I read an
interesting article recently in which the author, objecting to President
Muhammadu Buhari’s frequent travels abroad pointed out that Presidential
spokespersons since 1999, including this writer, have always justified such
trips using essentially the same arguments. The fellow quoted copiously and
derisively from my State House press statements and an article by me titled
“The Gains of Jonathan’s Diplomacy”.
Those who
object to Presidential travels abroad do so for a number of reasons: (a) the
cost on the grounds of frequency and size of estacode-collecting delegation,
with multiple officers performing the same function tagging along on every
trip, (b) the need to make better use of diplomats in foreign missions and
Foreign Ministry officials who can act in delegated capacity; (c) the failure
to see the immediate and long-term gains of Presidential junket, thus creating
the impression of a jamboree or mindless tourism, and (d) the conviction that
the President needs to stay at home to address urgent domestic challenges,
rather than live out of a suitcase, in the air. While these reasons may seem
understandable, arising as they are from anxieties about reducing wastage and
increasing governmental efficiency for the people’s benefit, I still insist
that Presidential trips are important, and that by travelling abroad, the
President is performing a perfectly normal function.
We may
however, complain about abuses and the reduction of an important function to
tourism for after all, in eight years, President Bill Clinton of the United
States travelled only 54 times – only by Nigerian standards, but we must
also admit that the President is the country’s chief diplomat. In our
constitutional democracy, he is the main articulator and implementer of the
country’s foreign policy. He appoints ambassadors who function in their various
posts as his representatives. He also receives other country’s ambassadors.
Emissaries from other countries or multilateral organizations consider their
visits incomplete without an audience with the President, and it is his message
that they take back home.
He visits
other Presidents and he also gets visited by other world leaders; an
interaction that provides him an opportunity to give effect to Section 19 of
the 1999 Constitution which defines the objectives of Nigeria’s Foreign Policy.
In doing this, he is expected to strengthen relationships with other countries,
at government to government and people to people levels in the national
interest.
The President
is also the country’s chief spokesperson, and that is why what he says, or what
he does when he is negotiating within the international arena on Nigeria’s
behalf is of great consequence, and this is particularly why on at least two
occasions recently, Nigerians were inconsolably upset when their President
chose a foreign stage to put down his own country, and people. This
clarification of the role of the President as the country’s chief diplomat may
sound didactic, and I apologise if it comes across as pedantic, but this is
necessary for the benefit of those who may be tempted to assume that the job of
a President is to sit in one place at home and act as a mechanic and ambulance
chaser. The concerns that have been expressed however point to something far
more complex, and I seek to now problematize aspects of it.
One of the
concerns often expressed is that the trips that have been made by our
Presidents since 1999 look too much alike. It is as if every President that
shows up, embarks on exactly the same junket to the same locations, for the
same reasons: foreign direct investment, agriculture, security, co-operation
etc. etc. accompanied by a large retinue that includes many of the same
officials who travelled with the former President and had prepared the same
MOUs that will be signed again, with the new spokespersons telling us the same
story all over again.
Nigerians are
therefore not impressed with the seeming conversion of the country’s foreign
policy process into a money-guzzling ritual. This, I think, is the crux of the
matter. Whereas our foreign policy objective talks about national interest,
what constitutes that national interest has been blurry and chameleonic in the
last 55 years and more so since the return to civilian rule in 1999. National
interest has been replaced majorly by personal interest and it is the worst
tragedy that can befall a country’s foreign policy process. We run a
begin-again foreign relations framework because every new President wants to
make his own mark. The second point is that he is compelled to do so because in
any case, we do not have a strong institution to follow up on existing
agreements. The international community knows this quite well, and more serious
nations being more strategic and determined in the pursuit of their own
interests will bombard a new Nigerian President with invitations to visit. They
also know that a new President in Nigeria is likely to cancel or suspend
existing agreements or contracts being executed by their nationals. The
uncertainty that prevails in Nigeria is so well known, such that the gains
recorded by one administration are not necessarily institutionalized.
We may have
thus reduced foreign policy to individual heroism, which is sad, but
institutions and human capital within this arena are critical. The Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, once a glorious institution is a shadow of its old self. The
politicization of that Ministry has done great damage. When a President visits
a country, and enters into agreements that result in Memoranda of
Understanding, it is expected that there will be follow up action to be taken
by officials either through Bilateral Commissions (where they exist between
Nigeria and the respective country) or the issuance of instruments of
ratification, leading to due implementation. Nigeria signs all kinds of
documents but so many details and agreements are left unattended to. There is
too much politics in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and too much rivalry
between career foreign affairs personnel and the politicians who do not allow
them to function as professionals. This has to stop, otherwise every new
President has to start again and embark on trips that should have been taken
care of at the level of bilateral commissions or the ministry.
Career foreign
affairs personnel are critical to the shaping of foreign policy. They are the
agents through which states communicate with each other, negotiate, and sustain
relationships. The only thing they complain about in that Ministry is lack of
money. It is the same with the Missions abroad. Give them money, but there is
always a greater need for professionalism, which makes the diplomats of
Nigeria’s golden era so sad. The foreign policy process also works better when
there is Inter-Ministerial and Intra-governmental collaboration. The tendency
in Nigeria is for every department of government to operate as an independent
foreign policy unit. Government officials get invited to functions by foreign
embassies, without clearance from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and they
just troop there to eat free food, but they never keep their mouths shut.
Nigerian officials are probably the most talkative in the world and with
foreigners, they will offer their mother’s life history to make them appear
important. That is not how to run foreign relations. There must be control,
co-ordination, discipline, clarity and sanctions.
Every world
leader wants to meet the Nigerian President. Nigeria is a strategic market and
a very cheap one too, a source of raw materials and a dumping ground for
finished products, with a consumptive population. Our balance sheet in all our
relationships is unbalanced even in Africa, which we once described as the
centerpiece of our foreign policy. We have toyed with many slogans: dynamic
diplomacy, economic diplomacy, concentric circles of medium powers, citizen
diplomacy, transformational diplomacy, what else, the Buharideens are yet to
come up with their own, but you wait, they will soon come up with something-
really, the truth is that Nigeria’s foreign policy process is not strategic or
competitive enough.
Within Africa,
it is driven by too much kindness rather than enlightened self-interest, or
deliberate search for sustainable advantages. A Donatus mentality has seen
Nigeria over the years looking out for its African neighbours, donating money,
supporting their causes, but Nigeria has gained little from this charity-driven
diplomacy. Many of the countries we have helped to build openly despise us at
international meetings, they struggle for positions with Nigeria, they
humiliate our citizens in diaspora, and when they return later to beg for
vehicles, or money to pay their civil servants or run elections, we still
oblige them. The attempt in recent years to review all of this, and be more
strategic should be sustained.
We must wield
the carrot and the stick more often. American Presidents don’t just visit other
countries, they make statements and often alter the course of history with
their mere presence as Kennedy did with his visit to Berlin in 1963, Nixon in
China in 1972, Jimmy Carter going to Iran in 1977, George Bush, visiting Mexico
in 2001, and Obama in Cuba in 2016. In the international arena, we give the
impression that we are ready to jump at any and every invitation in order to be
seen to be friendly, but we tend to overdo this. Foreign Affairs Ministry
officials who want to be seen to be doing something will always try to convince
the President to embark on all trips. The dream of every Ambassador on foreign
posting is also to have his President visit, even if once during his or her
tenure. The resident Ambassador is happy, the Foreign Affairs folks get quality
eye-time with the President but the hosts look at us and wonder what is wrong
with our country signing the same agreements with the emergence of every
President and not being able to act.
It does not
help either that with every new President, we talk about reviewing Nigeria’s
Foreign Policy. We are probably the only country in the world that is always
reviewing Foreign Policy and informing the whole world. That should be the
routine work of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Nigeria Institute of
International Affairs, with inputs from the Nigerian Institute of Policy and
Strategic Studies (NIPSS), the Nigeria Intelligence Agency (NIA), and the
Presidential Advisory Committee on Foreign Affairs.
We must never
lose sight of a necessary linkage between domestic policy and foreign policy.
What exactly is in it for the average Nigerian, for the Nigerian economy and
for Nigeria? Do we have the capacity to maximize gains from foreign interactions?
Always, the real challenge lies in getting our acts together and tying up the
loose ends in terms of sustainable policy choices, infrastructure, culture,
leadership, and strategic engagement.
Dr. Reuben Abati was spokesman and
special adviser, Media and Publicity to President Goodluck Jonathan (2011 –
2015). He tweets from @abati1990.
No comments:
Post a Comment