President Donald Trump's administration is pushing forward with plans to sell up to a dozen aircraft to Nigeria's air force for the fight against the extremist group Boko Haram, sources said on Monday, in a deal that could be worth up to $600 million.
The
Super Tucano A-29 aircraft, an agile, propeller-driven plane with
reconnaissance and surveillance as well as attack capabilities, is made
by Brazil's Embraer. A second production line is in Florida, in a
partnership between Embraer and privately held Sierra Nevada Corp of
Sparks, Nevada.
Former
President Barack Obama's administration originally agreed on the sale,
but delayed it after incidents including the Nigerian Air Force's
bombing of a refugee camp in January that killed 90 to 170 civilians.
The
Trump administration wants to push ahead to boost Nigeria's efforts to
fight Boko Haram and bolster hiring in the United States by defense
firms.
"We've been told that the administration is going to go forward with that transaction," a congressional aide said.
Formal
notification of the deal has not yet been sent to Congress but is
expected shortly. Trump has said he plans to go ahead with foreign
defense sales delayed under Obama by human rights concerns.
A
senior Nigerian military source in Abuja, Nigeria's capital, confirmed
that the sale would go ahead and said it would also involve training,
surveillance and military intelligence "to support ... the ongoing
insurgency war."
In
March, the Trump administration informed Congress of its plans to
pursue a $5 billion sale to Bahrain of Lockheed Martin F-16s and related
equipment, which had been held up under Obama when Bahrain failed to
meet human rights targets.
Reuters
first reported the Obama administration's plan to sell the Embraer
aircraft to Nigeria in May 2016, as a vote of confidence in President
Muhammadu Buhari's drive to reform the military.
The
Super Tucano costs more than $10 million each and the price can go much
higher depending on the configuration. It is powered by a Pratt &
Whitney Canada PT 6 engine.
Trump's plan to move ahead with the Nigerian sale was first reported on Monday by the Associated Press.
The
U.S. congressional source said rights concerns remain, despite support
for the sale from some lawmakers. There are also questions about whether
Nigeria will be able to pay the full $600 million for the aircraft,
equipment, training and support.
U.S. officials said Buhari raised frustration with delays in the sale in a phone call with Trump in February.
(Additional reporting by Lesley Wroughton and Mike Stone; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and James Dalgleish)
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