What can the U.S. — or anyone — do to return more than 200 abducted girls to their families in Nigeria? And what might happen if the U.S. engages with another violent group of extremists? Retired Gen. Carter Ham, who until last year led the U.S. African Command, says there's still a chance to help.
Ham's former command will be part of the U.S. effort to search for the missing schoolgirls, who were kidnapped three weeks ago by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram. The group's leader said this week that he plans to sell them. Ham says he suspects some of the girls may have already been sent to other countries.
"I suspect they've been probably dispersed by now. That'll be a difficult challenge," Ham tells NPR's Steve Inskeep on Morning Edition. "But we have surveillance platforms, signals intelligence and other capabilities that would be helpful."
Yesterday, Nigerian officials offered a $300,000 reward for help in finding the girls; earlier this week, the country accepted a U.S. offer of help. The moves followed days of protests by demonstrators venting their anger over the mass abduction. The case has led to a Twitter campaign around the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls; first lady Michelle Obama joined that push Wednesday.
If the girls are located, Ham says he thinks U.S. agencies such as the FBI could help the Nigerian government with "hostage rescue, negotiations and care of hostages, once [they're] released. So there are a lot of capabilities the U.S. government broadly can bring to assist the Nigerians."
But first, the girls and their captors must be found. Ham says he doesn't think anyone will be able to talk Boko Haram's leader, Abubakar Shekau, into returning the girls. But he says that if the girls have been dispersed, as many believe, Nigeria and its allies might have a better chance.
"That means that some girls are probably held by younger, less experienced, and perhaps less ideologically committed individuals," Ham says. "And some of those might be affected by good hostage negotiation."
Besides the U.S., other countries, such as Britain and France, have also offered to help. Ham says the rescue effort must also include Nigeria's neighbors, such as Niger, Chad, and Cameroon.
But as NPR's Michele Kelemen reports, some observers are skeptical that the international effort can make a difference. They note that more than three weeks have already passed. And they say Boko Haram is entrenched in Borno, the northern Nigeria where it has repeatedly attacked schools and villages in recent years. Another brutal attack was reported this week.
"It's like a needle in the haystack type of search we are talking about here," says Richard Downie of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "A small group of personnel that the U.S. is providing, that may help, but it's unlikely to be a game changer."
As for the possible repercussions that could come from the U.S. more directly opposing a militant group that targets Western entities, Ham acknowledges that the operation could "cause Boko Haram to focus more on U.S. interests."
But he added, "in a larger sense, I think if we can help Nigeria find these girls — and I think we can — then I'm, personally I'm glad to see us make that effort."
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