losses, or otherwise proved incapable of beating the extremist threat down.
Chad boasts by far the mightiest army in the region, and is France’s main African military ally. Chadian soldiers provided irreplaceable ground help chasing Islamist militias that had taken control of northern Mali into the desert, as French power struck from the air.
It is now urgent to provide Chad “support very, very fast,” the diplomat said, especially because fierce, war-hardened Chadian forces represent “the only rampart” against Boko Haram in the region.
In the meantime, Paris might well find it impossible to confine its 3,000-strong regional force to Chad, Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso and Mauritania if Boko Haram continues striking out from Nigeria into southern Niger and western Cameroon — and perhaps even staged its first incursion into Chad.
Unlike its operation against Jihadist militias in the Sahel, an active French role in the fight against Boko Haram would likely require troops on the ground as well as the air.
Paris is seeking to avoid such scenarios by urging international partners to join France in helping affected African nations help themselves against the extremists.
“France cannot settle all the world’s conflicts,” French President Francois Hollande said during a February 5 press conference, at which he scolded global powers for insufficient involvement in combating Boko Haram.
“It’s certain that Boko Haram is creating a major crisis, and that all foreign countries are responding to it far too slowly,” agreed a European diplomat, who nevertheless rejected French criticism that Europe is not trying to help with reminders the European Union has offered Nigeria security assistance for nearly five years — which Abuja has repeatedly rejected.
Specialist Marc-Antoine Perouse de Montclos agreed that because Boko Haram is first and foremost a Nigerian entity, the key to defeating it must come from or through Nigeria’s government.
“Resolution to the crisis has to come from Abuja, which isn’t participating,” in the regional battle, Perouse de Monclos wrote in an analysis published on Thursday by the Jean Jaures Foundation.
In it, he suggests a greater role should be played by Britain, since the “former colonial power is maintaining a low profile, while France has little or no diplomatic influence.”
But with Nigeria’s presidential elections now postponed due to the insecurity and chaos created by Boko Haram, one diplomat warns the electoral stakes may now be too high for central powers in Abuja to take on “an evil genie they created themselves, and which has escaped the bottle.”