“At the request of the Nigerian government, the United States will discontinue its training of a Nigerian Army battalion,” the U.S. government, through its embassy in Abuja, said in a statement.
Relations between the two nations have been at a record low with Nigeria blaming the United States for not giving sufficient backing to its battle against Boko Haram.
After months of casual assertions, the Nigerian Ambassador to the U.s. Ade Adefuye, had in November straightforwardly blamed the United States for declining to offer arms and supplies to Nigeria to help rout Boko Haram.
In its reaction, the American government claimed it has underpinned Nigeria to the degree its law allows, and blamed the Nigerian security powers for human rights infringement.
The U.S. said its laws prohibit offers of arms to nations with such human rights record.
Indeed thus, the American government said it has given some military supplies to Nigeria.
The two nations are not likewise relating admirably financially after the U.s. completely suspended purchasing Nigerian unrefined petroleum in July, a choice that helped plunge Nigeria into one of its most extreme money related emergencies as oil value tumbles to a seven-year low.
It is not clear whether the most recent choice to suspend the military preparing identifies with past financial and military occurrences between the two nations.
Nigeria’s overseeing Minister for Information, Nurudeen Mohammed, couldn’t be arrived at promptly, and presidential spokespersons, Reuben Abati and Doyin Okupe,.
In any case the U.s. government said in its announcement that the initial two periods of the preparation were led in the middle of April and August 2014, and had given at one time untrained regular citizen staff with fundamental soldiering abilities.