E.R.R

E.R.R

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

NIGERIA INVASION BY US :McCains Ridicule, Noonan’s Sentimental Jingoism By Daniel Larison

JChibok Abduction: US Deploys Drones As McCain Urges Full Military Action

In its efforts to rescue the over 200 abducted girls in Nigeria, the United States yesterday said it is now using unmanned drones to search for  them, while a United States Senator, John McCain (R-Ariz.), also recommended military action for President Barrack Obama.

A statement signed by the US Press Secretary, Jay Carney, a copy of which was handed over to Daily Newswatch  in Washington, DC, said the use of drones became important to quickly recover the girls from their abductors.

The statement said, “The deployment of drones comes in addition to manned surveillance flights and satellite imagery being offered to the Nigerian government in the search for the girls. The U.S. has also sent an interdisciplinary crisis team with officials from the Pentagon, State Department, and FBI to consult with Nigerian authorities.

“At this point, the administration is not actively considering deployment of U.S. forces, despite calls from some Republicans to use special force to rescue the missing girls.”

The US reiterated that it had encouraged the Nigerian government not to offer a ransom in exchange for the girls’ release.

“Nigeria is a sovereign nation. The girls were abducted in Nigeria. They are Nigerians and it’s entirely appropriate that Nigeria would lead the effort to find them,” it was stated.

However, Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.) yesterday recommended military action for President Barrack Obama to assist Nigeria in rescuing the girls.

McCain, while speaking with journalists in Washington, DC, said the military force would urgently help in freeing the abducted girls from Boko Haram sect.

“Let President Obama use every tool that we have to rescue these young girls. That means, it will be done surgically, it could be done in a way that is very efficient. But for us not to do that, in my view, will be an abrogation of our responsibilities,” he said.

The senator said the administration does not need the permission of the Nigerian government to deploy forces inside the country, and cited the use of special force to recapture cargo ships and personnel seized off the coasts of Africa.

Also, the Consul-General of  the Nigerian Consulate based in Atlanta, Ambassador Geoffrey Teneilabe, has urged Nigerians to dismiss fears that the United States is planning to dismantle and take over Nigeria, following its intervention to rescue the abducted girls.

Reacting to a video statement made by General Overseer of the Latter Rain Assembly Church, Pastor Tunde Bakare, yesterday, Ambassador Teneilabe said there was no plan by the US to take over Nigeria.

Pastor Bakare in a video clip shared on Facebook, said the US government had concluded plans to dismantle Nigeria.

“Foreigners have invaded our lands. They are looking for excuses to destabilize us.  Orchestration of evil is going on. God took me in the spirit to the room of former President W. Bush in 2005. Bush told me in the vision that come 2015, Nigeria would not remain as a nation, but I told him that he was telling lies. I want to tell Nigerians that without the intervention of foreigners we successfully fought a civil war in this country,” the pastor was seen as saying.

But the Consul- General of Nigeria in charge of 17 states in the South- East of the United States, said: “I want to urge Nigerians to completely ignore Bakare’s statement. America has been helpful to Nigeria. She has given us her word that she would support us, and take the lead in this rescue mission.

“As a matter of fact, we need US technology, goodwill, clout, surveillance and intelligence machinery to solve the issue of Boko Haram. Do not forget that Boko Haram is a terrorist group and terrorism is a global problem. Even America cannot fight terrorism alone without the support from other countries.

“The realities are facing us, and we should be able to address the realities. By Bakare’s statement, what is the solution? Do we fold our arms and allow Boko Haram to take over the country?

“So, let us set aside our fears and welcome all the countries coming to assist us, and make maximum use of their experiences to wipe out Boko Haram from Nigeria.”

He noted that Boko Haram is sponsored by some politicians designed to undermine the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan.

“If you go back to history, you know that Boko Haram started increasing its muscles after the last election that brought President Jonathan in. There is a lot of politics involved in the issue. After the election, they started burning houses, killing innocent people and other criminal activities in some parts of Northern Nigeria. Since then, the group has been terrorizing the nation.

“The fact is that Boko Haram does not want President Jonathan to rule, they want to frustrate him, and also make the country ungovernable to him,” he explained.

Daily Newswatch.JOHN MCCAIN said'
I certainly would send in U.S. troops to rescue them, in a New York minute I would, without permission of the host country.” He added, as only Sen. McCain would: “I wouldn’t be waiting for some kind of permission from some guy named Goodluck Jonathan. ”

 That’s Nigeria’s hapless president.





John McCain made a widely-ridiculed suggestion to send U.S. forces into Nigeria without the permission of their government. Peggy Noonan thinks it’s a great idea:
John McCain has it exactly right. (I don’t think I’ve ever written that sentence.) He told CNN that as soon as the U.S. learned that hundreds of children had been kidnapped and stolen away by a rabid band of terrorists in Nigeria, we should have used “every asset that we have—satellite, drones, any capabilities that we had to go after them.” He told the Daily Beast: “I certainly would send in U.S. troops to rescue them, in a New York minute I would, without permission of the host country.” He added, as only Sen. McCain would: “I wouldn’t be waiting for some kind of permission from some guy named Goodluck Jonathan. ” That’s Nigeria’s hapless president.
Mr. McCain said that if he were president he would have moved already, and that is not to be doubted.
There is nothing wrong with taking action—when possible—that is contained, discrete, swift, targeted, humanitarian and, not least, can be carried through successfully.
It’s never a good idea to agree with McCain on these sorts of things, and it should worry Noonan that she’s agreeing with him despite the hint that she knows his judgment is not very good. Noonan’s column is a good example of how not to think about the use of military force in other countries. First, she never considers how something could go very wrong. There is no recognition that mounting a rescue might imperil the lives of the people being held captive. Noonan simply assumes that U.S. forces could–and therefore should–launch a raid in another country without its government’s consent, and she takes for granted that it would be successful. After all, what could be wrong with that? She thinks there is nothing wrong with it, which is more confirmation that she hasn’t given the matter much thought at all.
She doesn’t think about the possible negative consequences, since she seems to think that a “contained, swift, targeted” and “humanitarian” mission can’t have any of those. Like advocates for “limited” strikes on another country, Noonan imagines that the people being targeted by U.S. military action will play along and not retaliate in some way. If a raid provokes attacks against U.S. installations and results in the deaths of U.S. citizens, does Noonan think that the public will be pleased by the original decision to intervene? In what may be the most bizarre part of her argument, she imagines that it is not an exercise in hubris to intervene in another country’s affairs so long as no one publicly celebrates it. The hubris here lies in the presumption that the U.S. is entitled to police other countries with military action at will. Whether or not Americans brag about it afterwards is almost completely besides the point.
Maybe the most revealing part of her column is this:
Americans would feel happy about what we’d done, and good about not bragging about it. Actually we would really be proud but not sickly proud, just morally satisfied.
In the end, that’s what interests Noonan–making us feel good about ourselves and giving us a reason to be proud of using the military overseas. It doesn’t really matter whether or not it would make the situation in Nigeria worse. What matters is that we can be proud about taking military action for high-minded reasons, and there’s no need to worry about the consequences. In its way, this is far more delusional and worrisome than anything on display in a victory parade, because it represents the complete abdication of reason in favor of a thoroughly sentimental attitude towards the use of lethal force.
VIA AMERICAN CONSERVATIVE (http://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/)

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