Essential elements of intelligence and the intelligence cycle in overseas relations include what is better described as “the cover story”. It is an old conundrum referring to the story that is put out to the public and sustained as a narrative to mask far more strategic interests in government-to- government relations.It is based on that established thin line between the right to know and the need to know and indeed in diplomatic relations, if ordinary people are allowed to know everything, there will be utter chaos on the streets around the world.
I make this point in the light of the excitement that US Secretary of State John Kerry’s visit appears to be generating. He will visit Nigeria, August 23-24, after Kenya, 22-23, and from here, he will jet off to Saudi Arabia, 24-25.
The cover story is that he will hold talks with President Muhammadu
Buhari, Northern Governors and religious leaders, give a speech on “countering
violent extremism” in Sokoto, and thematically focus on “counter-terrorism
efforts, the economy, the fight against corruption and human rights issues”
during the trip. Nicely, correctly
crafted cover story! America loves Nigeria. America wants to help Nigeria. And
once we are told this story, even our foreign ministry officials get really
excited. They tell the President: “this is big! It shows America is supporting
the administration. Mr. President, America loves you, don’t mind those tweeps
on social media.” They would have forgotten most conveniently that Secretary
John Kerry has been visiting Africa since 2014, and before him, Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton did so too. We tend to be overly impressed by the
recognition, but we often fail to look beyond the cover story.
The Americans don’t consider a visit such as this the circus that we
think it is. And that is why the Foreign Affairs Ministry must put up its
thinking caps in preparing the briefing notes for President Buhari. They must
anticipate one critical question that the cover story does not cover: what does
America want? What is in this visit for the United States? And what does
Nigeria want? And what should the Nigerian President say to Mr. Kerry at that
critical moment when he suddenly requests for a one-on-one and all Presidential
assistants are asked to leave the room? That is usually where the rub is, that
critical moment when the Nigerian President is left alone with a strategic
guest and he may not know exactly what to say to messages and statements for
which he had not been prepared. And when the American envoy makes requests,
what should he say at that very moment? We have a lot at stake, and it is
important that this particular visit is not treated as another opportunity to
have a nice dinner party and showcase Nigerian culture and arts.
John Kerry attended President Buhari’s
inauguration in May 2015. This is what
he wrote, inter alia, after the
visit: “Last May, I shared in an
extraordinary moment. I had the privilege, together with many leaders from across
Africa, of bearing witness to the first peaceful, democratic transition of
power between two parties in Nigeria. I traveled to Lagos earlier this year to
emphasize that for the United States, Nigeria is an increasingly important
strategic partner with a critical role to play in the security and prosperity
of the region. I also said that it was imperative that these elections set a
new standard for democracy in the continent. There is no doubt that this is a
decisive moment for democracy in Africa…In Africa, as elsewhere, there is a
deep hunger for governments that are legitimate, honest and effective….”
Secretary of State Kerry will be visiting Nigeria tomorrow I believe, to
carry out a year-after, on-the-spot, hear-see-for-yourself assessment. He must have heard that a year after his last
visit, so much has happened in Nigeria, and the rest of Africa. Africa itself
is at a tipping point, growth has slowed down tragically, commodity prices have
declined, old problems and wounds have resurfaced, and democratic renewal has
not resulted in “honest and effective” governance, and in all this, Nigeria
faces special challenges; it is at the outmost edge of that tipping point. The threat level in the country has gone up,
policy uncertainty is high, the people’s voices are not being heard and
generally, things are hard: unemployment, security issues, human rights, and an
economy in recession capable of exacerbating social crisis and so on.
America will expect President Buhari to defend his administration. The
briefing notes must take care of that, but let no one be fooled: no one may
have talked about behind-the-scene meetings, the truth is that the American
team will not listen to only one side of the story. There will be undeclared meetings
with civil society, the opposition, the business community and other interest
groups, who in typical Nigerian fashion will speak their minds. Right now, that
may not be complimentary. Non-state actors are perhaps more important sources
of intelligence because intelligence is neither mere information nor publicity
or a strictly state-based activity. Take this: John Kerry may be visiting to
enable the American government make up its mind about the Buhari government.
But why should anyone care about what America thinks? We are after all,
a sovereign nation, and Secretary of State John Kerry should not even be
talking to President Buhari, he should meet with his counterpart in our own
foreign ministry. Hold it. The
difference is that America remains the world’s superior power and it does not joke
with its self-assigned role of the world’s police, even if at the centre of that
mix, is the paramount element of America’s national interest. Nigeria, being
the most populous country in Africa, and an oil-rich country with international
investments, is of strategic interest to the United States.
We are, by that fact also, a threat to
America’s interest in a number of ways. The first is the threat of Nigeria
becoming a festering spot for terrorism, and home of the world’s deadliest
terror group. Since May 2015, the Buhari administration has made efforts to
curb terrorism in the problematic parts of the North, but in the past few
weeks, with the re-appearance of Abubakar Shekau, the factionalisation of the Jama’t Ahl as-Sunnah lid Da’wah wa’l Jihad
with a faction led by Abu Musab al-Barnawi, and the further confirmation of a
linkage with the ISIL, it seems obvious that the threat of terrorism in Nigeria
is far from being resolved. The potential of that threat getting worse is even
far more evident now more than ever.
The second threat is the Niger Delta, and the resurgence of violence in
that volatile part of the world. America
may have discovered Shale oil and its reliance on Nigerian Brent crude may have
reduced, but American multinationals still have significant investments in Nigeria.
America has every reason to protect American investment and citizens. The third
threat is Nigeria’s continuing romance with China. The Jonathan administration
did not hide its interest in China and Sino-Nigerian relations. I believe his
administration paid dearly for this open, and well-intended friendship with
America’s rival in Africa. The Buhari administration continued in this regard,
where the Jonathan administration left off, since in any case, Nigeria is
non-aligned, but the sub-text is that the United States may not be too
comfortable with the Chinese encroachment on spaces it once occupied and the
open complicity of traditional allies in undermining American interest.
President Buhari should be briefed to listen very carefully to both what is spoken
and that which is unspoken.
The fourth threat is the security situation in the country. In the last month alone, both the United
States and the United Kingdom have released, perhaps the most damaging travel
warnings to their nationals living in or doing business in Nigeria. The UK
Foreign and Commonwealth Office advises against travel by British nationals to
11 states of the Federation, and strictly essential travel to another seven
states. The United States warns against travel to about 20 states. Both
countries cite “high threat from terrorism, kidnapping, violent crime and
demonstrations/civil unrest.” What is
left? It is as bad as both major partner-countries alleging that Nigeria is not
safe for anyone. Their European allies and other countries may not have issued
any travel warnings, but the disclaimers from the US and the UK can be taken as
a reflection of the assessment of the Nigerian situation and international
reaction to Nigeria’s change agenda since 2015.
Whoever is preparing the briefing notes for President Buhari should take
this into consideration.
And may I advise that the briefing should avoid the initial reaction by
Information Minister Lai Muhammed. He dismissed the travel warnings as untrue
and advised the Nigerian media to ignore and not promote the story. It actually seems as if the local media acted
as directed. Which is stupid. What has
been overlooked is that foreign embassies in Nigeria from where intelligence
about local situations is sourced are non-partisan. Ahead of the visit by
Secretary of State John Kerry, the Foreign Affairs Ministry should have engaged
the relevant embassies and assured them of the administration’s efforts. They
could have issued ahead of John Kerry’s arrival, a reasonable account of what
has been done so far, in a manner that does not compromise the sovereign, but
which deals with the perception issues thrown up by the pre-Kerry visit build
up by America and its allies.
And
of course, whatever the tone of the diplomatese, always look beyond the cover
stories. John Kerry’s visit may be the tipping point for the Buhari administration
and it may well not be, considering the fact that the United States is itself
in transition, but if Secretary of State Hillary Clinton becomes President, we
would be dealing from January 2017 with someone who knows Nigeria too well. In
the meantime, President Buhari should have something specific to say to the
United States through Kerry. It’d be wrong to treat this as a farewell visit by
a lame-duck American administration. Not yet and certainly not so. President Barack Obama will leave office in
November without ever visiting Nigeria!
33 comments:
Today is Sunday, I am trying to comment early on lib cant read this oga.
Edo people are not blind. Tell us Iyamu was P.A tell us he was SSG to Lucky Igbinedion, tell us crap but we know what we want. We detest unpatriotic, ruthless, disrespectfu and deceitful governance. A government in the end who is no different from he accused predecessor.
Vote Osagie Ize Iyamu Vote PDP Edo State Sept.10
Seen. Bk was here!!
Summary please 😢
*www.bonitabislam.com*
~glo rule your world~ cos I do•
Next!!!
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See What Tamed Africa
I will come bck n read mbok
RUBBISH TALK
-D great anonymous now as Vivian Reginalds
Nice piece
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So much sense in this article!
Seen
Benjamin Natenyahu(Israel prime min) described john kerry as having the brains of a 15 yr old,and this is the man that put buhari in power,what is the result,economy been run like that of a 15 year old totally in utter shambles.
I care less whether Obama visits Nigeria his legacy in his 8 years is that he has made america richer and africa poorer,d first black president has witnesses more deaths in africa than at any time since slavery bearing in mind at slavery time the world population was one tenth what it is now.
Nigeria is poorer,nigerians are dying of hunger.and he put this tribalistic bigot there,i have no regards for mr terry only to concur with benjamin netanyahu.
By the way when is he(terry) visiting israel?????????
Hard truths sir...
We don hear o! Linda take note!
Miss Reuben Abati.
You see i called you 'Miss' because that is exactly what you and the rest of this old clueless political class represents.
Please let me also clarify to state that using 'Miss' is no way intended to disrespect our esteem beautiful Nigeria women who work hard day-in day-out to put Nigeria on the map.
Miss Reuben Abati, you see how quick you jump to draw up analysis of what a US secretary of state visitation to Nigeria could mean and how Mr. Buhari should care about the excruciating details of what to say to the man. Why should Mr. Buhari have to defend his government before Kerry a united state secretary of state, when in fact Mr. Obama is Mr. Buhari's counterpart in the political structures of both government?
The only people Mr. Buhari have to defend his government are the esteem people of Nigeria not the United states. He must do this by allowing his administration to be held accountable by a viable opposition political party and by providing enabling social-political-econimical avenues and apparatus that would allow any Nigerian who so wish participate in the general affairs of the state.
No other government on earth accepts and allows this kind of downward thinking and nonsense flutters over their foreign relations with the so called United states except the ass lickers in Africa governments and obsolete political class like yourself.
Obama's visit to Cuba was well documented and i urge you to research it and take some knowledge in. Obama refused to visit Nigeria in his almost completed eight years in office, yet i have lost counts how many times Mr. Buhari has paid unsolicited visits to the US, well as the biggest cheerleader why not.
Kerry is coming, so the price of garri and tomatoes has reduced?
None of you so called corrupt political class knows a clue and importance about what managing a nation as big as Nigeria is all about, your thinking ends in your article. thats all you can offer.
Here we are today, look at the state of our country Miss Abati, don't you think it's time you stop talking and putting out these obsolete articles considering you were a corner stone in the previous government.
Don't you say we achieved the biggest economy in your defence, If i hear am. You should sit down and hide your face in shame and so should your cohorts.
A fearless new generation will rise up after this one and the previous failed ones. They will do right by Nigeria and give the well meaning life our people so yearn for.
Where black people do well anywhere in the world, Nigerians makes up 80%. Where black people fails, Nigerians makes up 80%.
Until the world respect Nigerians, black people will always be looked down on.
That respect should start by how we look and carries our ourselves as a people and in government. Surely your class will have to give way for a new Nigeria to emerge. FOR THE SAKE OF OUR BELOVED BLACK RACE.
Okkk
@Abati,maybe they should contact you on what to write as the brief bcos this administration got plenty square pegs in potholes.
Linda pls were is Great Etcetera the critics, I hope he was not threatened to stop criticizing the this failed government, or has he been given appointment. Is he afraid of the tyrant let him come out of hiding we need him now . #Original comment from C E O.
Long talk but making sense in a way or two...
Nothing goes for nothing...!
Sensible, well thought and educative write up!
Mrs Gift
Seen..... #Lindatakenote
Oga Reuben, Kerry ' s visit is to water the ground for Obama ' s come Oct 1st. Note it!
Well crafted, Mr. Reuben. It is however, disappointing to acknowledge the true fact that the 1st black Caesar of the modern world will avoid the most populous black civilisation in the modern era.
AA
Did you tell GEJ all this when he was sharing our nation's wealth to PDP members? I know you did not pls.Rueben Abati.Carry the money's you got as gifts & allowances & go sit in your house.Stop distracting us & trying to make us remember you were once in the corridors of the presidency.
Why hide your ID coward? Bibi that you are relying on didn't deem it fit to visit Nigeria even after voting against Palestinian state. He went to Kenya & Uganda instead.
Kerry is a war veteran, married to a mozabiquean , a presidential aspirant & d man who gave Obama his big break. As we say in Nigeria , who Bibi epp?
Talk is cheap. Oga Ruben but u were in power not 2 long ago nah. Wah did u and ur former oga do better. U and lia mohammed re the same. Get a job and stop writing trash #rubbish
It is obvious that abate is confused. He hasn't gotten over the fact that America didn't support his principal Nathan in the last elections.
Wow, esosa odigwe made soo much sense in his reply to Mr rueben abati. Still on still, this govt needs to carry Nigerians along.
Hahaha
Beautiful
#We are Nigeria's light movement has begun.
You are a deep thinker and u r welcome to the team that would build this country...
We never had leaders, nor smart followers..
But Nigeria now has us..
Next pls
What is Obama coming here to do on October 1st?
After Kerry in August, Obama again in October?
How is this Medicine after death going to change the exchange rate?
Jobless and wandering around.
Please we don't need any such big distraction here.
Nigeria has serious issues and no time to receive tourists.
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