So the headline trumpets a victory. Hundreds freed, a hideout shattered, and British-trained Nigerian forces delivering what the press pack calls a 'decisive blow.' One might imagine the ghosts of Empire nodding approvingly over their gin and tonics. But let us not be seduced by the theatre of the thing. This is not the beginning of the end. It is merely another skirmish in a long, grinding war that reveals more about our collective decadence than it does about the terrorists themselves.
Consider the numbers. Hundreds freed. That sounds splendid until you remember the thousands still enslaved, the millions displaced, the regions rendered uninhabitable. The 'hideout' is an old story: a clearing in the Sambisa Forest, a few dozen mud huts, children with bellies distended by malnutrition, women who have forgotten their own names. And we call this a 'blow.' It is a pinprick. The hydra has a thousand heads, and our strategy, if it can be dignified with that term, is to chop off one and hope the others will wither from shame.
But the real story here is not Boko Haram. It is us. The West's relationship with Africa has always been a tragicomedy of paternalism and neglect. We trained these troops. We gave them drones, intelligence, and a pat on the back. And then we went home to our Netflix and our artisan coffee. We want the glory without the cost. We want to appear on the side of the angels without spending the moral capital required to stay there. This strike is a perfect metaphor: it looks decisive on Twitter, but in the field, it is a temporary respite before the next atrocity.
The Victorians understood something we have forgotten. They knew that empire was a burden, not a pleasure. It required constant vigilance, immense resources, and a willingness to get one's hands dirty. They were often monstrous, yes, but they were not naive. They did not pretend that a single raid could pacify a region. They did not send in Special Forces and then declare victory. They built institutions, however flawed. They imposed order, however brutally. We, by contrast, prefer surgical strikes and humanitarian press releases. It is the difference between a surgeon who performs a clean amputation and one who merely applies a bandage and calls it healing.
Now, the bleeding continues. Boko Haram is not a conventional army. It is a symptom. It is what happens when a state fails so completely that the only identity left is religious fanaticism. And our response? We treat the symptom while ignoring the disease. We free the hostages, but we do not rebuild the schools. We kill the fighters, but we do not address the poverty that creates them. We hail our own virtue while the corpses pile up. This is the intellectual decadence of our age. We have all the tools of civilisation but none of the will.
Do not mistake me. I am glad the hostages are free. I cheer the bravery of the soldiers. But I refuse to participate in the self-congratulation. This is not a victory. It is a single, belated step on a thousand-mile journey. And if we are not prepared to walk that entire distance, we should stop pretending we are moral actors. The Romans understood that a frontier cannot be secured by occasional incursions. It requires a permanent presence. If we will not provide that, then we must accept the chaos. There is no middle ground.
So, yes, a blow was struck. But the war continues. And unless we are willing to face the full, ugly implications of our involvement, we are merely rearranging the deck chairs on a continent that is slowly sinking into a sea of blood. That is the truth. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a copy of Gibbon to consult.








