US Restricts Intel from Nigeria on Missing Girls

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Project Liberty

The U.S. military has conducted several surveillance flights over northeastern Nigeria in an effort to find school girls held by a terrorist group but is not sharing the intelligence gathered from the Nigerian government, Pentagon officials said Tuesday.

Army Gen. David Rodriguez, head of the Africa Command, was in Abuja, the Nigerian capital, to work out "protocols" for sharing the information from the high-resolution cameras carried by the surveillance aircraft, the officials said.

"At this point, we are not sharing raw intelligence data," said Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman.

Warren declined to give reasons for holding back the information but Africa specialists have warned of corruption in the Nigerian military and fears that the Boko Haram terror group holding the girls has penetrated the security services.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan "himself has said that high levels of the security apparatus and the government have been penetrated" by Boko Haram agents and sympathizers, said J. Peter Pham, director of the Africa Center at the Atlantic Council.

"That's going to hurt the search effort," Pham said Monday on the PBS "NewsHour" program.

Although the military was holding back, the U.S. has been sharing commercial satellite imagery with the Nigerians, the State Department said.

At the Pentagon, Warren said that the U.S. military began Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance flights Monday.

The operations with fixed wing aircraft were at the request of the Nigerian government over areas in northeastern Nigeria where Boko Haram was suspected of taking the girls.

Several news outlets and government officials speaking anonymously have said that the ISR flights were piloted, but Warren declined to say whether the flights were by manned aircraft or by drones. He also declined to say where the aircraft were based.

Warren said that Rodriguez' presence in Nigeria had been planned previously, but he was now working out of the Embassy in Abuja to coordinate with an inter-agency team, including about 10 troops from Africom, on assisting the Nigerians in the search for the girls.

The search reportedly was centered on the Sambisa Forest, a Boko Haram stronghold near Nigeria's border with Cameroon.

More than 200 girls aged 16-18 were abducted on April 14 from their boarding school in the northeastern town of Chibok by fighters from Boko Haram, which seeks an Islamist state in the north.

Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau posted a video Monday showing about a hundred of the girls seated on the ground and offered to exchange them for prisoners held by the government.

-- Richard Sisk can be reached at richard.sisk@monster.com

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