U.S. Defense officials believe Boko Haram has split the kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls into several groups
As American military and intelligence
specialists joined the hunt for Nigeria’s missing schoolgirls, U.S.
officials expressed frustration Thursday with the country’s inability to
act on fresh intelligence about the Boko Haram extremists who took more
than 200 teenagers captive and threatened to sell them into slavery.
U.S. surveillance imagery has shown suspected bands of Boko Haram militants on the move in northeast Nigeria Imagery from U.S. surveillance drones and
satellites over the last week has shown suspected bands of Boko Haram
militants setting up temporary camps and moving through isolated
villages and along dirt tracks in northeastern Nigeria, U.S. officials
say.
The Obama administration has shared the
imagery with Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan’s government in Abuja.
But Nigeria’s security forces are hampered by poor equipment and
training and have failed to respond quickly, said a U.S. official
familiar with the growing search operation.
U.S. Defense officials believe militants with
Boko Haram, a militant Islamic sect, split the girls into several
groups after the April 14 abduction from a government-run school in
Chibok village. The leader of the militants, Abubakar Shekau, said this
week that he would release some of the girls in exchange for imprisoned
members of his group.
Bolstered by international help, the
Nigerian-led search has now expanded to include an ungoverned area of
desert and scrub roughly the size of West Virginia that crosses the
porous borders into neighboring Chad, Niger and Cameroon, U.S. officials
say. The girls’ locations are still unknown, however.
Mounting U.S. frustration with the case spilled into the open Thursday at a Senate hearing.
“It is impossible to fathom that we might
have actionable intelligence and we would not have the wherewithal —
whether by the Nigerians themselves or by other entities helping the
Nigerians — to be able to conduct a rescue mission,” said Sen. Robert
Menendez (D-N.J.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
“In general, Nigeria has failed to mount an effective campaign against Boko Haram,” Alice Friend, the Pentagon’s principal director for Africa, told committee members. “In the face of a new and more sophisticated threat than it has faced before, its security forces have been slow to adapt with new strategies, new doctrines and new tactics.”
Parents of the abducted girls have complained
that they reported the location of the militants and the girls days
after the kidnapping but that security forces did not respond. Jonathan
reportedly plans to fly to Chibok on Friday for the first time since the
girls were seized.
In addition to the U.S. drones and satellite coverage, a manned U.S. surveillance plane has been flying sorties over Nigeria this week. The British government has pledged to send a surveillance aircraft, and France, Israel and China have offered to share intelligence and satellite imagery, officials said.
The U.S team of about 30 advisors includes
military experts in logistics, communications and information sharing.
The White House has said it has no plan to send troops to take an active
part in search-and-rescue operations.
U.S. options are limited. A 1997 law
prohibits American forces from working with foreign military units that
have been accused of chronic human rights violations. The law has
prevented U.S. officials from dealing with a Nigerian counter-terrorism
unit that has experience tracking Boko Haram, officials said.
Boko Haram’s brutal insurgency has created widespread fear in northeast Nigeria, but the military’s harsh operations have left many villagers distrustful of authorities and unwilling to pass on tips, U.S. experts say.
Human rights groups have documented
widespread abuses by Nigerian forces over the last few years, including
the burning of homes and farm buildings, shooting suspected Boko Haram
members as revenge for attacks on police, and detaining young men
indefinitely without trial.
The army and police “are not disciplined and
are very abusive,” Sarah Margon, the Washington director of Human Rights
Watch, said Thursday.
Many Nigerians believe the military responds only when Boko Haram fighters attack government facilities, not when they kill civilians, said Lauren Ploch, an Africa specialist at the Congressional Research Service.
Boko Haram, meanwhile, has built up an
arsenal of weapons and a fleet of trucks stolen from police stations and
military barracks.
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