• Colors: Cyan Color

By Hassan Gimba

Israel's message to one of the intermediaries was that it would not participate in the US attack, and therefore asked Iran not to target it. This request was also met with a negative response from Iran, which explicitly stated that with the start of US military action, Israel would be attacked. This made Netanyahu threaten to attack Iran with a force “1,000 times more than they have known”, alluding to the use of nuclear bombs. The US and Europe have been, as part of their propaganda, telling whoever cares to listen that Iran would use the bomb if it had it. The world has now seen who is itching to use it.

By Bolanle Bolawole

In the first instalment last week, the response to the question whether the new FG-ASUU agreement will end strikes in our universities was ambivalent. “Yes” to some but “No” to others. “Yes” if the agreement is seen as a means to an end and not an end in itself. If it is seen as the first step that begins a journey of 1000 years, as a Chinese proverb puts it, because the task of rescuing our university system from the depth into which it has fallen will take more than the signing of an agreement to accomplish.

By Azu Ishiekwene

Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger - three rogue states that have formed an Alliance of Sahelian States (AES) to resist external pressure from ECOWAS on military rule - have just won the biggest diplomatic jackpot beyond their wildest imagination.

Not even a sorcerer would have guessed that, as a reward for their delinquency, this trio would receive support, endorsement actually, from the dominant power in the world since World War 2 – the United States. But much better than prodigals, they are about to receive flowers for their waywardness.

According to the BBC, Nick Checker, head of the US State Department’s Bureau of African Affairs, would visit Mali's capital, Bamako, to convey the United States' "respect for Mali's sovereignty" and chart a "new course" in relations, moving "past policy missteps." The statement adds that the US also looks forward to cooperating with Mali's allies, neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger, "on shared security and economic interests."

New possibilities or what?

Forget the diplomatese and sugar-coating! This is a declaration of intent, and it states, even in its nebulous ambiguity, that the US has cut all pretences and will do or undo business with anyone, anywhere, without hesitation, on a whim. The days of thoughtful, considered diplomacy are over.

In Niger, the military junta of General Abdourahamane Tchiani had expelled 800 US troops from the large drone base Washington had built in Agadez, after the Biden administration demanded a roadmap to restore democracy in Niamey.

Trump may well roll back the tanks with a deal, any deal to undercut or compete with Russia and its Wagner agents, Niger’s new super ally, while France remains bitter, despised and stranded.

To spite France for President Emmanuel Macron’s condemnation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin had launched a foray into Francophone West Africa. President Donald Trump might well have taken a leaf from the Kremlin’s playbook after Macron censured his Greenland fantasy.

This massive oxygen tank from the most unlikely quarters is a boost not just for delinquents elsewhere, but also for a whole new phase of America’s transactional politics, thanks to President Trump, the deal-maker who strikes deals without moral or institutional qualms. Even the saying, “no sentiment in business,” was never such an absolute Machiavellian riposte.

The price of delinquency

But it’s not only the global powers that may need to reset their interests. The way things are going, the ECOWAS, which has had a torrid time convincing the military leaders of Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger that coup-making is unacceptable, now has to contend with America warming to Mali and co.

The trio's exit has had real negative consequences for the affected countries and the subregion as a whole. Although there isn’t sufficient quantitative data yet, the three countries, with an estimated combined population of 73 million, comprise 15 percent of ECOWAS’ total population, 50 percent of its landmass, and contribute about 7 per cent of its GDP. Even though they are landlocked, losing them has impacted the size of the regional market.

In Niger, one of America’s potential new brides, food prices have risen by an estimated 21 percent, while the country’s budget has fallen by about 40 percent due to regional sanctions. In the region as a whole, household mobility and intra-regional trade have decreased, as have the numbers of migrant workers, students, and families who regularly move across borders for work, education, or healthcare.

Diplomatic efforts to bring them back have failed, either bungled in haste or sabotaged by the new military leaders, who have little appetite, if any, for a return to civilian rule. Why make peace when war is an option?

Cauldron game

This is the cauldron into which we must now factor the Trump administration's opportunism. Instead of mediating the crisis in a way that benefits ECOWAS and the US, the president decides to rub salt in the subregion’s wound.

It would be interesting to see how the subregion responds, especially since it has nothing near the gift of cunning or leverage that Europe used to dissuade Trump from grabbing Greenland. Before the rapprochement, the US had placed the three AES members on its comprehensive travel ban list, a measure the countries immediately reciprocated.

Does this “new course” mean a reversal of the US “missteps” which also affect Sierra Leone, while seven ECOWAS members, including Nigeria, are on the partial ban list?

Mum is the word

There’s yet no official response to the indications of back-pedalling by the US, either from the AES, ECOWAS or the AU. One clear thing, though, is that such a step will further drive a wedge between the subregion and its delinquent states. However, it is unlikely that they would gamble their present relationship with Russia, warts and all, for a roller-coaster ride with the US.

The motive of the US is not a stable, cohesive, interdependent subregion capable of deepening trade and cooperation. It’s yet another subversive attempt by Trump’s administration to smash, grab and convert any critical resources that it can find at any cost.

A variant of this strategy first played out with South Africa, where Trump insisted on a non-existent “White genocide” to create discord, and then later in Nigeria, where he used the excuse of a “Christian genocide” to raise sectarian tensions.

Subversion as diplomacy

His administration appears to have gone up a notch, with covert meetings between leaders of Alberta separatists, committed to breaking away from Canada, and members of the U.S. State Department.

Administration officials claim that the meetings have involved a civil society group, and not official members of the separatist movement. Yet, Trump’s unrelenting covetousness has made it difficult for some to believe that this is not in furtherance of his Project 51st US State.

While the Trump administration’s interest in Alberta may also be to spook “stubborn” Prime Minister Mark Carney, the common thread between Alberta and the Sahel is critical minerals. The military leaders in the AES know that with this US president, business trumps rogue politics. They have spurned any idea of a political transition and are instead preparing for a lifetime in office.

Disregard for democratic values that might have concerned the US in a former life is no longer an issue. In the current dispensation, if it’s not critical minerals – which the Sahelian states have in abundance – or the promise of a nice piece of real estate, forget it.

The fire next time

Captain Ibrahim Traore of Burkina Faso has scrapped the legal framework that allowed multiparty democracy and dissolved all political parties. At the same time, the reports from Bamako and Niamey do not indicate any immediate plans to return to civil rule. The current mood in the world’s major power centres does not suggest any need for haste.

The rogue states can take their time, as we wait for the fire of diplomacy by subversion to make its next fall.

... Azubuike Ishiekwene is the Senior Vice Chairman and Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the book, Writing for Media and Monetising It. NNL.

By Segun Adediran

Within the next several years, the invisible architecture of Nigeria’s democracy faces a quiet but existential threat. For decades, the local press served as the bedrock of our national identity, but today, that foundation is being hollowed out by unregulated global digital gatekeepers.

By Bola Bolawole

Michael Jackson has now arrived in Jamaica for a meeting with Bob Marley. Read on!

“Kingston, Jamaica, October 23rd, 1978. 8:30 p.m: The exclusive Pegasus Hotel’s penthouse suite was buzzing with quiet conversation when Michael Jackson walked through the heavy wooden doors… Michael had an agenda beyond social pleasantries. He wanted to propose something that would reshape both (his and Bob Marley’s) careers forever.

By Hassan Gimba

Last week, we promised to examine the choices available to Iran and the United States, as well as how military confrontation might unfold. We also noted that Israel reportedly considered using nuclear weapons in its last war with Iran—an approach known as the Samson Option. We stated that if this had happened, or if it happens in the future, Israel would become only the second nation to use nuclear weapons in warfare, after the United States used atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

By Bolanle Bolawole

You can’t believe this, but it is the truth, uncomfortable and damning as it is: Since the return to civilian rule in 1999 (many argue we yet do not have democracy properly so-called), the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities (ASUU) has embarked on strike actions totalling over 57 months - almost five years lost by students and their parents especially to strike actions, since the lecturers and other university workers always return to hold government by the jugular and get paid for work not done!

By Bola Bolawole

"Anything you can do/I can do it better/I'm the toughest (I'm the toughest)/And I can do what you can't do/You'll never try to do what I do/I'm the toughest/I'm the toughest" (1978) - Peter Tosh.

By Dr Godswill Uche

This journey is not about one man; it is about all of us. I am in this Okigwe Senatorial Race for the good people of Okigwe Zone and I cannot do it alone. Your steady support, trust, and your active participation is essential as we work toward a future that reflects and portends our collective prosperity.

Truth be told, the future of our communities depends on how well we develop, and empower our young people in this generation.

Great transformation begins with us because democracy is for the people and for the people.Lets rally round this great goal getter.. He is rugged ,dogged and highly focused when it comes to bringing or attracting dividends of democracy to his people.This is the time to pay him back for all those good and positive things he has been doing for NDI Okigwe.

Umunnem let's send a thorough bred and that is Chief Longers Anyanwu Ebubedike gburugburu Obowo.Dont send somebody with inferiority instincts that will be subservient to his fellow Senators especially those big Senators from the North or Yoruba land.

Longers is bold, fearless and daring.

He has always believed that leadership must be people oriented. He reiterated that youths of Okigwe cannot be spectators again in democracy; he regards the youths as partners in development. Their energy, ideas, and courage remain a great assets that must be harnessed, not ignored. In the same vein with the women who he describes them as the backbone of our society, and no meaningful progress can happen without their full participation.

These convictions are not new to Chief Longers Anyanwu he will bring it to bear once elected. He will make sure everybody is being carried along. They are values he has carried long before now, and they continue to guide his actions.

Chief Longers Anyanwus shoulder is a message many leaders will not forget in a hurry: Be human first. Lead with Mercy, Decide with wisdom. Act with love .because power without empathy is just oppression in disguise.

To the people of Okigwe zone , I urge you to remain firm and focused. Do not be discouraged by noise or detractors. Development is achieved through vision, Discipline, and collective efforts and which must be sustained.

Chief Longers Anyanwu is committed to offering credible leadership, rooted in integrity, transparency, and service. If entrusted with your mandate.

His priority will always be the welfare of the people, empowerment of Okigwe Zone youths, and the creation of opportunities that will uplift the great people of Okigwe Zone.

As we step into the new day, new week and month ofJanuary let us do so with unity, determination, and renewed positive resolve.

Together, we can build communities where leadership serves, voices are heard, and progress inclusive. Chief Longers opined.

Long live Okigwe Zone Long live Imo State Long live the governor of Imo State Long live Nigeria.

...Dr Godswill Uche writes from Owerri.

By Azu Ishiekwene

After months of dallying and endless speculations, Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf of Kano State finally broke ranks with Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, his in-law, mentor and political godfather.

By Bolanle Bolawole

Neither Bob Nesta Marley nor Muhammed Ali (formerly Cassius Clay) needs any introduction - except, perhaps, to the Gen. Z and Alpha generations that know next-to-nothing of history. Marley was the widely-recognised king of philosophical-cum-political reggae music and Ali, the politically-conscious and philosophical greatest-ever boxer in modern history. Both were black. Both were conscious of this heritage - especially so its challenges. Both were determined to live and act as the champion their heritage and its cause. And both actually did! The sacrifices they consciously made, made a difference for them as individuals, for blacks as a race, and for the totality of humanity.

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