Boko Haram is winning.
That's the assessment of both U.S. counterterrorism officials and many experts who cover West Africa.
After several months of optimism, and military successes by Chadian and
Nigerian forces that rolled back the terror group's gains, Boko Haram
has retaken the initiative.
The Islamist terror group attacked a
police academy in Chad's capital city of N'Djamena this weekend, killing
dozens of officers and recruits. Boko Haram had also killed dozens of
Nigerians, including police officers, in a series of recent attacks
around Maiduguri, the biggest city in Nigeria's northeast. On Wednesday,
a sack of bombs killed more than 60 people in Bauchi, Nigeria.
"You
can quibble on this and that, but yes, they are winning," said John
Campbell, the Ralph Bunche Center director at the Council on Foreign
Relations and a former U.S. ambassador to Nigeria. Campbell said that
Western observers had "way overstated" the territorial gains by Nigerian
and Chadian forces that dislodged Boko Haram from small towns it had
overrun in the spring.
"There have been successes," said a U.S.
counterterrorism official. "But it's whack-a-mole. Boko Haram does
strategic retreats. ... They will move out from the forest into the
countryside, attacking villages, then when confronted will beat a
retreat and carry out bombings in Maiduguri. ... We've just had three
days of bombings in Maiduguri. It had quieted down in Maiduguri."
Officials
in Nigeria and four neighboring countries -- Chad, Cameroon, Niger and
Benin -- have been trying to form an 8,700-man fighting force to battle
Boko Haram. Both the United States and France has been helping with
intelligence and other support, but the multinational force is still has
no central command.
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/boko-haram-winning-n376786?cid=par-sy-_all
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