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Maitama Sule, Fomer Nigerian Ambassador, a USA spy?

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Below is a report released recently by Wikileaks concerning United States of America [USA]’s data gathering operations in Nigeria through its local spies planted/stationed around the Nigerian presidency.
The report exposes, the former Nigerian Ambassador to the United Nations, Maitama Sule as a USA spy.
Read the secret wire report to the USA – of Maitama Sule’s supplied information.
——
 
NIGERIA: NORTHERN SUPPORT FOR YAR’ADUA WANING, THOUGH TEMPERED BY FEAR 
SUMMARY:
 
Maitama Sule (strictly protect), former Nigerian ambassador to the United Nations (1979-1983) and confidant of President Umaru Yar’Adua, averred that the northern political elite is increasingly apprehensive about Yar’Adua’s health and his capacity to continue to govern, and 
is fearful the North may lose the presidency to the South if Yar’Adua dies, although we note that there are other factors at play on this issue besides Yar’Adua’s health, particularly if the Supreme Court calls for a new election.  
While Sule believes that President’s performance during his first year in office has suffered due to his ailing health, he assessed Yar’Adua has succeeded in disentangling and distancing himself from former President Obasanjo.  Sule informed that Yar’Adua wants to further reduce Obasanjo’s influence both within the Villa and the National Assembly.  Consequently, Sule remarked, Yar’Adua intends to replace current Chief of Staff, and Obasanjo-loyalist, Abdullahi Mohammed.  (Nigerian press reported May 30 that Mohammed has resigned, and will officially vacate office June 2.)  
Sule confided that some influential northerners are currently pressuring former National Security Adviser, Aliyu Muhammad Gusau, to consider taking over as Chief of Staff.  
Also, Sule alleged that Obasanjo is working to bribe the Supreme Court to overturn President Yar’Adua’s April 2007 election.  While claiming 
that First Lady Turai Yar’Adua is heavily involved in corrupt activities, Sule insisted that President Yar’Adua is committed to remaining personally untainted by corruption. 
To that end, Sule asserted, President Yar’Adua recently turned down $60 million, which had been offered to him as the President’s personal “share” of Nigeria’s monthly oil earnings.  Although Yar’Adua, according to Sule, allegedly ordered his “share” to be deposited into the nation’s treasury, Sule also said First Lady Turai pocketed $60 million while Senate President David Mark and House Speaker Dimeji Bankole each pocketed $30 million.  We still contend however, that it is impossible for Yar’Adua not to know about his wife’s illicit activity even if he is not personally accepting bribes or engaging in such activity.  END SUMMARY. 
 
¶2. (S//NF) Maitama Sule (strictly protect), former Nigerian ambassador to the United Nations (1979-1983) and well-known confidant of President Umaru Yar’Adua spoke with PolOff at his Kano residence May 15 (see Ref A for Sule biographical information).  Sule lamented the northern political elite remains increasingly apprehensive about Yar’Adua’s health. 
Whereas earlier health-related predictions of Yar’Adua’s prognosis had been relatively positive, current estimates, Sule observed, paint a somber picture of the President’s strength, and consequently, his capacity to continue to govern.  With the prospect of Yar’Adua’s death while still in 
office figuring prominently in the minds of many in the North, Sule remarked that the North fears it may inadvertently forfeit its turn to hold the presidency.  Such an eventuality, Sule bemoaned, would impair the North’s ability to retain influence and help chart a more positive course for northerners, especially after eight years of what northerners deem Obasanjo’s injurious influence on the North. 
 
¶3. (S//NF) Sule believes that Yar’Adua has succeeded in distancing himself from Obasanjo, and appears more committed to attenuating Obasanjo’s influence within the Villa.  To that end, Sule said, Yar’Adua plans to reshuffle the cabinet to replace Obasanjo-loyalists within the Villa.  In particular, Sule noted that the northern political elite is working to convince former National Security Adviser Aliyu Muhammad Gusau to rebuff entreaties by Ibrahim Babangida to aid him in a return to power, and instead, accede to the position of Yar’Adua’s Chief of Staff, which is currently held by Obasanjo-loyalist Abdullahi Mohammed.  (Nigerian press reported May 30 that Mohammed resigned with effect from June 2.  Gbolade Osinowo, Senior Special Assistant to President Yar’Adua will act as Chief of Staff until a replacement is announced.)  
Sule said that Gusau has been reluctant to accept anything less than the presidency, given that he too wanted to be the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the April 2007 presidential elections (Ref B). 
Sule admitted that Obasanjo’s influence within the PDP has not been as circumscribed as Yar’Adua had hoped.  However, by limiting Chief of Staff Mohammed’s (and potentially, other Obasanjo-loyalists’) access to the President, Sule argued, Obasanjo would be left in the dark since he would neither be able to influence Yar’Adua nor be privy to the ins and outs of the Villa.  Sule reasoned, as well, that a powerful Chief of Staff loyal to Yar’Adua would ensure not only that Obasanjo’s power within the Villa would be diminished, but also that the influence of the ambitious (though certainly not tied to Obasanjo) Secretary to the Government Babagana Kingibe would be reduced. 
 
¶4. (S//NF) Sule also intimated that Obasanjo, in concert with Senate President David Mark, is working to bribe the Supreme Court to overturn President Yar’Adua’s April 2007 election (see Ref C).  (In the event that the Supreme Court annuls the President’s election, the Constitution stipulates that the Senate President administers an interim government for a period of up to 90 days pending fresh elections.  However, 
Mark has his own political troubles as his election too had been overturned in late February 2008.)  
Moreover, Sule stated that in his judgment, the President’s lackluster performance over this past year should be viewed in light of his ailing health.  Despite his shortcomings, Sule said, some of the northern elite continue to politically support Yar’Adua not least because he is viewed as committed to preserving northern interests. 
 
¶5. (S//NF) While claiming that First Lady Turai Yar’Adua is heavily involved in corrupt practices, and especially real estate fraud, Sule insisted that President Yar’Adua is committed to remaining personally untainted by corruption. 
To that end, Sule asserted, President Yar’Adua recently turned down approximately $60 million, which had been offered to him by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) as the President’s personal “share” of Nigeria’s monthly oil earnings (Nigeria has produced around 2 million bpd, though production has dropped recently to 1.8 million bpd). 
Allegedly, Sule said, the NNPC (beginning under former President Obasanjo’s administration) allocated USD 1.00 per barrel of Nigerian oil sold as a type of personal payment or “kickback” to the President.  While Yar’Adua reportedly ordered his “share” to be deposited into the nation’s treasury, Sule claimed that the First Lady pocketed her husband’s reported share, while Senate President David Mark and House Speaker Dimeji Bankole pocketed USD 0.50/barrel (e.g., $30 million).  
In light of the possibility that Obasanjo could have stolen billions of dollars under this arrangement, Sule told PolOff that Yar’Adua told him that he 
may use this information, perhaps one day in the near future, 
to indict Obasanjo for corruption.  The problem however, 
according to Sule, rested in the fact that Yar’Adua 
recognized that if he were to pursue Obasanjo, he may 
unwittingly subject his wife and close advisers to greater 
scrutiny, and risk his own political survival. 
 
¶6. (S//NF) Sule said that Yar’Adua had effectively quashed 
efforts by Obasanjo to direct Senate President David Mark, et 
al. to inflate allocation requests for the 2008 budget in 
order to funnel a substantial portion of those extra funds to 
Obasanjo (Ref E).  Sule told PolOff that the various chairs 
of the budget committees in both the House of Representatives 
and Senate were Obasanjo-loyalists.  The disagreements 
between the National Assembly (NASS) and President Yar’Adua 
over the passage of the budget resulted from Yar’Adua’s 
desire to limit Obasanjo’s influence over the NASS, and to 
assert his own authority, Sule opined.  Furthermore, Sule 
said the Senate and House had unsuccessfully attempted to 
extort money from the Presidency in order to pass the budget. 
 
¶7. (C//NF) Retired Major General, and current chair of the 
northern interest group the Arewa Consultative Forum, Ibrahim 
Haruna (strictly protect) told PolOff May 29 that although 
President Yar’Adua is a fellow northerner, he has been a 
“disaster” for Nigeria since his inauguration May 2007. 
 
ABUJA 00001018  003 OF 003 
 
 
Haruna opined that Yar’Adua, in one year, has not delivered 
on any of the promises he had made to the North.  To the 
contrary, Haruna asserted, Yar’Adua has been “reaping the 
rewards” of the presidency without having to “lift a finger.” 
 Haruna alleged that Yar’Adua has demonstrated during his 
first year in office that he is more interested in “owning 
oil wells” in the Delta than in conducting Nigeria’s 
political affairs. 
 
———– 
AN ANALYSIS 
———– 
¶8. (S//NF) We believe Sule’s assessment that Yar’Adua is 
successfully (albeit slowly) disengaging himself from 
Obasanjo is valid, and his information on the First Lady’s 
alleged illicit enrichment activities tracks with other 
reporting.  However, Sule may be exaggerating the political 
support Yar’Adua has in the North.  Or, at the least, Sule 
may be conflating the North’s support for Yar’Adua with the 
North’s desire to hold onto its turn for the presidency. 
Over the course of Yar’Adua’s first year in office and slow 
pace of reform, northern elite opinions of the President seem 
to have gradually shifted (see also Ref D), as they worry not 
only about his health but also forfeiting the presidency to 
the South.  While some have argued that Yar’Adua is committed 
to safeguarding northern interests, others have maintained 
that the President has proven to be both incapable and 
unwilling to do anything positive for the North (and the rest 
of Nigeria).  Certainly, several northern contacts with whom 
we have spoken have said, time and again, that the North 
fears it may lose the helm of political affairs should 
President Yar’Adua die in office or fail to return as the 
PDP’s candidate in any re-run of last year’s presidential 
race (in the event the Supreme Court overturns his April 2007 
election).  After one year in office, many northerners 
consider Yar’Adua equally as complicit as Obasanjo in the 
North’s underdevelopment, and accuse the President of turning 
a blind eye to his own region.  After all, one of the 
principal grievances of the North during Obasanjo’s past 
administration was not simply that Obasanjo was from the 
South and ignored Northern interests, but that Obasanjo 
successfully thwarted efforts by the North to exert its 
relevance in his administration. 
 
¶9. (S//NF) Additionally, many prominent northerners have 
spoken out against not only Obasanjo’s mismanagement of the 
Nigerian government’s vast resources, but also President 
Yar’Adua’s unimpressive record of performance over this past 
year.  It appears that the northern political elite’s desire 
to retain the presidency is separate, to a degree, from its 
support for this particular northern president, or even for 
concerns that Yar’Adua may be ineffectual or corrupt.  In the 
short term, desire for a Northern president may temper 
criticism for Yar’Adua in certain circles.  However, with 
time, it is difficult to surmise how the desire for the North 
to retain the presidency can sustain support for Yar’Adua 
unless he begins to pick up the pace. END COMMENT. 
SANDERS
 
REF: A. 07 ABUJA 2616 
     ¶B. 07 ABUJA 47 
     ¶C. ABUJA 799 
     ¶D. 07 ABUJA 1671 
     ¶E. ABUJA 643 
 
Classified By: A/Pol/C Heather Merritt, reasons 1.4 (b, c & d).  

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