How God, US made me — Buhari



Shortly after the August 1983 military coup that brought a 40-year-old Muhammadu Buhari to power, he received a phone call from a top personnel in the United States Army. General Smith was the Commandant of the U.S. War College from which Buhari graduated in 1980. The school’s 1979 set had graduated its first Nigerian, General Wushishi, who was the Chief of Defence in the just ousted Shehu government.



“Please, be kind to him,” General Smith said over the phone. The essence of the phone call was not just to congratulate Nigeria’s new Head of State, but to ensure that the first Nigerian to graduate from the U.S. War College would not suffer any indignity under the government of the second Nigerian to graduate from the same school.

Former classmates
On Wednesday, July 22, members of the U.S. War College Class of 1980 gathered at the Blair House in Washington, DC, to welcome the man they had selected as their football team referee 36 years ago.

“Being referee all those years ago taught me to be fair and just,” President Buhari said during the meeting.
President Buhari at prestigious reunion with his 1980 Army War College classmates.

Among the former classmates gathered were Lt. General Granrud (Commander of the U.S. forces in Japan Rtd), Brigadier General Jack Pellica, General Ronald Griffith (Former Vice Chairman of the U.S. army central command ), Colonel Lany Gordon and Colonel Paul Summerville. General Smith has since passed on, as have all the directing staff and a larger percentage of the old students from the set. “This just shows that all of us are on the queue,” President Buhari said, “waiting for our turn.”
The Nigerian Commander-in-Chief said he hoped that the U.S. would continue its tradition of training Nigerians in the war college. At the time he attended the school, he was the only African in his class. The only other foreigners were from Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Israel, Indonesia, Thailand, France and Japan. The Japanese student went on to become the head of his country’s army.

President Buhari then went on to update his classmates on his life since he last saw them: his different appointments, his accomplishments and his family. “I have just received my 13th grandchild,” he said.

He added that the wife they knew him with at the time had since died, and that he had also lost a son and a daughter from his new wife. “Of all my eight children,” he said, “only one is a boy.” Some of his former classmates were curious to know if President Buhari would place his only son, Yusuf, in the army.

“I stopped him from joining the army,” President Buhari replied.

He explained that the military he joined was very different from what it is today, adding that he was the second Nigerian to be sent to the U.S. War College—based on his records alone, without connections. “Things took a wrong turn in Nigeria,” he said. “Your records no longer mattered.”

Some of the former classmates present at the meeting stated that at the time they met President Buhari back in 1980, they knew little about Nigeria or Africa. They credited the Nigerian leader with giving them their initial enlightenment about the continent. Others recalled how he always overworked himself.

However, President Buhari described his war college experience as being responsible for his subsequent life of hard work, endurance and perseverance. “I contested for president three times and failed,” he said. “Then I did it the fourth time and won.” A roar of laughter followed the president’s apt illustration.

He then rendered his narrative of the collapse of the Soviet Union, breaking into 18 republics and how that influenced his decision to join politics.

“The collapse of the Soviet empire in 1980 without a single shot being fired convinced that the multi-party democratic system was the best for all countries.”

President Buhari then expressed appreciation to President Barack Obama and to the U.S. for the role the country played in Nigeria’s successful elections, recalling Secretary of State, John Kerry’s visit to him and to former president Goodluck Jonathan, as well as to Attahiru Jega, the electoral commissioner at the time.

Electoral commissioner

“Kerry read the riot act to all of us,” he said, “saying that the conduct of the election must be free, fair and in line with the Constitution.” He added that, without US intervention, the electoral malpractices of the past twelve years would likely have happened again. “God made me but America made me,” he said.

The Class of 1980 gave President Buhari the full assurances of their support, stating that they were willing to use their experience to assist him in any way they can, particularly with tackling terrorism in northeast Nigeria. They promised to put together and forward to him a compendium of their thoughts on the security situation in Nigeria.

In September, President Buhari will be meeting once again with his former classmates, at another event scheduled to take place at the United Nations.

Garba is the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity.
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  1. This is the man they sold to us that he never went to school. Please who can remaind me if any such meetings happen during the tenure of GEJ. Look at the pedigree of those who are his classmates. In secondary school, he was their class captain, now in war college he was the referee. Please who was GEJ classmate or lecturer or supervisor back in the university

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  2. Wonderful. But you should have highlighted his waec qualification. Great!

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  3. Oh lord shame my enemies just the way you shamed Buhari's; and dignify me to their constanation and peril !!!

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    1. Aaaaaaaaaameeeeeeeeen!!!!! l claim this prayer too.

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    2. Amen. My enemies will be embarrased like Orubebe and go into extinction like Pdpigs. Buhari is a great man.

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    3. Oh, did you know that his WAEC miraculously re-appeared in his file at the Army Headquarters shortly after he won the elections? Frankly, I think Buhari should sue the erstwhile Army Chief for denying that PMB's file did not contain any WAEC certificates, but just the statement of result from the school; and he should do anything legally possible to prosecute anyone who was party to mutilating the file.

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  4. Some idiots can never understand how great the man is. They are blinded with politics of hate, religion, tribe and parochial sentiments. We will overcome. He had no waec, but compare his output with that of his predecessor, a PHD holder, who could hardly express himself in good English and make himself audible to listeners. Very sad indeed. They are after paper even when the head is empty.

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  5. Turakin you too much...

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  6. I would really love FFK and Doyin Okupe to comment on this story. They are still looking for WAEC when the man had moved on!

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    1. Doyin and FFK have gone into extinction .

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    2. The idiots may also be shitting in their pants for fear that the imminent investigation into looting under GEJ might touch them.

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  7. Awwwwwwwwwwww!!! tears in my eyes. Wonderful. May God finish the good work He has started through His servant GEJ. God's ways are not our ways, so my fellow Christians, even his Muslim brothers and people of other religious inclination, please let us support this great man God has brought at this critical time to rescue this nation He loves so much.

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  8. This is the man that PDP claimed was illiterate. Look at the profile of his classmates at the US War College; and that of those at the Secondary School in Katsina, who parade, among others, an IG of Nigerian Police. Shame on detractors and hypocrites.

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