in practice the
term “fake” refers to Western education. It was founded in 2002 by Mohammed
Yusuf, a Salafist preacher who created a school to provide an Islamic
alternative to Westernized schools. Over time it became a recruiting tool for
Boko Haram fighters. The group envisions creating an Islamic caliphate
throughout Africa. Yusuf was killed by police in a 2009 uprising, and was
replaced by Abubakar Shekau, who recently pledged the group’s alliance with ISIS. Let’s review just what kind
of monsters these Boko Haram terrorists are:
- Causing at least 9,000 and as many as 17,000 deaths since launching their insurgency in 2009. Another 1.5 million have been displaced;
- Burning entire villages to the ground;
- Beheading, torture and other forms of barbarity reminiscent of ISIS;
- Massacring 2,000 civilian men, women and children in a single raid;
- Deliberately targeting children for massacre;
- Using young girls as suicide bombers. A January bombing wounded 18 and killed 20, including the 10-year-old female bomber, who was probably unaware she carried the device;
- Kidnapping over 500 girls in the past 5 years, including 276 in the notorious Chibok private school raid. About 90 percent of the Chibok girls were Christians;
- Separating captured Christian girls from others, where they are raped, sold into slavery, murdered, or forced to convert; and
- Training young children to be soldiers.
Certain Buhari supporters such as
Ango Abdullahi of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), have been accused of
tacitly supporting Boko Haram, and Jonathan’s Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) has linked Buhari himself with the terrorists. The
alleged connection however, is an open question. In 2013, Buhari protested a government crackdown on the
group. In 2012, Boko Haram nominated Buhari as one of six mediators in
negotiations with the government over a proposed ceasefire. In 2001, Buhari
expressed his desire to see Nigeria ruled by Sharia law, saying:
I will continue to show openly and
inside me the total commitment to the Sharia movement that is sweeping all over
Nigeria… God willing, we will not stop the agitation for the total
implementation of the Sharia in the country.
However, Boko Haram attempted to assassinate Buhari last year in a
suicide bomb attack that killed 82. More recently, the group called both him and
Jonathan “Infidels.” For his part, Buhari called the group “bigots masquerading as
Muslims.” Buhari also ruthlessly suppressed a similar group, the
Maitatsine, during his time as military head-of-state. Buhari’s vice-presidential running mate is a Pentecostal
pastor from the south. Similarly, Jonathan picked a Muslim from the north as
his number two.
But much violence has surrounded
Buhari’s past efforts. Nigeria has a practice of alternating northern and
southern rule called zoning. In the 2011 election, Jonathan was
president, having ascended from the vice presidency in 2010
following the death of President Umaru Yar’Adau, a northerner. Some
Northern politicians believed that Buhari should have assumed the presidency in
2011.
Abdullahi and others, at that time,
threatened violence if Buhari wasn’t elected. Buhari himself refused to condemn violence. This was universally
interpreted as encouragement from Buhari. Within hours of Jonathan’s
election—what was believed to be one of Nigeria’s historically fairest—Buhari’s Muslim supporters
took to the streets, attacking Jonathan supporters with machetes and knives.
Following Jonathan’s inauguration, Boko Haram launched a wave of bombings, killing and wounding dozens.
An estimated 800 people died in the post-election
violence in the Muslim north.
A prominent Nigerian deputy
governor, Tele Ikuru, who recently abandoned the APC to
join Jonathan’s PDP, called the APC “a party of rebels, insurgents and
anarchists, clothed in the robes of pretence and deceit.”
Embarrassed by the kidnapping and
the perceived association between Buhari’s supporters and Boko Haram, AKPD
claimed that they discontinued work for Buhari in early 2014. However, The
Washington Free Beacon has unearthed emails showing that they continued to
quietly aid APC into at least January of this year.
Their campaign appears to have been
successful. While Nigerian election polls are conflicting, the most recent one projects Buhari the winner by a wide margin. Not
surprisingly, the reasons cited for Jonathan’s unpopularity include
the perception that he is weak and ineffectual against Boko Haram, and that the
economy is in a sorry state. Nigerians have taken to calling the president “Bad
Luck” Jonathan.
Nigeria’s Critical Role and U.S.
Policy Failures
Most Americans are unaware of the
critical role Nigeria plays in African politics. In addition to being Africa’s
largest oil producer, Nigeria is also the continent’s most populous nation,
with an estimated 162 million people, and is home to approximately 12.5 percent of the world’s total
black population. Additionally, Nigerian Americans are very productive and well
represented in the fields of medicine, sports, engineering, and academics.
Annual remittances are $21 billion, with America providing the largest
proportion. It is ironic at best that America’s so-called “first black
president” is alienating such a nation, especially given its powerful influence
throughout Africa.
Because of Obama, America is losing
allies the world over. Despite his so-called outreach to “the Muslim world,”
the few Muslim allies America has are calling him out. For example, observe the
unprecedented spectacle of Arabs cheering Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech before the U.S. Congress. Columnist
Dr. Ahmad Al-Faraj of the Saudi daily newspaper Al-Jazirah, called Obama “the worst president in American
history.” The only Muslims Obama seems to like are those who hate America, and
he is going out of his way to court them, come what may.
About
the author
James Simpson
James Simpson is an economist, businessman and investigative journalist. His articles have been published at American Thinker, Accuracy in Media, Breitbart, PJ Media, Washington Times, WorldNetDaily and others. His regular column is DC Independent Examiner. Follow Jim on Twitter & Facebook
James Simpson is an economist, businessman and investigative journalist. His articles have been published at American Thinker, Accuracy in Media, Breitbart, PJ Media, Washington Times, WorldNetDaily and others. His regular column is DC Independent Examiner. Follow Jim on Twitter & Facebook
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