
U.S. Special Forces Worry, he Can't Verify Nigeria's Claims That It Found the Missing Schoolgirls
A day after Nigeria's defense chief claimed that the country's military knew the location of more than 200 missing schoolgirls, the State Department has noted that it has been unable to verify that claim.
A day after Nigeria's defense chief claimed that the country's military knew the location of more than 200 missing schoolgirls, the State Department has noted that it has been unable to verify that claim.
In a Tuesday statement, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki
indicated that the U.S. also isn't thrilled with the Nigerian
government's decision to say this publicly, even if the claim does turn
out to be true. Here's the statement, via Reuters:
"We don't have independent information from the United States to
support these reports you referenced...We, as a matter of policy and for
the girls' safety and wellbeing, would not discuss publicly this sort
of information regardless."
The comments come in response to Monday remarks by Nigerian Air Marshal
Alex Badeh, who said that "the good news for the parents of the girls is
that we know where they are, but we cannot tell you." He added that the
government had ruled out a forceful military response to rescue the
girls, along with the possibility of negotiations with their Boko
Haram-affiliated captors.
In addition to the State Department's statement, officials from the U.S.
and the EU cast doubt on Nigeria's claims in interviews with Reuters.
The countries were assisting Nigeria's search with intelligence data.
"The officials said that as far as they knew, technical intelligence
systems had not produced precise or credible information establishing
the girls' location," Reuters noted.
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As the Wall Street Journal reported, the military may have been relying
on sightings from hunters and herdsmen in northeastern Nigeria, who have
been reporting what they see back to the military. But this isn't the
first time an official statement from the military has faced scrutiny,
both for its accuracy and for the wisdom of the statement itself. As the
Journal notes, one unnamed Nigerian official said it was probably
unwise to disclose the breakthrough: "It was not strategic to say it.
When you come out and say you know where they are—they'll just move
them," he said.
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