Turning
the tide against Boko Haram will require a “huge” international effort,
a top US military commander warned on Tuesday, taking a swipe at
Nigeria’s response to the emboldened extremists.
Relations
between the Nigerian and US militaries have been strained with Nigeria
cancelling training by US advisers of a unit that was supposed to fight
the militants, who have captured towns and villages in the country’s
northeast and vowed to create a hardline Islamic state.
The conflict has left more than 13,000 people dead and one million homeless.
General
David Rodriguez, head of US Africa Command, said the Islamists’ gains
on the battlefield are cause for concern and “the number of people
displaced is just staggering.”
“I
think it’s going to take a huge international and multinational effort
there to change a trajectory that continues to go in the wrong
direction,” Rodriguez said at an event organized by the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.
“The Nigerian leadership and Nigerian military are going to have to really improve their capacities to be able to handle that.”
Rodriguez said the Nigerian military’s response “was not working very effectively and actually in some places made it worse.”
He added: “I hope that they let us help more and more.”
Nigeria’s
ambassador to the United States, Adebowale Ibidapo Adefuye, complained
in November that his country is “not satisfied” with US support for the
struggle against Boko Haram and that Washington has blocked the sale of
some military hardware over human rights concerns.
In
a visit Sunday to Lagos, US Secretary of State John Kerry said
Washington was “prepared to do more” to help Nigeria counter Boko Haram.
Nigeria
has the largest army in west Africa but has come under criticism at
home and abroad for failing to stop the advance of Boko Haram.
The
United States was working with Nigeria to build a comprehensive
strategy “across the board, not just military,” that encompassed
education, economic development and health care to address the needs of
the population in the north, the four-star general said.
Another “big focus” was to bolster the country’s intelligence gathering, added Rodriguez.
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