PDP Chieftain Chief Dan Ulasi has faulted Nigerians who are celebrating U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to invade Nigeria, warning that no one can predict where American bombs would land if military strikes occur.
Speaking in an interview with Symfoni TV from 39:30, Chief Ulasi questioned the logic of welcoming foreign military intervention. “You’re talking of Trump wanting to come here to fight? How do you know who the bomb will fall on his head? When an artillery bomb is dropped in the air, how do you know where it’s going to land? If you say people are being killed in Plateau, and the bomb drops on the same people that are being killed in Plateau, and the people killing them maybe are in Sokoto or somewhere else. How do you know? So it’s a very complex issue that you don’t pray for,” he said.
The PDP chieftain suggested that Trump’s statements should be interpreted as diplomatic pressure rather than literal threats of military action.
He explained further that Trump’s rhetoric serves primarily as a wake-up call intended to force the Nigerian government to seriously examine violence in affected states rather than as an actual declaration of impending military strikes.
He argued that the threats should prompt Nigerian authorities to conduct comprehensive investigations into who is perpetrating killings in Plateau, Benue, and northern regions, gathering concrete evidence about the perpetrators and their locations. View, More,
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