By David Akoji, Director, Special Duties/ State Operations, National Orientation Agency.
Nigeria stands at a defining moment in its national security history. As the government implements a revamped security strategy to confront insurgency, banditry, kidnapping, and other violent crimes, the recalibration includes not only systemic reforms at home but also renewed international partnerships, notably with the United States of America, Turkey, and other global allies. What Nigerians should understand is that this moment is not just about foreign support — it’s about a national strategy anchored on shared responsibility, strategic collaboration, and institutional reform.
As General Christopher Gwabin Musa, Nigeria’s Minister of Defence, has emphasised, “Nigeria is now a non-aligned nation, which means we can partner with everybody. Once you are a friendly nation to us, we are friends, and we can relate directly.” This reflects a conscious pivot toward broad, flexible diplomacy in defence cooperation, one that enables Nigeria to engage multiple partners without limiting its strategic options. 
Partnering Without Compromise
International backing is practical as much as it is symbolic. The United States offers advanced intelligence support, humanitarian assistance frameworks, and counter-terrorism cooperation. Other commitments include security training, stabilization expertise, and capacity building across agencies. Turkey’s engagement, on the other hand, goes beyond procurement, it includes military education programs, joint training, and defence industry cooperation, which Nigeria hopes will enhance local capabilities and technology transfer as explained by Gen Musa. 
General Musa underscored this point clearly: “Some of these [equipment and technologies] are quick interventions that will come in, and we are going to deploy them as fast as possible.” This signals not only material aid but a willingness to integrate new tools including drones, surveillance systems, and joint operational platforms into Nigeria’s existing framework. 
A Strategy Built on Lessons Learned
Nigeria’s security challenges are complex and multidimensional. Demonstrating clear understanding of the challenges, Gen Musa acknowledges that the enemy is internal and concealed:
“This is asymmetric warfare. It is not like conventional warfare where you are fighting another country. In this case, the enemy is within, and that makes it more dangerous.” 
This insight underscores why the new strategy emphasizes intelligence-led operations, community engagement, and inter-agency coordination. Military action alone, he has repeatedly stressed, cannot win this war without public cooperation and credible civilian-security interfaces. 
Nigeria’s Legacy as a Security Leader
It was not long ago that Nigeria was revered as a core peacekeeping and stability anchor in West Africa. Through leadership roles in the Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group and under the broader umbrella of the Economic Community of West African States, Nigeria spearheaded peace enforcement missions in civil war torn Liberia and Sierra Leone. Its troops also contributed significantly to United Nations peacekeeping efforts across Africa. These histories remind us that Nigeria’s role has not been passive — it was central to regional security architectures.
Today’s strategy, therefore, is not merely about accepting help, it’s about reviving Nigeria as a capable security provider both domestically and within the sub-region.
What Nigerians Should Expect in the Months Ahead
1. Intensified Operations with Clear Objectives
Expect a sharper focus on intelligence operations over static deployments. The aim is to get ahead of threats rather than respond after attacks occur.
2. Strengthened Borders and Domestic Cooperation
Nigeria’s borders will likely see tighter control regimes to disrupt cross-border trafficking and weapon inflows, recalling past calls for robust border management. 
3. Modernisation and Technology Deployment
With equipment from partners like Turkey arriving soon, technology, not just manpower will shape the next generation of security responses. 
4. Public Engagement and Shared Responsibility and this is where it becomes necessary to make a clarion call for funding and empowering of the National Orientation Agency to robustly play its statutory role.
Musa’s insights make it clear: the strategy demands citizen involvement in intelligence sharing, reporting suspicious activities, and resisting the normalization of ransom payments or shielding of criminals.
5. Economic and Social Stability Imperatives
Security is inseparable from socio-economic revitalization. Restored stability will create the environment necessary for agriculture, trade, and local enterprise to flourish.
A Call for Unity and Realistic Expectations
While foreign support is welcome, Nigeria must lead its own security project. In this regard, General Musa’s message is consistent: security is a collective endeavour. This includes political will, institutional reform, community cooperation, and sustained public trust. The months ahead will not be defined by instant victories but by tangible progress — fewer attacks, stronger intelligence mechanisms, better-equipped forces, and active civilian collaboration.
Nigeria has led Africa before. With a coherent strategy, strengthened partnerships, and unwavering domestic resolve, it can do so again first by securing its own soil, then by contributing to the peace and stability of its neighbours and wider region.

