Influential lawmakers in the United States have taken steps to block the proposed sale of attack helicopters to Nigeria over concerns that the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration was “drifting towards authoritarianism.”
This came on the heel multiple security challenges which included a 12-year insurgency by Boko Haram militants in the country’s northeast, deadly spate of high-profile kidnapping-for-ransom campaigns and bandit attacks that observers said has morphed into full-scale insurgency, as well as separatists agitations in the south-east and south-west.
Foreign Policy, A U.S. newspaper, Foreign Policy citing U.S. officials and congressional aides privy to the blocked ammunition deals worth $875 million, said power brokers in Washington, particularly the top Democrat and Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, were hellbent on pushing the Biden administration to rethink the U.S. relations with Nigeria to ensure balance between national security and human rights.
Earlier in June, the chairperson of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Bob Menendez, during a Senate hearing with Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, called for a “fundamental rethink of the framework of our overall engagement” with Nigeria.
Foreign Policy said state documents it saw showed that the blocked proposed sale included, in addition to the 12 AH-1 Cobra attack helicopters accompanied by defense systems, “28 helicopter engines produced by GE Aviation, 14 military-grade aircraft navigation systems made by Honeywell, and 2,000 advanced precision kill weapon systems—laser-guided rocket munitions.”
Although the U.S. Department of State described its relationship with Nigeria as “among the most important in sub-Saharan Africa” to whose military it has provided limited funding for training and education programmes, recent events in the most populous African country have raised concerns among human rights advocates.
Nigerian protesters calling for police reform were last year attacked by security operatives and thugs allegedly sponsored by the state, leading to some deaths, while no security official has been prosecuted for the mass killing of hundreds of Shiites in Kaduna in December 2015.
Nigeria has relied on the U.S. arms deals to help it tackle insecurity in the past and recently received some fighter Tucano jets from the U.S. However, the latest action by the U.S. lawmakers will not be the first time the North American nation would suspend arms sale to the African country.
Citing concerns about civilian casualties and human rights abuses, in 2014, former U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration cut back the sale of Cobra helicopters by Israel to Nigeria.