Reuben Abati, former spokesman to
immediate past president, Goodlcuk Jonathan, slammed the Nigerian military over
its operation code names.
Abati said army’s operation code-names
such as: Operation Python Dance, Crocodile Smile were wrong because a python
does not dance neither does a crocodile smile.
In an article entitled, ‘Python Do Not
Dance,’ the former presidential spokesman noted that the Nigerian military has
never been so clever in coming up with operation code names.
He wrote, “Many of them are dead
give-aways (Operation Lafiya Dole, Operation Pulo Shield, Operation Maximum
Safety, Operation Crackdown) or so stupidly incongruous they evoke instant
suspicion (Operation Python Dance, Operation Crocodile Smile). Pythons don’t
dance. Crocodiles don’t smile.
“Wars have been fought over the use of
wrong codes; nations have been sabotaged due to poor communication. Whoever
came up with the code name – Operation Python Dance- (sometimes a code name may
be computer generated) may have been aiming for irony, but it was strange irony
given the facts of the situation and the manner of operation. I make this point
to argue that the Nigerian military has messed up Operation Python Dance II in
the South East conceptually and operationally, and the attendant arrogance does
not serve the Nigerian state well in my view.
“A dance is accompanied by music, it is
celebratory in its kinetic and spatial expressions, and it is probably one of
the most ingenuous explorations of the human frame. Accompanied usually by
music and the symbolism of movement and flexibility, a dance, vertical,
horizontal or earth-bound is one of the wonders of human creativity and the most
universal of human languages.
“There is something called snake dance.
It is of course celebratory. To say a python is coming to a community to dance
is a revelatory oxymoron. A python swallows, it cuts off blood, constricts and
suffocates, it is a pretentious animal that curls itself up when it is ready to
eat, and then strikes, employing the techniques of velocity, ambush and
surprise.
“In December 2016, the pythons of the
Nigerian military went to the South East on Operation (I) but they did not blow
their cover. They said they wanted to help reduce crimes during Christmas. In
September 2017, they blew their own cover, and revealed the absurdity of their
cryptonym. They did because they behaved exactly like pythons. If that was
meant as a covert operation to protect the sovereignty of the country in the
face of “seen and analysed threat levels” in the South East, the Nigerian
military got it terribly wrong. There is every reason for other military
authorities in the international community to laugh at Nigeria.
“The military admittedly can conduct
routine exercises to prepare its men, to tune up or to check out the country’s
territorial integrity. Before and even shortly after the civil war, Nigerian
soldiers occasionally came out of their barracks and drove round the town. They
used to sing, march on the streets and dance inside their trucks and wave at
the people. The people waved back, and in due course, many children mastered
some of their songs. In our neck of the woods at the time, there is an Alamala
barracks in Abeokuta, one popular song was: J’amala n si ko, mo ti j’amala ki n
to lo s’ogun, j’amala n siko”.
“The latest instance is the bungled
operation in Abia State. Operation Python Dance II did not have to take place
in the streets of Isiama Afara in Umuahia, Abia State, close to Nnamdi Kanu’s
father’s house. The public show of force could have been done anywhere else in
the South East. Strutting military force close to the home of the leader of the
Indigenous People of Biafra, who in the last year has been busy mobilizing his
people, and making demands on the Nigerian state is an undisguised act of
provocation with all the pythonic elements of invasion, surprise and
suffocation. It was the equivalent of the state descending to the level of
rabble-rousing. This happens when an institution like the military opts for
street politics, and our military certainly exposed itself in ways that called
its professionalism to question in the last few days.”
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