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Saturday, 15 November 2014
Ex-military chiefs to FG: Block Boko Haram food supply
Former
senior
military
officers
have
asked
President
Goodluck
Jonathan to declare total war on Boko Haram.
The retired senior officers, including a former
Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, who spoke
with SUNDAY PUNCH in seperate interviews,
insisted that there was the need for the Federal
Government to cut off food and fuel supplies to
the insurgents to weaken their strength. They said
government should engage the sect head-on to
end the insurgency by the group .
To prosecute the war, they also advised the
Federal Government to consider other
alternatives to the United States on arms
procurement.
Although President Jonathan had, in his
nationwide Democracy Day broadcast in Abuja on
May 29, 2014, directed the armed forces to launch
a full-scale military operation against Boko
Haram, the Generals expressed the belief that the
war against the insurgents was not full-scale yet.
To clarify what total war implies, a retired Colonel
in the Nigerian Army, Paul Ogbebor, told SUNDAY
PUNCH it was distinct from other types of war.
He said, “There are many types of war. We have
insurgency and the operational mode is internal
security operations; that is what we have been
doing. There is the guerrilla warfare, which the
terrorists are using; they hit and melt away.
“We also have the conventional warfare, which
the President and Commander-in-Chief must
declare and determine the mode. It could be a
police action, which is the lowest level of warfare.
He could say he is fighting a war of invasion on
enemies encroaching on our territory. That is the
type of war we should be fighting now to uproot
the enemy.”
Ogbebor, who is one of the first Nigerians to be
admitted into the Nigerian Defence Academy,
Kaduna, stressed that the country had yet to
begin a full war as it had not applied its national
might.
“When you say you are fighting a war, it means
that the federal troops are the friendly forces,
while Boko Haram should be the enemy forces. It
also means that the friendly forces must do
everything to defeat the sect.
“As of now, we are fighting insurgency. It is not a
national task because, if it were, everything would
be directed towards it,” he said.
He, however, said that with less than 200,000
military officers, the country lacked adequate
forces to engage in full-scale fighting. He stated
that adequate recruitment of both new and
retired officers (reserves) to fill up the loopholes
was required.
Ogbebor said, “The army of 150,000 should be
quickly built up to a minimum of about 500,000 so
that we can capture the ground and occupy it
sufficiently. Retired officers should remain in their
places and join the police for internal security.
Internal security should go side by side with total
war. What happened in Kontagora or Yobe should
not happen; we should have men on the ground
for surveillance.”
Citing the Nigerian Civil War, also referred to as
the Biafran War, Gowon told SUNDAY PUNCH the
purpose of the war was to defeat the insurgents
who decided to take up arms against the state.
He said if the aim of Boko Haram was to divide
the country, then all efforts must be geared
towards crushing the sect.
“We are not fighting the people; we are fighting
these insurgent groups. Just like during the civil
war, I did not fight all the Igbo people, I only
fought those who took up arms against the
authorities. There was the order that whatever
you do, you should not harm the ordinary people:
women, children and old people. It is only those
who took up arms against you. That is really the
meaning of all-out war — not against the people.
“If the people are backing them (Boko Haram),
then they have to contend with the fury of
government to restore law and order. I think this
is the way it should be understood. It is not
fighting a war against the ordinary people, who, in
any way, would be running away from the war.
“If anyone takes up arms against you and decides
to establish what they call an Islamic state, then I
think you can deal with them, because they are
really trying to break the country and that must
not be allowed,” Gowon said.
On the implications of the war on civilians in the
affected areas, Ogbebor said the effects could be
managed by the Federal Government as was
done during the Nigerian Civil War.
He said, “There is always such a situation in the
enemy’s territory where we have to find a way to
cut off supplies to the enemies — food, water,
communication and electricity — in order to stop
things that will encourage them to continue with
the war. We had that in the civil war and it was
effective.
Similarly, a former Military Administrator of
Bauchi and Osun states, Col. Theophilus
Bamigboye (retd.) said he was in support of the
Federal Government declaring a full-scale war
against Boko Haram.
He told one of our correspondents on Friday that
the menace of the insurgents and their
occupation of territories in Nigeria were taking a
long time and it was bad for the image of the
country.
Like Gowon and Ogbebor, he expressed his
support for any measure taken to flush out the
insurgents and return normalcy to the troubled
areas.
Bamigboye stated that there was the need to
adopt high-powered intelligence to know the
actual location of the insurgents and the most
appropriate approach to adopt to end their
menace.
He said, “You can imagine the strategies adopted
(by Nigerian forces) so far and the insurgents are
still occupying some Nigerian territories; the issue
is still on. I will advocate for a full-scale war so
that we can finish the insurgents. It is no longer a
local thing.
“We should declare a conventional warfare so
that we can deal with this situation and forget
about it because the pain and the destruction are
going on for too long. I will support a full-scale
war against the insurgents.”
In the same vein, a former Military Governor of
Kaduna State, Col. Abubakar Umar (retd.), said
“total war” had begun in Nigeria since 2009, when
Boko Haram began its attacks.
He said, “Nigeria has been at war with Boko
Haram in the last four and a half years. The
President simply made an emphasis in his speech,
perhaps out of anger concerning what had
transpired two or three months before, where
Boko Haram had been torturing one town after
another.
“He was simply trying to emphasise that Nigeria
was indeed at war and that all hands must be on
deck in this war against Boko Haram. Many
politicians have considered the Boko Haram
attacks as insurgency happening in a distant
corner of Nigeria.”
The former military administrator pointed out
that Boko Haram was to Nigeria what ISIS was to
the Middle East, adding that they both threatened
global peace and security.
Efforts to get the Presidency to comment on the
calls for total war were unsuccessful. A presidency
source, who would not have his name mentioned,
simply asked SUNDAY PUNCH to direct its
enquiries to the Army.
But attempts to get the reaction of the Defence
Headquarters on the issue did not yield any result
as calls made to the Director, Defence
Information, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, indicated
that his phone was either switched off or out of
network coverage area.
However, findings by our correspondents
indicated that Olukolade was out of the country.
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