Tag: Defence

  • Nigeria and Risks of Multi-Power Security Deals*

    Nigeria and Risks of Multi-Power Security Deals*

     

    *By Richard Ikiebe

    Lately, Abuja has embarked on signing or deepening defence partnerships with the United States, China, the United Kingdom, Russia, France, India, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and now, Türkiye, often within overlapping time frames and against a backdrop of unrelenting insecurity. On paper, this looks like strategic diversification. But given Nigeria’s weak institutions and fragmented loyalties, these multi-power deals risk multiplying internal vulnerabilities rather than delivering autonomy.

    In international relations, hedging is meant to be a sophisticated strategy. Middle powers cultivate ties with rival blocs at the same time; securing trade, weapons, intelligence and diplomatic cover from each without fully joining any camp. Done well, hedging buys room to manoeuvre in a fluid world.

    However, successful hedging demands a coherent centre. It assumes the state has a clear hierarchy of national interests, reasonably disciplined security institutions, and a political class that can resist turning every external relationship into a patronage asset. Nigeria does not enjoy those conditions. The federation remains riven by sharp regional, ethnic and religious cleavages. Security agencies are still deeply exposed to politicisation, often shaped by “loyalty clubs” and patron-client networks rather than by doctrine.

    When you pile complex, overlapping military partnerships on top of a jaundiced domestic terrain, what you get is a crowded and inflamed marketplace in which foreign and domestic actors bargain over influence with contaminated information.

    The recent pattern is revealing. With Washington, Nigeria has moved into a new phase of security cooperation: advanced air platforms, intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance support, kinetic assistance against extremist camps, and a growing noncombat troop presence focused on training, coordination and operational support.

    London has formalised a Security and Defence Partnership with Abuja on doctrine, special operations, maritime awareness and joint planning. Paris, too, is embedding itself through operational training and intelligence cooperation in the Sahel and Lake Chad basins.

    At the same time, China has stepped in as a defence-industrial partner, promising technology transfer and local production of ammunition and advanced equipment. Moscow maintains a framework for training and equipment supply, while Riyadh has concluded a renewable defence memorandum covering training, logistics, counter-terrorism and intelligence.

    New Delhi and Islamabad both court Abuja with staff talks, courses and high-level visits. For its part, Türkiye has upgraded its role from arms supplier to full-spectrum partner with Nigeria, combining drones, helicopters and naval platforms with special forces training and real-time intelligence.

    Add ECOWAS, the African Union, the UN and smaller bilateral channels, and Nigeria’s security ecosystem is now densely populated with external actors, many of whom are rivals among themselves and carry their own regional agendas.

    From Abuja’s official podium, this is sold as diversification and a strengthening of “defence architecture”. However, from the vantage point of a fragile bureaucracy, it looks more like a multi-layered web, too complex for the state to see, let alone control.

    In its current fragile state, Abuja risks overestimating its capacity to juggle many rival interests at once. Great powers can absorb shocks and play multi-board games; a state with weak institutions and contested loyalties cannot.

    When external hedging meets internal fragmentation, rival domestic factions increasingly hitch their loyalties to different external partners. One elite unit becomes the Americans’ partner of choice; another cluster is drawn to Russian or Chinese; religious and cultural affinities pull others toward Saudi Arabia, Pakistan or Türkiye; while historic and educational ties still make British links the default home for another group.

    Over time, these alignments risk consolidating Nigeria into a patchwork of “mini-Nigerias”, divided along old ethno-regional and religious fault lines. But the greatest risk would appear in information and intelligence sharing.

    What was designed to widen access to intelligence, military equipment and expertise risks degenerating into counter-hedging platforms. Trust dies in the hands of competing layers of interests, and doubts about Nigeria’s ability to prevent leaks of valuable information multiply. Gradually, the partners stop treating Nigeria as a trusted ally and instead see her as a contested space to be monitored and managed.

    The Horn of Africa offers a cautionary story. Over the past decade, states around the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden have welcomed bases, training missions and facilities from almost every major military actor: the US, China, European navies, Gulf states, Türkiye and others.

    It is instructive that external militarisation has not stabilised the region. Parts of Somalia, for example, saw courting foreign interest as a route to de facto independence and recognition. Neighbouring nations and distant powers alike treated ports, coastal enclaves and airfields as instruments in larger rivalries.

    Although Nigeria is vastly different from the Horn of Africa, the logic is uncomfortably familiar. When many external actors plug into a fragile political-security ecosystem, they amplify fractures and turn domestic disputes into wildfires.

    Certainly, Nigeria should have partners. Isolation is neither realistic nor desirable. Strong, coherent middle-power states can hedge because they possess the institutional spine to decide who does what, where, and on whose terms. Weak, divided states hedge at their peril. For Nigeria today, multiplying security deals without first consolidating doctrine, professionalising institutions and building a minimal national consensus risks crossing that line.

    Nigeria’s leadership like to speak of strategic autonomy, but sovereignty is not the ability to sign more MoUs than your neighbours. It is the ability to say “yes” and “no” from a position of internal strength. Abuja must now invest seriously in developing its own strength, its multi-power security systems. Diplomacy will remain a dangerous overexposure when we invite the world into our house, when our foundations are still visibly cracked.

    *Dr Richard Ikiebe is a Media and Management Consultant, Teacher and Chairman, Board of Businessday Newspaper***

  • Ajaokuta Steel to produce military hardware, as Steel, Defence Ministries sign deal

    Ajaokuta Steel to produce military hardware, as Steel, Defence Ministries sign deal

     

    ABUJA– THE Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited is to commence production of military hardware based on the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding, MoU, between the Ministry of Steel Development, and the Ministry of Defence.

    The Minister of Steel Development, Prince Shuaibu Audu, and the Minister of State for Defence, Dr Bello Matawalle signed the MoU respectively at the a ceremony held at the Ministry of Defence Headquarters, Monday, in Abuja, which highlighted grave areas including a collaborative framework for the development and production of essential military equipment, utilizing the vast resources and capabilities of the Ajaokuta Steel Company.

    According to a statement issued by the Ministry of Steel Development, The MiU signed were in two parts: One signed between the Federal Ministry of Steel Development and the Federal Ministry of Defence, and the other between Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON) and the Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited.

    Meanwhile, the statement also disclosed that the Minister of Steel Development, Prince Shuaibu Audu during the ceremony explained that the groundbreaking initiative underscores Nigeria’s commitment to self-reliance in defense manufacturing and harnessing the strategic potential of the Ajaokuta Steel Plant, one of Africa’s largest and most vital industrial assets.

    He noted that the collaboration seeks to leverage Ajaokuta’s steel production capabilities to develop high-quality military hardware, including armored vehicles, weapons, helmet and other defense equipment, and added that the partnership will not only strengthen Nigeria’s defense industry but will help improve the security architecture of the country.

    Earlier, the Minister of State for Defence, Dr Bello Matawalle, noted that the significant event comes at the right time with high-impact prospects that will improve national security and drive Nigeria’s economic growth.

    “This particular MoU is unique in many respects as it comprehensively covers its scope — both national security and economic growth”, he said.

    Also, in a remark the Director General of DICON, Maj. Gen. Babatunde Ibrahim Alaya, described the signing as an enduring commitment to Nigeria, stating that the MoU will create jobs and build local capacity in defence-related industries.

    Both Ministries are optimistic that the collaboration will pave the way for further partnerships in the defense sector and contribute to the overall industrialization of Nigeria.

  • Ministry Of Defence To Strengthen Military Cooperation With Israel

    Ministry Of Defence To Strengthen Military Cooperation With Israel

    The Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Defence, Ambassador Gabriel Tanimu Aduda reaffirmed the Nigerian government’s commitment to enhancing military cooperation with the State of Israel during a recent courtesy visit from Israeli Ambassador to Nigeria, Michael Freeman, at the Ministry’s headquarters in Ship House, Abuja.

    During their meeting, the two officials discussed strategies for bolstering defence cooperation, strengthening mutual security frameworks, and exploring opportunities for enhanced military training and capacity building within the Nigerian Armed Forces.

    Ambassador Aduda highlighted the critical need to deepen defence ties in the light of evolving global security challenges. He emphasized the importance of strategic areas such as joint operations, knowledge exchange, and the modernization of defence cooperation. The discussions also included plans to finalize a new bilateral defence agreement aimed at fostering technical collaboration in defence industry development.

    “The Ministry will engage in strategic initiatives to replicate successful Israeli military cooperation frameworks in Nigeria, thereby enhancing our national defence architecture,” Ambassador Aduda stated.

    In response, Ambassador Michael Freeman expressed gratitude for the audience and underscored the significance of this partnership as a progressive step toward achieving innovative defence solutions. He extended a formal invitation to Ambassador Aduda and his team to visit Israel, with the goal of further strengthening the ties between the two nations.

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