The media and people have come to the point that Nigeria Really helped Sierra-Leone to recover from their Country crisis.
Dear reader, Read along and you will discover the truth in my article here.
Soldiers stand guard during a military ceremony to honour war heroes (Akintunde Akinleye/Reuters) |
Boko Haram’s five-year long insurgency shows no sign of
abating. With the group now seemingly capable of seizing
and holding territory, questions over the military’s competence have grown
louder. To rescue the army’s wounded pride our military and political leaders
often point to what they claim is the army’s “stellar credentials” in bringing
peace to war ravaged countries. The ECOMOG
missions in Liberia and Sierra-Leone in the 1990s, which the Nigerian military
led, is often presented as the prime exemplar of the army’s competence in
combat. I've lost count of how many times I've heard something like “our boys
brought peace to Liberia and Sierra-Leone” whenever questions are raised over
the badly mishandled war against Boko Haram. But just how true is this claim?
Nigeria’s commitment to restore peace and stability to the
two West African countries was undoubtedly commendable – about $8 billion allegedly
spent on the missions; up to 12,000 soldiers deployed; and approximately 1,500
killed-in-action, including Brigadier General Maxwell Khobe. By most estimates
Nigeria provided 90 percent of the funding and about 80 percent of the total
troops for both ECOMOG missions. This praiseworthy commitment notwithstanding, the
fact is the military’s interventions in Liberia and Sierra-Leone failed to
dampen the civil wars that ravaged those two countries.
Brief background on Nigeria’s ECOMOG Interventions
Liberia
The civil war that destroyed Liberia lasted eight gruelling
years, 1989-1997. The human toll of the conflict was shattering. Out of a
pre-war population of 2.5 million, 200,000 – mostly civilians – would die, and
1.5 million would be scattered into neighbouring countries as destitute refugees.
On Christmas Eve 1989, Charles Taylor crossed into Liberia
from Cote d’Ivoire with 168 armed fighters. Calling themselves the National
Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL), their stated aim was to overthrow Samuel Doe;
the country’s dictator who had himself seized power in a bloody coup in 1980.
The ranks of Taylor’s rebels rapidly swelled in number. Doe’s repressive and
brutal decade long rule meant a significant section of the country was already
seething with discontent by the time of Taylor’s incursion. The Liberian army,
long crippled by decades of corruption, ethnic favouritism, and political
manipulation buckled in the face of this motley band of ill-disciplined, Libyan
trained, international rebel force (the nucleus of the NPFL reportedly
consisted of mercenaries from an assortment of West African countries including
Burkina Faso, Sierra-Leone, Gambia, Cote d’Ivoire – many of whom had received
rudimentary training in Libya).
As the NPFL raced to Monrovia, the Liberian capital, they
butchered civilians along the way – especially targeting Doe’s ethnic kinsmen
and other ethnic groups they believed had done well under Doe. By the end of
July 1990, the Liberian state had practically collapsed. With roughly 90
percent of the country under Taylor’s control, with Doe besieged in his
Presidential residence, and with the NPFL and other ethnic militias having free
rein in the capital, a generalized state of insecurity prevailed in the country.
The Western Powers however, showed scant interest in the tragedy unfolding in
Liberia; leaving West African states to scramble a sub-regional response.
In May 1990 at the behest of Babangida, Nigeria’s military ruler
at the time, a five-member Standing Mediation Committee (SMC) comprising
Nigeria, Ghana, Gambia, Mali, and Togo had been formed within ECOWAS to
negotiate a political resolution to the crisis. Several rounds of
mediation however produced no tangible results. Charles Taylor felt he was on
the cusp of military victory; hence he had little incentive to commit to any
political settlement that may have resulted in a power sharing arrangement.
Under diplomatic pressure from Nigeria, the SMC recommended the deployment of a
sub-regional peacekeeping force to intimidate the warring parties back to the
negotiating table.
On the 7th of August, ECOWAS established ECOMOG –
the sub-regional force that was to enforce a ceasefire – initially comprising troops from
Nigeria, Ghana, Gambia, Guinea, and Sierra-Leone. On the 24th of
August, the ECOMOG troops were inserted into Liberia: 3,000 initially, rapidly
augmented to 6,000 within a month. ECOMOG forces would eventually peak at
16,000 in 1993, before tapering off to around 11,000 by early 1997. Nigeria,
however, dominated the force – providing both the overall commander and between
75-80 percent of the total troops. Thus began Nigeria’s quest to pacify Liberia.
Sierra-Leone
It didn’t take long for the Liberian conflict to spill into
Sierra-Leone. Sierra-Leone was a troop contributor to the ECOMOG mission in
Liberia – with about 700 troops – and it had been a strong supporter
of Nigeria’s muscular approach to the Liberian crisis. Sierra-Leone’s only
international airport also served as the Nigerian military’s primary staging
post for operations in Liberia. Charles Taylor therefore, keen to exact his
revenge, facilitated the creation of a Sierra-Leonean rebel group known as the
Revolutionary United Front (RUF). In March 1991, the RUF invaded Sierra-Leone
from Liberia – igniting a brutal civil war that would consume the country
for the next eleven years. By 2002 when the war ended, 50, 000 civilians had perished
and 2.5 million people had either become internally displaced or had fled to
neighbouring countries.
The RUF incursion prompted calls within Sierra-Leone for the
redeployment of the country’s ECOMOG contingent for internal security duties at
home. But Babangida, keen to blunt perceptions of ECOMOG being a Nigerian show
(there was already considerable disquiet within West African capitals over
Nigeria’s overwhelming dominance within ECOMOG
Nigerian policy however was limited to bolstering the
security of the capital city, Freetown. This insulated Nigerian soldiers from
direct participation in the escalating civil war ravaging the countryside. Events
in May 1997 would finally drag Nigeria into the Sierra-Leonean vortex.
Much like Liberia, Sierra-Leone had suffered decades of
predatory rule which had caused state institutions, including the military, to decay
to the point of collapse. By the mid-90s, Sierra-Leone resembled a “phantom
state” devoid of any institutional capacity and utterly dependent on others
to preserve its territorial integrity. Nigerian forces protected its capital from
being overrun by the RUF, while a South African mercenary firm and a tribal
militia made up of local hunters battled the rebel threat in the countryside.
On the 25th of May 1997, taking advantage of the
departure of the mercenary firm – their contract had been terminated in January
by President Tejan Kabbah following international pressure – and barely one
year into the country’s nascent democracy – Kabbah had only been elected the
year before – a handful of semi-literate corporals and sergeants calling
themselves the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) seized power in a coup
d’état. Announcing their intention to bring an end to the civil war, they
invited the rebels to come and join them in a coalition government. Given such
a dramatic turn of events, Nigeria, being the Kabbah government’s protecting
power, simply couldn’t allow such a humiliating affront to go unchallenged.
After an initially botched attempt to retake Freetown and
reinstall Kabbah’s government on the 2nd of June; Nigeria
reinforced
its forces in the bits of the capital it still controlled, worked to
diplomatically isolate the AFRC/RUF regime, and with UN backing imposed a
naval and air blockade on Sierra-Leone - all in a bid to force the
usurpers from power. With the
AFRC/RUF regime proving recalcitrant and unwilling to yield to these
pressures
however, Nigeria’s patience finally snapped. On the 6th of February
1998, in a well-coordinated assault lasting about a week, Nigerian forces
dislodged the AFRC/RUF regime and expelled the rebels from Freetown. The
victory was nothing short of stunning. Buoyed by triumphalism, the victorious soldiers
were ordered to pursue the RUF into the hinterland and militarily defeat them.
Thus began Nigeria’s quest to pacify Sierra-Leone.
Why Intervene and Did It Succeed?
Why Intervention?
Babangida initially hoped to achieve two objectives by sending
Nigerian troops into Liberia: Force the warlords to commit to a political
settlement, and contain the conflict from spreading to neighbouring countries. When
it became clear that Taylor’s ambition of seizing state power for himself was
the biggest obstacle to peace, two new objectives gradually took shape:
Crippling Taylor’s war machine, and blocking his ascent to the Liberian Presidency. The reasoning
being that with Taylor’s military machine broken and his ambition frustrated, he
would be more likely to commit to a political solution.
In Sierra-Leone however, Abacha, Nigeria’s then military
ruler, initially had a limited objective when he authorised Nigeria's
direct intervention in the country’s civil war: Overturning the May 1997
coup and
reinstating Kabbah to power. After Nigerian troops routed the rebels in
February
1998 and restored Kabbah’s government, perhaps flushed with the
impressive
victory, a new objective emerged: Defeating the RUF and pacifying the
entire country.
There was also a secondary objective which led Abacha to opt for
intervention. In
the 1990s Nigeria was under limited sanctions due to Abiola’s
incarceration and the hanging of Ken Saro Wiwa and his colleagues.
Therefore to improve the battered image of his regime and stave off the threat
of more stringent sanctions, Abacha, a military dictator at home, decided on
military intervention to safeguard a fledgling democracy abroad.
A further implicit reason which powerfully shaped
Babangida’s and Abacha’s decisions to commit Nigerian troops in Liberia and
Sierra-Leone has been attributed to a deep-rooted belief, shared by most
Nigerians, in the country’s destiny as West Africa’s leading power. The
interventions were therefore meant to demonstrate that Nigeria could police its
turbulent neighbourhood and shape the security environment of the sub-region.
Did the Interventions Succeed?
Geopolitically, the interventions improved Nigeria’s image.
The attempts to pacify Liberia and Sierra-Leone through the near unilateral use
of military power enhanced Nigeria’s claim to sub-regional leadership. Many
commentators saw the country’s leading role in ECOMOG as an indication that Anglophone
West Africa finally possessed what the Francophone sphere had in France for
decades: A hegemon with the power and resolve to stabilise weak regimes and reverse
the tide of collapse in failing states. Without
Nigeria’s diplomatic and political leadership, and military and financial
commitment, the ECOMOG missions to Liberia and Sierra-Leone would have never
gotten off the ground. The geopolitical achievement however, should not obscure
the fact that Nigeria failed in its political and military objectives.
Liberia
In Liberia, all four objectives of (1) forcing the warlords
to durably commit to a political settlement, (2) containing the conflict from
spreading, (3) crippling Taylor’s war-machine, and (4) denying him the
presidency were not achieved. On the first objective, while many peace
agreements were signed, the agreements merely bought the warlords time to
recuperate for the next round of fighting. Hence, each failed not long after
being signed. On the second objective, the spread of the Liberian conflict into
Sierra-Leone put paid to that hope. On the third and fourth objectives, Nigerian
forces was neither able to decisively break Taylor’s war-making resolve, nor
perpetually frustrate his ascent to the Liberian presidency. In fact Nigeria,
recognising it couldn’t militarily defeat Taylor, eventually reconciled itself
to a Taylor presidency.
Abacha, who came to power in 1993 and therefore inherited
Babangida’s Liberia mission, reportedly didn’t share the same antipathy that
Babangida had for Taylor. The lack of personal animosity between the two men paved
the way for Taylor’s visit to Nigeria to meet with Abacha in June 1995 to settle
differences. This rapprochement eventually culminated in Taylor’s election to
the Presidency in 1997 with Nigerian acquiescence – thereby bringing an end to
Liberia’s first civil war. Many observers were left wondering what exactly had
been achieved: Taylor was exactly where he would likely have been seven years
ago without ECOMOG’s intervention. Taylor himself, commenting on the outcome, wryly
observed: “If we had been allowed to win on the battlefield, we would have
finished the war in six months in 1990”.
This peace however would prove illusory. Within a year of
his coming to power, Taylor, citing sovereignty concerns, told ECOMOG to leave.
And within two years, his repressive rule would eventually plunge Liberia into
another civil war which would last four years, 1999-2003. Abandoned by former allies
and faced with encirclement by two rebel armies, Taylor finally relinquished
power in August 2003. If anything, it is the outcome of this second war that is
the source of Liberia’s current peace. And Nigeria played absolutely no military role in
it – save for sending peacekeepers to monitor the ceasefire which concluded the
war. So the notion that the Nigerian army won the Liberian civil war and brought
peace to the country is simply false.
Sierra-Leone
Nigerian reinforcements arriving in Freetown, Sierra-Leone (Getty Images) |
The army’s efforts in Sierra-Leone were met with similar
disappointment. The main objective of defeating the RUF was not achieved. In
fact reading Brigadier Adeshina’s (rtd) The
Reversed Victory, one gets the distinct impression that Nigerian forces
came within a hair’s breadth of strategic defeat.
After dislodging the rebels from Freetown and restoring
Kabbah’s government in February 1998, Nigerian troops met with initial
success
as they probed deeper into Sierra-Leone to seek out and destroy the RUF.
As the
troops advanced, the rebels melted before them. In April, Kono District,
the
main diamond producing centre and the country’s economic nerve-centre,
fell to
Nigerian troops. Many other cities similarly fell to Nigerian troops –
often
after a token defence by retreating RUF forces. Outright military
victory
seemed imminent. What was happening however, as has been chronicled by
Lansana
Gberie, a leading scholar on Sierra-Leone’s civil war, was that the RUF
“avoided confrontation” with Nigerian troops during this phase. Having
been
badly mauled earlier in the Freetown battle, the rebels instead
retreated to their forest redoubts to rejuvenate and rebuild their
shattered force. And the
Nigerian army, lacking in “counterinsurgency training, failed to
pursue the rebels to their hideouts, preferring conventional assaults
against
towns”.
As the rebel strength recovered, their attacks on Nigerian
positions increased in intensity and frequency – first only hitting isolated
outposts with hit-and-run attacks, eventually mutating into conventional
assaults on supposedly well dug-in Nigerian positions. By October, the momentum
had palpably shifted in favour of the RUF. In December, now with the wind in
their sails, the rebels mounted a lighting month-long offensive which saw them
reconquer the northern and eastern portions of the country. According to Brigadier Adeshina, so total was
Nigeria’s collapse in the north and the east that in some
sectors the rebels captured strategically vital towns “without firing a shot
while pursuing our boys”.
On the 6th of January 1999, just under a year after they were
forcibly dislodged from the capital, the RUF stormed Freetown
again, intent on reconquering it. In a bruising battle lasting just
under a month,
Nigerian troops managed to expel the rebels and reassert control over
the
capital city. As the rebels retreated, leaving carnage in their wake,
the belief that Nigeria could win a decisive military victory on the
Sierra-Leonean
battlefield evaporated.
Lansana Gberie perfectly captures the surprise which many
felt at the revival in the RUF’s military power, particularly as it was
believed they were on their backs just a couple of months ago: “The spectacular
resurgence in rebel activities caused much bewilderment. How was it that a
group that had been routed from power without much resistance, that had seen
its control of nearly 70 percent of the country reduced to scattered and
isolated parts of northern and eastern Sierra-Leone, and had been all but
pronounced dead, resurge with such power and destructiveness?”
The Sierra-Leonean President who, during Nigeria’s early
successes, had initially resisted calls for a political settlement to the civil
war bowed to reality. He signed a controversial peace
agreement with the rebels in July 1999 which granted them blanket immunity
and cabinet positions – the
leader of the RUF was made Vice President and minister of natural resources.
The UN was called in to monitor the newly agreed ceasefire and co-administer
with ECOMOG the disarming and demobilisation of the rebels.
This proved a false dawn. The RUF, rather than disarm and
demobilise as per the peace agreement, instead harassed UN peacekeepers – in
many cases stripping them of their weapons, and occasionally holding them
hostage. Concluding that the UN peacekeepers and ECOMOG forces were too weak
and demoralised to confront them, in May 2000 the RUF massed for yet another
assault on Freetown. The deployment of British troops finally stabilized the
volatile situation, and forced the rebels to disarm and demobilise. This was
what created the condition for durable peace to return to Sierra-Leone.
Commenting on the outcome of Nigeria’s intervention, Gberie
delivers this withering verdict: “Almost every observer concluded, after
the
January 1999 attack on Freetown, that the Nigerian-led ECOMOG force had
failed,
and failed disastrously. And no one failed to notice that it was the
robust
presence of the British troops that prevented the total collapse of the
UN
mission and a relapse into violence”. In reality, though a
highly commendable effort, Nigeria's ECOMOG-led mission to Sierra-Leone
failed to quell the civil war and restore peace to the broken country.
The less than
impressive outcomes in Liberia and Sierra-Leone, and the current challenges in
the fight against Boko Haram, underscore the urgent need for comprehensive
military reform.
waoh!!! The Nigeria will continue to lead in terms of military strength Africa
ReplyDeletewhatever they just kill Nigeria Ecomog troops like fowls
ReplyDeleteAfrica remain the centre peice of Nigeria-foreign Policy till thy kingdom come
ReplyDelete