Friday, 16 May 2014
White House Rules out Special Forces for Kidnapped Girls
Despite the growing clamour in the United
States Congress for the deployment of American
Special Forces to assist in the search for more
than 200 Chibok schoolgirls abducted more
than a month ago, the White House has ruled it
out, saying the focus is on assisting the Nigerian
government in finding and rescuing the girls.
This is just as presidency sources disclosed
yesterday that President Goodluck Jonathan
would be paying his first visit to Chibok in Borno
State today, more than a month after the
students were kidnapped.
Former US presidential candidate, Senator John
McCain, Wednesday had said the Pentagon
should consider acting unilaterally and send
special forces to rescue the girls.
“We’re the best-trained, most professional
military in the world, and if we know where
these young girls are, we should go rescue
them,” he said, questioning Nigeria‘s military
capability.
US military officials said privately, however,
that a rescue mission would be fraught with
massive risks and dangers and that it currently
was not deemed an option.
McCain got support from Congressional
Democrats such as Senator Dianne Feinstein, a
ranking senator, who said special forces should
be sent but only if the Nigerian government
makes the request.
However, the White House said yesterday that it
was not actively considering sending Special
Forces to Nigeria, adding: “We are actively
advising including through military personnel -
the Nigerian government as it seeks to find, to
locate and to rescue these girls. Finding them is
the first step.”
According to AFP, White House Press Secretary
Jay Carney said at a briefing: “Our military
personnel at the embassy and any additional
military personnel we may deploy will be in
Nigeria in an advisory capacity."
“At this point, we’re not actively considering the
deployment of US forces to participate in a
combined rescue mission," Carney said in
response to a question at his daily news
conference.
Carney said: “I think it’s important to be mindful
of where we are in this process and not get ahead
of ourselves. We’re engaged at many levels now
as part of this group that’s been stood up at the
embassy with personnel from the embassy as
well as from AFRICOM and elsewhere, including
the military, State (Department) and FBI to
assist the government in the effort underway to
find the kidnapped girls.”
That effort includes manned fixed-wing
reconnaissance flights, he said, adding that it
also includes unmanned, unarmed
reconnaissance flights (US drones) in the effort
to find them.
“I would note that even the narrowly-drawn area
where there is the greatest suspicion that the
girls might be is an area that is something along
the size of the state of West Virginia. So this is a
pretty vast expanse of territory,” he said.
Carney pointed out that the US does not have
intelligence to share about the location of the
girls or whether they are all together.
“But time is of the essence, as we've been saying.
That’s why we were so eager to assist the
Nigerian government in this effort that the
Nigerian government, of course, is leading.
“But it's important to step back and understand
the challenges that this search effort is facing.
“We would have to know where the girls are as a
simple proposition before we could attempt
rescue attempts. At this point, we’re not
considering the deployment of US military
personnel. The military personnel who are
involved in this effort are involved in an
advisory capacity,” he explained.
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