June 20 in Nigerian History: Obasanjo, Bush Meet at White House to Deepen Ties

Obasanjo

On Thursday, June 20, 2002, former President Olusegun Obasanjo held high-level talks with U.S. President George W. Bush at the White House. Framed as a private visit, the meeting focused on deepening bilateral ties in trade, security, and democratic governance.


Obasanjo briefed Bush on Nigeria’s peacekeeping role in West Africa. They discussed conflict zones in Angola, DRC, Sierra Leone, and Liberia.

Bush backed Obasanjo’s direct engagement with Liberian President Charles Taylor over his exit terms. Both leaders also reviewed U.S. training for Nigerian troops to boost Africa’s peacekeeping capacity.

The presidents talked about trade expansion and foreign investment. Obasanjo outlined Nigeria’s economic reforms and anti-corruption drive. Bush pushed for growth beyond textiles under AGOA, highlighting Nigeria’s oil, gas, gold, and bauxite potential.

Obasanjo presented NEPAD — the Millennium African Plan he co-authored with Thabo Mbeki and Abdelaziz Bouteflika, later joined by Egypt and Senegal — as Africa’s roadmap for democracy, governance, and development. HIV/AIDS on the continent also made the agenda.

Afterward, Obasanjo said the visit helped “establish our relationship… we are friends,” adding with a laugh that Bush now “knows what I look like.” Bush called Nigeria “a friend of America” and Obasanjo “a friend of mine,” signaling strong personal and strategic alignment.

The meeting reinforced Nigeria’s role as a key U.S. partner on African stability, energy cooperation, and democratic institutions at the time.

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Lawal Sodiq Adewale aka CHOCOMILO is an award winning journalist. Mail me at Chocomilo@withinnigeria.com. See full profile on Within Nigeria's TEAM PAGE
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