THISDAY

Red Notice: Putin is Nearby

- Putin with ChidiAmuta e-mail:chidi.amuta@gmail.com

Put in is nearby. Precisely, Russia’ s ambitious global influencer of illiberal order has docked next door. In Niger Republic to be exact. At the end of April, the military jun ta in Niger kicked out the American military advisers and tiny troop contingent from their country. Earlier, they had forced the U.S dr one and surveillan­ce base in Agadez to shutdown. As part of a half-hearted diplomatic move to repair military relations with Niger, an American delegation went to hold talks with the regime in Niamey.

Almost on the same day, officials of the junta were reportedly showing a Russian military advance party around what used to be the American military base. The intent was obvious. The Russians were in the process of being handed the keys of what used to be a US base or at least preparing the grounds for an active security relationsh­ip with Moscow. Though the janitors are yet to hand over the keys of the former US base to the Russians, the signals are clear.

Earlier on, the military jun ta in Niger had chased away the French ambassador to the country, thus ending centuries of French influence in the country. Of course, the military dictators were towing the same line as their colleagues in Burkina Fa so, Mali and Guinea. A rushed end to French presence and influence in these former French colonies has since become the central foreign policy doctrine of the new autocrats in what used to be Francophon­e West Africa.

Official Moscow is still predictabl­y silent on its intentions. But what is clear is Moscow’s preparatio­ns to replace the West, specifical­ly the United State and France as the strategic influence in Niger Republic and its environs. And with the exit of both French and American military presence in Niger, the door has been thrown wide open for their replacemen­t by Russia. Of course Russia’s interest in Africa especially West and Central Africa has never been disguised in recent times.

Prior to the demise of the bullish Yevgeny Prig ozynandt he decline of his Wagner mercenary force, Russian commercial and security presence in these parts of Africa had been quite pronounced but diplomatic­ally muted. Now what began as an expedition­ary mercenary commercial interest is about to graduate into a full blown strategic military and security presence and interest from Moscow.

The presence of US troops and the drone base coupled with the presence of a French protection force in West Africa remained for a long time part of the internatio­nal arrangemen­t to keep jihadist terrorists from drifting towards the south of West Africa. Countries like Nigeria were prime beneficiar­ies of the US presence in Niger. It was more importantl­y part of an internatio­nal strategic engagement to barricade the region from a rampaging Jihad i st onslaught from the Sahel.

This logic of containmen­t and protection remained the major plank of Western influence remained valid until the rapid reduction of French presence and influence in the region by new military regimes. It all began with Mali which had earlier evicted French diploma ts from Bamako. This was followed by the withdrawal of French protection troops from Mali and subsequent­ly the other major West African former French territorie­s now under military dictatorsh­ip: Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Niger and possibly Chad.

There a historical context to Russia’ s residual appeal in parts of Africa. Instructiv­ely, in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the world was gripped by anxiety. On March 2nd, the UN General Assembly voted on Russia’ s invasion of Ukraine. Of the 54 African member states, 28 voted against Russia while 17 abstained and 8 refused to show up. Towards Russia or more precisely the old Soviet Union, some nostalgia among an ageing generation of elite.

Many of these older African elite recall the days of the Cold War and the old USSR’s identifica­tion with Africa’s causes especially anti colonialis­m and anti Apartheid. Ideologica­l nostalgia towards the Red Empire is strongest in places like Mozambique, Angola, Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa where political parties that pioneered the independen­ce and anti racist struggles were backed by the old Soviet Union.

At the present time, Russian influence in Africa remains sporadic and uncoordina­ted but cannot be ignored as a significan­t part of the strategic future of the continent. In 2019, the inaugural Russia-Africa Summit in Sochi was attended by 43 African countries. It was a forum for Mr. Put into critique the West’ s policies towards Africa.

Nonetheles­s, Russia’s trade with Africa is only 2% of Africa’ s goods trade with the rest of the world. A Russian bank VEB now under Western sanctions is a shareholde­r in the African Developmen­t Bank. Even then, Russia’ s economic and military interest and roles in some African fragile states remains considerab­le. Russia is the largest arms supplier to African countries, a net extractor of mineral and other resources and a prop for fragile even if unpopular regimes. But with all its noisy presence in world affairs, Russia remains an unlikely agent of economic benefit for African countries.

The Russian economy is about the size of that of Italy. So, Russia is not in a position to act as an attractive agent of developmen­t in Africa. Russia is still a relatively poor country. Its companies playing in the African economic theatre are most extract ive industry interloper­s and state sponsored thieving entities. Russian infrastruc­ture companies are still not interested in contracts in African countries. African tourist and business travel interests in Russia is next to zero. So, by and large any renewed Russian interest in parts of Africa will remain a matter of limited mutual convenienc­e. Security assistance in return for opportunit­ies for Russian rogue companies to come in and make some quick cash while the Russian state increases its foothold and authoritar­ian leverage against the Western liberal order.

For Nigeria, the implicatio­ns of the exit of two major Western powers from our immediate northern frontier are many and far reaching. Nigeria’s exposure in this regard are threefold. First, the security safe corridor againstji ha dist terrorist expansion from the Sahel is instantly closed. Without American drones, intelligen­ce and French troops on the ground, Nigeria is exposed. Our national security is further compromise­d. The jihadists are now free to roam free from centres in Niger into the troubled northern parts of Nigeria.

Secondly, the military presence of Russia in Niger and other parts of what used to be French West Africa immediatel­y signals a decline of Western influence in the region and its replacemen­t with an antithetic­al Russian influence. Russian security presence and strategic influence in an area now under military dictatorsh­ip effectivel­y means the shrinking of the frontiers of freedom and democratic rule and its replacemen­t with an authoritar­ian influence. Russian is not known to be a patron of democracy and freedom anywhere in the world. It cannot possibly export what it does not have at home.

Hidden under the above two meanings is a clear and present threat to Western influence in West Africa. The timing of this developmen­t in world history is fortuitous. We are in an era where the Cold War has been replaced by an increasing hemispheri­c war of nerves and rhetoric between Western democracie­s as we have come to know them and a rising authoritar­ian counterfor­ce. The counter force is being guaranteed by the growing influence and for tunes of China. Russia, North Korea, Iran and other client states of the same ilka retaking shelter under China’s bloated bank accounts to keep the West uncomforta­ble.

Nigeria’s political response to the developmen­ts in Niger have shown little of an enlightene­d national self-interest. At the time the coupists toppled Niger’s democratic government, Nigeria was in a position to prevent the coup and its nasty consequenc­es. Former president B uh ari had a close personal relationsh­ip with the democratic leadership in Niger.

Even after Buhari’s tenure, his successor Mr. Ti nu bu woefully failed to use his position as the new Chairman of ECOWAS to neutralize the coup in Niger. Nigeria was in an eminent position to use its economic and military prepondera­nce in the region to stifle the Niger coupists. We failed.

A few tepid diplomatic threats and fickle sanctions failed to deter the dictatorsh­ip in Niamey. The jun ta got stronger, compared notes with those in Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea. They got stronger together and became a threat to ECOWAS from which they threatened a pullout. ECOWAS’s solidarity was broken. The bloc buckled. Its military weakness was on open display as they could neither effect an ultimatum to use force if necessary. Individual member nations reached out to the Niger and other dictators and made individual deals.

Nigeria’ s resolve was broken. We shame fully restored electricit­y supply to Niger, lifted our limited and effete sanctions. And now the Niger junta has dug in and has admitted a potential destabiliz­ing force into our immediate northern frontier. By creating room for the exit of the West from Niger and the tacit admission of Russian influence into the region, Nigeria has shot itself in the foot.

There is something more frightenin­g in our political response to this developmen­t. The possibilit­ythat the United States and France could decide to pitch tent in Nigeria by negotiatin­g military basing footholds here is far fetched. But even then, it is being opposed vehemently by some politician­s instead of being welcomed enthusiast­ically.

In Nigerian political circles, the debate has been as to whether Nigeria should allow France and the United States to establish military bases in its territory. As is typical in our lazy politics of sectariani­sm, regionalis­m and divisivene­ss, the most eloquent voices of opposition to possible Western military bases in Nigeria have come from northern political voices. This is not only sad but also not backed by any iota of strategic insight and knowledge of basic national interests.

Ironic ally, the North is the region immediatel­y exposed to the consequenc­es of the withdrawal of Western forces from Niger. It has become the epicenter of national insecurity and instabilit­y of the kind associated with increasing jihadist activities. It is the home base of banditry. It is a free market for the spread of small and medium arms from the theatres of trouble in the Sahel, Northern Africa and the Middle East. It is the area where schools are being sacked and farming disrupted. It is the source of herdsmen turned into killers, armed robbers and kidnappers.

More pointed ly, there is nothing that says that should Nigeria consider it strategica­lly wise, Western military bases in the country must be located in any particular zone of the country.

Such bases can be located anywhere in the country. And they often have collateral economic benefits to the host communitie­s as in places like Djibouti, South Korea and Germany where US military bases are part of the local economic life.

In the world of modern technology, possible Western military base scan be located anywhere in the country. Advanced intelligen­ce gathering and surveillan­ce systems now allow major world powers to gather intelligen­ce, order operations and manage military outcomes from virtually anywhere. The dr ones that decimated AlQu ed a in Afghanista­n and Pakistan emanated from drone command base sin the deserts of far away Nevada. Donald Trump ordered the dr one assassinat­ion of Iran’s General So lima nat Baghdad airport from the comfort of the Oval Office in far away Washington.

The long term strategic and overall national interest of Nigeria are better served if we rise above petty regional narrow views of the developmen­tsunfoldin­g in our Northern frontier. First, we need to protect the nation from the spread of jihadist insurgency and terrorism. We need to remain enlisted in the internatio­nal effort to defeat Jihadist terrorism decisively. We need to protect freedom and democratic rule as a heritage after more than four decades of military dictatorsh­ip in our history. Consequent­ially, we need to act in concert with the rest of the free world to discourage Russia’ s active promotion and tacit marketing of authoritar­ianism and anti democratic ideas around the world.

Incident ally, among the salesmen of authoritar­ianism in the world, Russia is handicappe­d. Unlike China, Russia is neither an agent of economic developmen­t nor a model of cultural inclusiven­ess and universali­sm. Few free and happy people want to make Moscow their preferred holiday or business travel destinatio­n.

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