Australian negotiator, Dr Stephen Davis, who was in Nigeria for four months, trying to negotiate the release of the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls, has raised questions over the value of the United States (US) involvement in Nigeria's war against Boko Haram. He has also given an insight into how the insurgents ambushed Nigerian soldiers.
Davis who recently alleged that former Borno state governor Alimodu sponsors Boko Haram and the terror group is funded through CBN, told TheCable by phone from Australia, that it seems America was not sharing intelligence with Nigeria.
"The militants usually move in a convoy of 20 to 60 vehicles. Although, they often move at night, they are now emboldened and are launching large-scale attacks in the daylight.
"Americans claim they are doing aerial reconnaissance. Why are they not passing the information to the Nigerian military? With this information, the Nigerian military could intercept the Boko Haram convoy before it reaches its target," he said.
It would be recalled that the US offered military assistance in form of training, aerial reconnaissance and equipment, although without any ground troops to Nigeria when Boko Haram kidnapped hundreds of schoolgirls in April.
The United Kingdom (UK), Israel and China also offered support, but Boko Haram has become more fierce since then, destroying villages and wreaking havoc on citizens.
Meanwhile, Davis also warned that military action alone is unlikely to end the insurgency.
"What has happened in the last six months is very worrying," he said, recounting days and weeks that he said he spent in discussions with the militants and his interactions with their commanders in his failed effort to get the girls released.
"Most roads in the rural north of Borno are very narrow and built up about two metres above the
surrounding countryside. This is because the surrounding countryside quickly becomes boggy with the rains.
"These roads such as the one from Dikwa to Marte can only take one vehicle on the narrow bitumen strip. A vehicle must draw to a halt and risk going off the side when encountering a vehicle travelling in the opposite direction.
"The road surface has deteriorated through lack of maintenance and are now heavily pot-holed, such that vehicles have to crawl along the road in many places.
"The militants normally strike at night, so they lay in wait where the military has to slow down to a crawl due to the poor road condition. Sometimes they dig the potholes deeper to entrap a convoy.
"On getting wind of the ongoing attacks, the Nigerian military would dispatch soldiers in a convoy of vehicles. Unfortunately, and unknown to the soldiers, the insurgents may have enlarged a big hole on the road. So in a convoy of say 20 vehicles, the first vehicle draws to a halt as it encounters the ditch.
"By the time the soldiers realise what is happening and try to make a U-turn, they are ambushed by the insurgents as the convoy struggles to turn around on the narrow pot-holed road," he said.
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