Obama wrong on Nigerians
By okey ndibe
(E-mail: okndibe@yahoo.com )
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
The title of this column, which sets out to make a subtle differentiation between
Nigeria and Nigerians, is carefully chosen.
President Barack Obama has every reason to be dismayed with the Nigerian state,
and specifically with the misbegotten lot who pass for the country’s leadership.
Nobody is more ashamed of the mediocrities presiding over Nigeria’s affairs
than enlightened Nigerians. The absence of even a credible pretence to a legitimate
leadership in Abuja is a source of embarrassment and great pain for Nigerians.
That gap must be also be galling for the first person of African descent to
occupy the US presidency. And especially at a time like this when Americans
just managed, by sheer luck verging on a miracle, to escape a heinous plot orchestrated
to have maximum psychological impact on Americans and the rest of us. Had Farouk
Abdulmuttalab and his al Qaeda sponsors realized their dastardly designs, they
would have send tremors down the spine of America and its allies around the
world.
President Obama also stood to pay a huge political price had the Delta flight
exploded over Detroit, as the foiled bomber had planned. Such a colossal calamity
would have poured fuel into extreme rightwing charges – anchored by former
Vice President Dick Cheney – that Obama was not only unserious about combating
terrorism, but was, in fact, cozying up to rabid groups out to destroy America.
To his credit, Obama recognizes that the war against terrorists is far more
complex than the George W. Bush crowd allowed. Until now, Obama has steered
the war away from the Bush mindset that often came close to pillorying Islam
– and certainly emphasized extravagant displays of firepower.
For all its pyrotechnic moments, the Bush approach made little progress in its
mission to cripple terrorists. In some ways, in fact, Bush’s anti-terrorism
doctrine, with its binary focus, its us-versus-them template may well have fertilized
al Qaeda’s radicalization and recruitment of otherwise moderate, educated
and liberal Muslims.
Obama was right to chart a different course. Far from abandoning the option
of force, he merely rejected the abuse of that response. He reckoned that force
ought not to be deployed where diplomacy had better prospects to promote dialogue
and establish a sense of shared values or common interests.
My fear is that, in the wake of the aborted bombing by Abdulmuttalab, the Obama
administration has moved too hastily to tar Nigerians. If there was an occasion
when the sins of one depraved young Nigerian should not be visited on other
Nigerians, this was it.
One point has been made again and again, but it bears belaboring. Abdulmuttalab’s
odyssey as a terrorist had very little, if anything, to do with Nigeria. By
all accounts, he fell under al Qaeda’s spell in the UK and was trained
and equipped for his deadly mission in Yemen. Nigeria came into the picture
of his plot at all only because he passed through a Nigerian airport en route.
And here’s another fact to consider: the moment the young terrorist’s
father got an inkling that his son had fallen among zealots intent on wreaking
havoc in the US, the man ran to tell US authorities what he knew. That the young
man was able to board a US-bound flight sporting his lethal underwear bespeaks
a profound failure on the part of an extensive network of US intelligence.
Obama has admitted that American intelligence did worse than fumble the ball;
it did not even come close to going for the ball. Even so, President Obama has
balked at suggestions that he fire one or more custodians of intelligence. His
argument is that the failure was a systemic one, not a matter of laxity on the
part of personnel.
Perhaps that’s the right call. But it’s baffling that an Obama who
has chosen to be magnanimous towards inept officers and intelligence agencies
has signed off on a policy that amounts to grave injustice to Nigerians. Everything
considered, there’s neither logic nor justice in portraying Nigeria as
an address to watch for terrorists when Britain and Saudi Arabia are not on
the list.
Shock, disgust and disbelief defined Nigerians’ collective reaction on
learning that Farouk Abdulmuttalab, the would-be Christmas day bomber, was a
Nigerian. Until the enterprising saharareporters.com produced the first photo
of Farouk, and identified his father, many Nigerians were certain that he was
an impostor who had somehow traveled under the cover of a Nigerian passport.
Nigeria has had a long and ugly history of outbreaks of religious violence –
on the domestic front. Adherents of some extremist or fringe Islamic group often
trigger these sprees of sectarian bloodletting when they launch unprovoked attacks
on Christians and other perceived “infidels.”
On the whole, the Nigerian state has a shameful record of confronting these
homegrown zealots. It has often deployed mere words of warning, even exhortations
of moderation to these bloodhounds. One thing it’s hardly done is to come
down hard on these killers in God’s name, or to follow through with prosecution.
Official apathy to episodes of religious mayhem has served to encourage their
recurrence.
In fact, the frequency and gruesomeness of such attacks seemed to wane only
when the victims, figuring out that the Nigerian government lacked the will
and muscle to protect them, learned to arm themselves and repel their assailants.
If Nigerians pose any serious threat to Americans, it’s likely to be Americans
visiting Nigeria. A Nigerian transporting mass violence to America is extremely
rare.
That’s why Nigerians regard Abdulmuttalab, rightly, as both a fluke as
well as a non-Nigerian threat. He’s Nigerian by birth, sure. But he is,
fundamentally, a hired-in-Britain, trained-in-Yemen al Qaeda operative. Nigeria
had little or no role in his logistical preparation for the mission of death
he undertook. He does not in any way represent an emerging trend in Nigeria.
In fact, I concur with the conclusion of a friend who speculated that, had Farouk
lived in Nigeria, he would never have been radicalized to take up explosives
against the US.
Perhaps, as some Nigerians suspect, the Obama administration has chosen to exploit
the terrifying circumstances of December 25 as an opportunity to further underscore
Nigeria’s pariah status. If that’s the idea, it’s a sad mistake.
Nigerians would welcome it if Obama toughened his administration’s stance
against the imposed government of Mr. Umaru Yar’Adua. It’s a different
matter when the US imposes strictures that compound the travails of innocent
Nigerians.
The designation of Nigeria as a garden of terror could not have come at a worse
moment. Nigeria is in the midst of a crisis never seen in its history –
the absolute disappearance of a man who presumes to be the country’s “president”
and his cohorts’ insistence on monopolizing power.
As the power game plays out, nobody has bothered to address a nation-wide fuel
scarcity that’s crippled the country as well as worsening power failures.
The parasites exploiting Nigeria are too comfortable to care.
Obama’s policy consigns all Nigerians to the undeserved category of terrorists
– until you prove otherwise. He would do better to review that policy
along the lines that recognize the veritable chasm between Nigeria’s “leaders”
and its people. Let America officially declare those who are running Nigeria
aground as terrorists, and spare the vast majority of us who have nothing in
common with Abdulmuttalab.