“The chief cause of problems
is solutions.”
Eric
Sevareid
Usually limited to the sport of tennis, an
unforced error refers to bad play made entirely as a result of a player’s
blunder, and not because of an opponent’s skills or effort. Applied to
politics, unforced errors do not have the luxury of being isolated from
pressure, prompting or stress in engaging an opponent. Nonetheless, the analogy
makes sense when the scale of the misjudgement or error is of such nature or
significance that it gives your opponent an undeserved advantage, or places you
at risks you could or should have avoided. There are many instances of
political unforced errors these days, perhaps owing to the slippery grounds on
which all players play, or the absence of good intelligence, stamina or skills
among the players. Some of the errors our politicians and leaders make these
days will cost the nation very dearly. While they will only lose nominations
and elections, some of their mistakes could lose the nation excellent
opportunities to fix its current problems, and give it a stronger foundation
for future generations to build upon.
Take
the case of the claimed breakthrough by the federal government in its fight
against Boko Haram in the form of an agreement to cease hostilities, presumably
as a step towards a negotiated resolution. The announcement came from the
federal government, a party in the war that has had the upper hand in the last
few weeks; looks like it is successfully marshalling all its assets for a final
onslaught, and still has large populations and territory in the hands of
terrorists it appears to be defeating. Even making legitimate allowances for
the fact that the government knows something we do not, the acceptance of a
ceasefire with an opponent seemingly on the run is bound to raise more than
eyebrows. Those among us who thought the administration deserves some trust had
our goodwill shattered just a few hours into the trumpeted ceasefire when the
insurgents took over new territory and population, slaughtering many locals to
make the point that nothing has changed.
Perhaps our military hierarchy really had
thought it had a binding agreement, and had instructed its forces not to fight?
No matter. The insurgents bombed the claim that there was a ceasefire, and then
the walls collapsed on the claim that a credible ceasefire was signed from the outrage
and cynicism of just about everyone who should know. Local communities, people
with knowledge of the insurgency and critical analysts who had seen it all
before said either the administration had been deceived again, or it is
involved in another game of deception. The word so far is that bombs are going off
from both sides and villagers are being slaughtered even as Jonathan’s
administration sticks to the idea that it has a credible ceasefire agreement.
Our troops will now fight to defend themselves and prevent further inroads into
our territories while people make money putting forward characters that claim
to represent Boko Haram, and our population in captured territories or
kidnapped citizens begin to wonder if they are being bargained away.
Or
take the case of the quiet but intense drama going on in the upper achelons of
the APC, the type that will give it the nation to run in 2015, or give the PDP
another four years from 2015. For a party that a few months ago was virtually
guaranteed victory against the PDP, the APC is now fighting for its dear life.
Everything is threatening to come unstuck, and unless you count the massive
invasion by former PDP members into the APC as moles, most of the problems of
the APC today are self-inflicted. There were small errors, faulty assumptions
and miscalculations here and there, all made in the euphoria which followed the
historic merger of major opposition parties which have now grown into massive
problems. The acute shortage of time to resolve them is being compounded by the
intense pressure from very powerful interests within the party to shape it
after their ambitions. The hitherto unassailable position of General Buhari is
now being openly challenged by people who, this time last year, were not even
in the party. Atiku, as is rumoured, may very well be in the game to retire
Buhari finally and permanently from politics, but all three careers (Buhari’s,
Atiku’s and Kwankwaso’s) could come to a tragic end if something dramatic and
unusual does not happen to save the party from a damaging contest for the APC
flag. PDP will not need to defeat APC in 2015: APC will lose all by itself in
the manner it mismanages the great opportunity it has to change the course of
Nigerian democracy.
Another
unforced error that may only be manifest in the next few weeks will be in the
candidature of President Jonathan. PDP
big wigs think that they have acted in the tradition of their party which
insists that you cannot say no to an incumbent president when he demands for
another go. They went through the usual motion of mowing down all internal
challenges, breached all the rules relating to campaigning, and they think they
are now ready to face whoever and whatever APC throws at them. The PDP will not
reveal its plan B, assuming, that is, it has one.
So you have to speculate whether it has
contingency plans for the distinct possibility that the Supreme Court could
strike down Jonathan’s eligibility as a candidate in 2015. How does it plan to
deal with rebellious first-term governors, senators and other legislators who
now want a Jonathan treatment? How does it handle governors who want to choose
successors? How would it handle fallouts from serving senators who will resist
pack-and-go orders because outgoing governors want their seats? With its
no-going-back-on-Jonathan posture, and assuming that he does cross the
eligibility hurdle, does the PDP have all answers to APC’s challenge? Could it
have boxed itself into a corner by assuming that the APC will only field
Buhari, and that it is inconceivable that Jonathan will lose to him? Could the
party be guilty of underrating Buhari’s popularity or potential to limit his
electoral shortcomings; and overrating Jonathan’s acceptability and the
capacity of campaign managers to deliver on promises to weaken resistance against
him in many parts of the nation? How would PDP react to the possible emergence
of a dark horse from APC, a northern Christian, a southern Muslim or a southern
Christian from the Niger Delta as candidates? How flexible is PDP strategy,
beyond the assumption that massive amounts of money can make major differences
in the manner voters behave, INEC conducts elections, the direction security
agents wield sticks and guns, and the judiciary is inclined?
Politicians
do not have the luxury of taking decisions in a vacuum. They make good and poor
judgment calls, and reap the benefits or pay huge prices for them. Because politics
is about life, limbs and livelihoods, the public is usually the victim or
beneficiary of failures or success of decisions of politicians. At this moment in
our history, so much depends on the manner our leaders and politicians
appreciate the total context of their actions and decisions. Unfortunately it
is also the case that those who lead our nation and are about to determine its
future have not demonstrated the levels of competence, commitment and vision
that will guarantee that our fears over 2015 and beyond are misplaced.