Clash of Counterterrorism-Assistance-Seeking States and their Super Power Sponsors: Implications on the War Against Boko Haram
Clash of Counterterrorism-Assistance-Seeking States and their Super Power Sponsors: Implications on the War Against Boko Haram
Decade-long security cooperation and counterterrorism engagements in Nigeria have failed to bring down Boko Haram or at least weaken its terrorist structures and transnational spread. I argue that disconnects between counterterrorism-assistance seeking states and their superpower sponsors are implicated in the intractability of Boko Haram's insurgency in Nigeria. Why is the U.S. counterterrorism intervention to individual MNJTF countries (i.e. troop contribution, military funding and intelligence support) 'lopsided', 'fragmented' and 'unevenly distributed;' and how are these implicated in the fight against Boko Haram terrorism? This has impacted negatively on MNJTF countries - lack of cooperation, divisiveness and individualism in coordinating and forging offensives against Boko Haram. These concerns interface several blind spots in the picture of external influences on military's approach to Boko Haram. I elicit primary data from top military officers. I conclude by predicting the implications and consequences of these counterterrorism complexities, and their potency to defeat or encourage Boko Haram terror.
CITATION: Iwuoha, Victor Chidubem. Clash of Counterterrorism-Assistance-Seeking States and their Super Power Sponsors: Implications on the War Against Boko Haram . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2018. African Security Review, Vol. 28, Issue 1, 2019, PP. 38-55 - Available at: https://library.au.int/clash-counterterrorism-assistance-seeking-states-and-their-super-power-sponsors-implications-war