Nigeria FOREIGN RELATIONS
President Ibrahim Babangida, 1990
Courtesy Embassy of Nigeria, Washington
A 1989 publication by the Federal Military Government,
Four Years of the Babangida Administration,
summarized the
priority issues of Nigerian foreign policy: the abolition
of
apartheid in South Africa; the enhancement of Nigeria's
relations
with member countries of the European Economic Community
(EEC),
the United States, the Soviet Union, and with other major
industrialized countries to increase the flow of foreign
investments and capital into Nigeria; and continued
support for
international organizations, such as the Economic
Community of
West African States (ECOWAS), the Organization of African
Unity
(OAU), and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). Relations with
other
African states constituted the cornerstone of Nigerian
foreign
policy.
The Ministry of External Affairs was directly
responsible for
foreign policy formulation and implementation. Because
matters
were usually left in the hands of the minister and his
officials,
foreign policy positions could change radically from one
minister
to another, depending on the minister's orientation. In
addition
to the minister's immediate staff, there was a small
foreign
policy elite comprising other top government officials,
interest
group leaders, academicians, top military officers,
religious
leaders, and journalists. This elite exerted indirect
influence
through communiqués and press releases, as well as direct
pressure on the government. In 1986 a conference--to which
every
stratum of this elite was invited--was held to review
Nigeria's
foreign policy and recommend broad policy frameworks for
the
1990s and beyond.
Several factors conditioned Nigeria's foreign policy
positions. First, the ethnic and religious mix of the
country
required cautious positions on some issues, such as policy
toward
Israel. Nigeria found it difficult to restore diplomatic
ties
with Israel and had not done so as of 1990 because of
Muslim
opposition and sympathy with the rest of the Arab Muslim
world.
Second, Nigeria's legacy as an ex-British colony, combined
with
its energy-producing role in the global economy,
predisposed
Nigeria to be pro-Western on most issues despite the
desire to
maintain a nonaligned status to avoid neocolonialism. In
1990
this pro-Western posture was reinforced by Nigeria's
"economic
diplomacy," which involved negotiating trade concessions,
attracting foreign investors, and rescheduling debt
repayment to
Western creditors
(see The Debt Overhang
, ch. 3). Third,
the
country's membership in and commitment to several
international
organizations, such as the United Nations and bodies
mentioned
earlier, also affected foreign policy positions. Fourth,
and most
important, as the most populous country in Africa and the
entire
black world, Nigeria perceived itself as the "giant" of
Africa
and the potential leader of the black race. Thus, Nigerian
external relations have emphasized African issues, which
have
become the avowed cornerstone of foreign policy.
These factors have caused certain issues to dominate
Nigerian
foreign policy across various governments, but each
government
has had distinctive priorities and style. During the 1950s
and
early 1960s, foreign policy aimed at proper behavior in
the
international system, and British authorities played a
major role
in Nigerian foreign relations. Consequently, the Balewa
government stressed world peace, respected sovereign
equality,
and maintained nonalignment based on friendship with any
country
that took a reciprocal position. After the fall of the
First
Republic, critics asserted that the government had been
too proWestern and not strong enough on decolonization or
integration,
and that the low profile had been embarrassing.
Nonetheless,
Gowon continued to keep a low profile by operating within
the
consensus of the OAU and by following routes of quiet
diplomacy.
The civil war marked a distinct break in Nigerian
foreign
policy. The actions of various countries and international
bodies
during the war increased awareness of the alignments
within
Africa and appreciation of the positive role that the OAU
could
play in African affairs. Whereas white-dominated African
countries had supported Biafra, the OAU sided with the
federation
by voting for unity. The OAU stance proved helpful for
Nigerian
diplomacy. Nigeria first turned to the Soviet Union for
support
after the West refused to provide arms to the federation,
and
after the war, a less pro-Western stance was maintained.
At the
same time, Africa remained Nigeria's top priority. In the
mid- to
late 1970s, attention focused on the liberation of
southern
Africa, on the integration of ECOWAS, and on the need for
complete economic independence throughout Africa. These
goals
were included in the 1979 constitution: promotion of
African
unity; political, economic, social, and cultural
liberation of
Africa; international cooperation; and elimination of
racial
discrimination.
Data as of June 1991
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