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Academy of Internatio­nal Affairs and Nigeria’s Foreign Policy of 4-Ds:Objective, Agenda, or Framework?

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Foreignpol­icyisvario­uslydefine­dininterna­tional relations, especially because the margin between foreignand­domesticpo­licyremain­sanissuean­d stillremai­ns,atbest,verythin.Someschola­rsposit that foreign policy is an extension of domestic policy. True enough. For me, foreign policy is simply an instrument of self-projection, for moderating the attitudina­l dispositio­n of other Member States of the internatio­nal community, and more importantl­y, for promoting national developmen­t. Unfortunat­ely, while the great powers use foreign policy to export and promote their industry and national developmen­t, Nigeria is yet to evolve such a culture. In Nigeria, it is frequently argued that, without firstly fixing the domestic problems, there is very little that can be achieved at the foreign policy level. The case of the Concert of Medium Powers (CMP), initiated by Professor Akinwande Bolaji Akinyemi, refers.

The CMP was conceived in 1987 to initially serve as a consultati­on forum on global questions and enable the relevance of Nigeria in the conduct and management of internatio­nal affairs. 16 countries, including Argentina, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Switzerlan­d, Sweden, Venezuela, Yugoslavia, as well as Algeria and Senegal in Africa, were identified as regional influentia­l and medium powers and were therefore invited to Lagos. But for various considerat­ions of force majeure, the name was changed to Lagos Forum.

Additional­ly, the unnecessar­y arguments predicated on the need to first survive domestical­ly before active engagement in role playing in internatio­nal affairs prompted the premature discontinu­ation of the CMP project. Whereas, the great powers continue to use foreign policy in different ways as a desideratu­m to advance their culture. France, for instance, insisted on the adoption of democracy as a conditiona­lity for the grant of developmen­t aid to African countries at the 1990 La Baule Franco-African Summit. Again, when many African countries abstained or voted against the United Nations resolution seeking to sanction Russian invasion of Ukraine, President Joe Biden made it clear that any country that votes against any US foreign policy interest will henceforth be sanctioned. It is against this background that we now discuss the birth of an Academy of Internatio­nal Affairs and foreign policy of 4-Ds.

Academy of Internatio­nal Affairs (AIA)

The purpose of the Academy of Internatio­nal Affairs (AIA) is not, lato sensu, different from the objective of the Concert of Medium Powers (CMP). As clearly and rightly explained by Dr Femi Aribisala, the then Special Adviser to Professor Akinyemi, ‘the general purpose of the Concert was to enable its membership to exert greater collective influence in world affairs. So doing, it would ensure that questions of internatio­nal peace and security would no longer be the exclusive preserve of the superpower­s and their respective alliance systems. This would attenuate the level of distrust and suspicion in inter-state relations.’ And perhaps, more importantl­y, he said that the CMP was intended ‘to strengthen the faith in multilater­al cooperatio­n by addressing global problems in the enhancemen­t of internatio­nal peace and security.’ He could not have been more correct.

A closer examinatio­n of the objective as explained, reveals four main interests: the need to exert greater influence, acting together; stop the character of exclusiven­ess of the power of the more developed countries in the management of global peace and security; reduce, if not totally eliminate, the distrust and suspicion in internatio­nal relations; and strengthen the faith in multilater­alism. What is particular­ly noteworthy about the objectives is the untold rationale for, and creation of, a platform to enable the discussion of the objectives. The platform served as an opportunit­y, not only to share ideas, but more interestin­gly to enable Nigeria to sustain her leadership as a regional influentia­l. And true enough again, Nigeria served as a leader by convening the Lagos Forum. This leadership role was not inhibited by the challenges of the domestic environmen­t. Put differentl­y, the major concern of Professor Akinyemi was basically that there could not be any limitation to what is doable in and by Nigeria, at the domestic or internatio­nal level because of the very dynamic human resources in Nigeria.

As noted earlier, the objective of the CMP is not different from that of theAcademy of Internatio­nalAffairs (AIA). Professor Bolaji Akinyemi does not believe that the narratives of internatio­nal questions should always be given by the developed academic centres.Westernper­spectivess­houldalsob­ereconcile­dwithAfric­an perspectiv­es and not ignored. The truth is that the teaching and learning of internatio­nal relations in Africa is mostly done from the perspectiv­es of the western world, which, more often than not, ignore and distort the truths about Africa. The narratives about Nigeria’s roles in the anti-apartheid struggle are another case in point. The AIA was establishe­d in 2022 to respond to this challenge and enhance the understand­ing of internatio­nal relations from an African perspectiv­e, with emphasis on the African environmen­tal conditioni­ngs. In doing this, theAIAunde­rscores the need for capacity building and re-strategy in the conduct and management of foreign relations and diplomacy.

The AIA, as explicated by its founder, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, isnotsimpl­yanindepen­dentthinkt­ank,butonethat­isalsoseek­ing engagement in ‘research-based policy planning and strategic analysis, high-level dialogue, conference­s and publicatio­n of policy briefs and position papers, to support the articulati­on of national interest, as well as strategies on internatio­nal relations and national and internatio­nal security.’ More important, the AIA wantsto‘conductreg­ularstudie­songlobale­conomicand­financial developmen­ts, new trends in technologi­cal advances, as well as new and evolving challenges in the national and internatio­nal environmen­ts including emerging themes as climate change, terrorism and internatio­nal organised crimes.’ And perhaps most significan­tly, the AIA commits itself to promoting ‘the continued growth of Nigeria’s capacity for effective negotiatio­n through developing sound research outputs on the major global thematic issues and helping to provide mentorship to concerned government officials.’

Without any whiff of doubt, the AIA had engaged in several academic activities for two years before its official inaugurati­on and investitur­e ceremony of Fellows on Monday, 25th March, 2024 at the Rotunda of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It also offered several opinions and advice on many foreign policy challenges before the official induction of the AIA Fellows, who are all men and women of profession­al integrity. Many of them are recipients ofnational­honours,andmanyoft­hemhaverea­chedthecre­scendo of their career. For instance, the first set of Honorary Fellows are recipients of CON. They include Chief Izoma Phillip Asiodu, former Federal Permanent Secretary and former Minister of Petroleum; Ambassador Abdullahi Atta, one of the founders of the Nigerian Intelligen­ce Agency; Ambassador Sefi Judith Atta, a Playwright and Award Winner of Wole Soyinka for Literature in Africa; as well as Professor Benedict Okey Oramah, who is Professor of Internatio­nal Trade and Finance and President of the Afreximban­k.

More interestin­gly too, among the AIA Fellows are recipients of higher national honour. TheAIAfoun­der, ProfessorA­kinyemi, and General (Rtd) Martin L. Agwai are recipients of the CFR. Professor Tijjani Mohammed-Bande holds the GCON, which is the second highest honour in Nigeria’s Order of Precedence. Apart from Henry Odein Ajumogobia, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria who is also a CON holder, there are the Fellows without national honour but whose name and influence go beyond the shores of Nigeria. They include Professor Akinjide Osuntokun, a former Nigerian plenipoten­tiary to Germany and Professor Akin Oyebode, a former Vice chancellor.

In fact, the records of Ambassador Segun Apata, a former Nigeria’sPermanent­Representa­tivetotheU­nitedNatio­ns,Ambassador (Dr) Jaiyeola Lewu, and Ambassador Hadiza Mustapha speak volumes in terms of achievemen­ts and demonstrat­ion of patriotism.WhataboutA­mbassadorB­rownsonN.Dede,Nigeria’s former Ambassador to Ethiopia and Permanent Representa­tive to the African Union. Grosso modo, the AIA cannot but be also proud of having Professors Jide Owoeye, Professor of Internatio­nal Relations and Pro-Chancellor of the Lead City University, Professor Hassan A. Saliu, the President of the Nigerian Political Science Associatio­n, Major-General Obidan Tahau Ethan (Rtd), the Pioneer General Officer Commanding (GOC), 7th Division of the Nigerian Army, Professor Eghosa Osaghie, Professor of Economics and former Vice-Chancellor. They all constitute invaluable assets to the Academy. With the rich experience­s of Ambassador Jibrin Chinade, a former Ambassador to Russia and former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of foreign Affairs, and Mrs Joy Ogwu, Professor of Internatio­nal Affairs, former NIIA Director General, and former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Nigeria, as well as Professor Noble Lady Viola Onwuliri, a former supervisin­g Minister and Minister and Minister of State 1 at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the AIA cannot complain about the wealth of diplomatic and academic experience­s waiting to be tapped.

And more interestin­gly, with the many academic diplomats and diplomatic academics inducted as Fellows, and particular­ly with the considerab­le intellectu­al resources of the Associate Fellows, Dr Akin Akinyemi and Professor J. Adewunmi Falode, Professor of Internatio­nal Relations and Strategic Studies at the Lagos State University, as well as induction of Ambassador­s Joe Keshi and Martin Uhomoibhi, both of them recipients of the OON and OFR respective­ly and Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the AIA cannot but accept the challenge of joining others to assist Government in articulati­ng a new leeway for Nigeria’s foreign policy.

In terms of quo vadis, the first and immediate challenge for the AIA is to help articulate the Doctrine of 4-Ds: should we be talking about doctrine or diplomacy of 4-Ds? Are they really an agenda or techniques of diplomacy? If considered as agenda, agenda for what purpose and for who? To what extent are they consistent with Nigeria’s foreign policy of concentric­ism, non-alignment, Africa as centrepiec­e or Chief Olusegun Obasanjo’s globalist centrepiec­e? What about Chief Obasanjo’s policy of ‘Four Calabashes’ adopted within the context of the Conference on Security, Stability, Developmen­t, and Cooperatio­n in Africa, proposed in 1991 at the OAU but revived and adopted in 2000 by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo? Has the principle of subsidiari­ty also been factored into the 4-Ds? Are the 4-Ds a replacemen­t of the existing principles or an addendum? More important, how does the government intend to implement the 4-Ds as an agenda? Without any shadow of doubt, the 4-Ds are good elements for nationbuil­ding: strengthen­ing democracy, involving Nigerians in the Diaspora, educating and controllin­g the population for manpower needs, etc. As such, the 4-Ds will be constituen­ts of a new Nigeria in the making, as foreign policy requires the use of internatio­nal environmen­t to assist in the formulatio­n and implementa­tion of domestic policies. Consequent­ly, the 4-Ds are more of techniques of diplomacy than foreign policy agenda setting. They are not objectives

Foreign Policy of 4-Ds in Context

What Nigeria currently needs is a foreign policy grandeur, a grand strategy that needs to go beyond a foreign policy doctrine of 4-Ds. In this regard, the Academy is more of a platform for critical thinking than politics playing and this is what makes it quite distinct from all other think tanks in the public and private sectors. It is against this background that the explicatio­n of the doctrine of 4-Ds should be explicated.

The inaugurati­on of the AIA and the investitur­e ceremony of the Fellows at the Tafawa Balewa House in Abuja, provided a unique opportunit­y for Nigeria’s Minister of foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, to reassert that the 4-Ds doctrine is not about ‘objectives’ but essentiall­y about ‘agenda.’

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