Nigerian Army


The Nigerian Army is the largest component of the Nigerian Armed Forces, and is responsible for land warfare operations. It is governed by the Nigerian Army Council. It bears the brunt of the nation's security challenges, notably the Boko Haram insurgency.

History

The original elements of the Royal West African Frontier Force in Nigeria were formed in 1900. During the Second World War, British-trained Nigerian troops saw action with the 1st Infantry Brigade, the 81st and the 82nd Divisions which fought in the East African Campaign and in the Far East.
The roots of the ethnic cleavages which started to rip through the army after independence had some of their origins in British recruiting practices, with line infantry and the artillery being raised from the North, but during the expansion of the force during the Second World War a large proportion of more educated southerners being brought in to take up posts that required more technical training. Like in Ghana, there was significant pressure to "Nigerianize" the armed forces, with, for example, two officers being promoted to Brigadier as a concession to public opinion on the occasion of the last British commander arriving in Lagos. From a force of 8,000 in five infantry battalions and supporting units, strength rose to around 120,000 in three divisions by the end of the Nigerian Civil War in 1970. In terms of doctrine, the task of the Federal Nigerian army did not fundamentally change: its task remained to close with and defeat an organized enemy.
The rapid expansion saw a severe decline in troop quality. The Nigerian expansion process led to an extreme shortage of commissioned officers, with newly created lieutenant-colonels commanding brigades, and platoons and companies often commanded by sergeants and warrant officers. This resulted in tentative command-and-control and in rudimentary staff work. One result of the weak direction was that the Federals' three divisions fought independently, and competed for men and material. Writing in a 1984 study, Major Michael Stafford of the US Marine Corps noted that "Inexperienced, poorly trained and ineptly led soldiers manifested their lack of professionalism and indiscipline by massacres of innocent civilians and a failure to effectively execute infantry tactics." Among the results was the 1967 Asaba massacre.
The influence of individual personalities is generally greater in the armies of developing states, as they tend to have weaker institutional frameworks. Key personalities involved in Nigeria included then-Colonel Olusegun Obasanjo. Obasanjo is particularly important due to his efforts to reorganize his command, 3 Division, during the civil war to improve its logistics and administration. The reorganization he instituted made the Division capable of carrying out the offensive that ended the civil war.
The U.S. intelligence community concluded in November 1970 that "..The Nigerian Civil War ended with relatively little rancor. The Igbos are accepted as fellow citizens in many parts of Nigeria, but not in some areas of former Biafra where they were once dominant. Igboland is an overpopulated, economically depressed area where massive unemployment is likely to continue for many years.
The U.S. analysts said that "..Nigeria is still very much a tribal society..." where local and tribal alliances count more than "national attachment. General Yakubu Gowon, head of the Federal Military Government is the accepted national leader and his popularity has grown since the end of the war. The FMG is neither very efficient nor dynamic, but the recent announcement that it intends to retain power for six more years has generated little opposition so far. The Nigerian Army, vastly expanded during the war, is both the main support to the FMG and the chief threat to it. The troops are poorly trained and disciplined and some of the officers are turning to conspiracies and plotting. We think Gowon will have great difficulty in staying in office through the period which he said is necessary before the turnover of power to civilians. His sudden removal would dim the prospects for Nigerian stability."
The Nigerian Army fought the Civil War significantly under-resourced; Obasanjo's memoirs chronicle the lack of any stocks of extra equipment for mobilisation and the "haphazard and unreliable system of procurement and provisioning" which lasted for the entire period of the war. Arms embargoes imposed by several Western countries made the situation more difficult.
At the end of the Civil War, the three divisions of the Army were reorganised into four divisions, with each controlling territories running from North to South in order to deemphasise the former regional structure. Each division thus had access to the sea thereby making triservice cooperation and logistic support easier. This deployment formula was later abandoned in favour of the present assignment of sectors to the divisions. Thus 1 Division with HQ at Kaduna is allocated the North West sector; 2 Division with HQ at Ibadan South West sector, 3 Division with HQ at Jos North East sector and 82 Division with HQ at Enugu South East sector.
Its formations include the 1 Division, headquartered in Kaduna in the north-west, and 2 Division. 2nd Division also possibly includes 4 Brigade at Benin City, with 19 Battalion at Okitipupa and 195 Battalion at Agenebode. 52 Signal Regiment may be the divisional signals unit. 3 Division's headquarters is at Rukuba Cantonment, Jos, in the North-East, and includes 21 Armoured Brigade Maiduguri, 23 Brigade Yola, and 33 Artillery Brigades. HQ in Lagos, which includes the 9 Brigade, based at the Ikeja compound in Lagos, HQ in Enugu in the South-East, which includes the 2 Brigade at Port Harcourt, 13 Brigade at Calabar and the 34th Artillery Brigade at Obinze/Owerri. The Composite Division at Enugu was formed in 1964 as 4 Division, in 1975 became Lagos Garrison Organization; in 1981 became 4 Composite Division; became a Composite Division in May 2002. 3rd Armoured Division was responsible in 1983 for the security of areas bordering Chad.

Lagos and Abuja have garrison commands, with the Lagos garrison as large as a division. 81st Division was previously the youngest division, formed on 26 May 2002 when the Lagos Garrison Command was upgraded to divisional status. The Division, therefore, inherited the security roles hitherto performed by the defunct Lagos Garrison Command. However a later undated article in a Nigerian online newspaper says the 81st Division was later again renamed the Lagos Garrison Command. In the 1980s, the Army's brigades included the 7th Infantry Brigade in Sokoto. There are also Divisional Artillery Brigades, among which are the 32 and 34 Artillery Brigades, ordnance corps units as well as Combat Engineer Regiments, and many other service support units spread across the country.

The 7th Division was established in August 2013 for the war against Boko Haram. The creation of the new division brought to six the number of divisions. The 7th division is headquartered in Maiduguri. The division includes a combat motorcycle unit as part of its 25th Task Force Brigade. The purpose of this unit is stated as securing roads in Yobe and serving as a force multiplier in combat operations.. Training and Doctrine Command formed in 1981, and is located at Minna. It supervises the Army's schools, including the Depot. The Army sponsors the Nigerian Military School at Zaria.

Structure

The Nigerian Army is governed by the Nigerian Army Council. The Nigerian Army is functionally organized into combat arms, which are infantry and armored; the combat support arms, which are artillery, engineers, and signals; the combat support services comprise the Nigerian Army Medical Corps, supply and transport, ordinance and finance. Others include the military police, intelligence, physical training, chaplains, public relations and band.
located in Minna is responsible for doctrinal, training and combat development, and supervises training centers. There are 17 Corps Training Schools and the .
The Nigerian Army said its newly created the 6th Division in Port Harcourt was established to organize and improve its internal security operations in four states of the Niger Delta. The Division will cover the Army’s 2 Brigade Akwa Ibom; 16 Brigade Bayelsa and 63rd Brigade in Delta, respectively, with divisional headquarters in Port Harcourt. This arrangement will help to curtail activities of militants, banditry, inter-communal clashes, illegal bunkering, kidnapping, robberies, Niger Delta Avengers and pipeline vandalism prevalent in the area. Insecurity in these states negatively impacts on the national economy resulting from sabotage by criminal entities within the region.
Current formations include:
The government and military chiefs, working with the National Assembly, civil society and international partners, need to do much more: implement comprehensive defense sector reform, including clear identification of security challenges; a new defense and security policy and structure to address them; and drastic improvement in leadership, oversight, administration and accountability across the sector.
It currently has over 6,000 officers and 150,000 soldiers.

Military forces abroad

In December 1983 the new régime of the Head of State of Nigeria, Major General Muhammadu Buhari, announced that Nigeria could no longer afford an activist anti-colonial role in Africa. Anglophone members of the Economic Community of West African States established ECOMOG, dominated by the Nigerian Army, in 1990 to intervene in the civil war in Liberia. Smaller army forces had previously carried out UN and ECOWAS deployments in the former Yugoslavia, Angola, Rwanda, Somalia, and Sierra Leone.
The anti-colonial policy statement did not deter Nigeria under Generals Ibrahim Babangida in 1990 and Sani Abacha in 1997 from sending peacekeeping troops as part of ECOMOG under the auspices of ECOWAS into Liberia and later into Sierra Leone when civil wars broke out in those countries. President Olusegun Obasanjo in August 2003 committed Nigerian troops once again into Liberia, at the urging of the United States, to provide an interim presence until the UN's force UNMIL arrived. Charles Taylor was subsequently eased out of power by U.S. pressure and exiled to Nigeria.
In October 2004, Nigerian troops were deployed into Darfur, Sudan to spearhead an African Union force to protect civilians there.
In January 2013, Nigeria began to deploy troops to Mali as part of the African-led International Support Mission to Mali.
Nigeria claimed to have contributed more than twenty thousand troops and police officers to various UN missions since 1960. The Nigeria Police Force and troops have served in places like UNIPOM 1965, UNIFIL in Lebanon 1978, the UN observer mission, UNIIMOG supervising the Iran-Iraq ceasefire in 1988, former Yugoslavia 1998, East Timor 1999, and in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 2004.
Nigerian Army officers have served as chiefs of defence in other countries, with Brigadier General Maxwell Khobe serving as Sierra Leone chief of staff in 1998-1999, and Nigerian officers acting as Command Officer-in-Charge of the Armed Forces of Liberia from at least 2007.

Chiefs of the Nigerian Army

Following is a chronological list of officers holding the position of General Officer Commanding or Chief of Army Staff.
OfficerTitlePeriod ServedRemarks
Maj Gen Kenneth G. ExhamGOC1956–1959Duke of Wellington's Regiment
Maj Gen Norman FosterGOC1960–1962
Maj Gen John Alexander MackenzieGOC19632nd Battalion, The Lancashire Fusiliers
Maj Gen Sir Christopher Welby-EverardGOC1963–1965Last British GOC
Maj Gen Johnson Aguiyi-IronsiGOC1965–1966Later military ruler
Lt Col Yakubu Gowon FSSCOASJanuary 1966 – July 1966Later military ruler
Lt Col Joseph Akahan OFR FSSCOASMay 1967 – May 1968
Maj Gen Hassan Katsina rcds pscCOASMay 1968 – January 1971
Maj Gen David EjoorCOASJanuary 1971 – July 1975
Lt Gen Theophilus DanjumaCOASJuly 1975 – October 1979
Lt Gen Ipoola Alani Akinrinade CFR FSSCOASOctober 1979 – April 1980
Lt Gen Gibson Jalo CFR FSS JSSCOASApril 1980 – October 1981
Lt Gen Mohammed Inuwa Wushishi CFR FSSCOASOctober 1981 – October 1983
Maj Gen Ibrahim BabangidaCOASJanuary 1984 – August 1985Later military ruler
Lt Gen Sani Abacha GCON, DSS mniCOASAugust 1985 – August 1990Last military ruler
Lt Gen Salihu Ibrahim FSS FHWCCOASAugust 1990 – September 1993
Lt Gen Aliyu Gusau Mohammed DSS rcdsCOASSeptember 1993 – November 1993
Maj Gen Chris Alli CRG DSS ndc pscCOASNovember 1993 – August 1994??
Maj Gen Alwali Kazir DSS Usawc pscCOASAugust 1994 – March 1996-
Lt Gen Ishaya Bamaiyi DSS Usawc pscCOASMarch 1996 – May 1999-
Lt Gen Victor Malu DSS mni fwc pscCOASMay 1999 – April 2001
Lt Gen Alexander OgomudiaCOASApril 2001 – June 2003Later Chief of Defence Staff
Lt Gen Martin Luther AgwaiCOASJune 2003 – June 2006Later Force Commander of the UNAMID
Lt Gen Owoye Andrew AzaziCOAS1 June 2006 – May 2007Later Chief of Defence Staff
Lt Gen Luka YusufCOASJune 2007 – August 2008
Lt Gen Abdulrahman Bello DambazauCOASAugust 2008 – September 2010
Lt Gen Onyabor Azubuike IhejirikaCOASSeptember 2010 – January 2014
Lt Gen Kenneth MinimahCOASJanuary 2014 – July 2015
Lt Gen Tukur Yusuf BurataiCOASJuly 2015 – PresentCommander Multinational Joint Task Force

Equipment

Despite a disproportionate emphasis on the materiel and sophistication of the Nigerian Armed Forces, and despite possessing some formidable hardware, the Army has been hamstrung by technical deficiency and an exceptionally poor standard of maintenance. Its overabundance of foreign suppliers, including Austria, Brazil, France, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, Romania, Turkey, Ukraine, the former Soviet Union, the United States and the United Kingdom, has also complicated logistics. Calculating the size and scope of replacement inventories alone is impossible given the menagerie of equipment in use.
The Nigerian Army maintains at least eighty-two different weapon systems and 194 types of ammunition, of sixty-two different categories, from fourteen manufacturers.

Infantry weapons

Missiles and Recoilless Rifles

Armoured fighting vehicles

Logistics

NamePhotoTypeCountry of OriginIn ServiceNotes
KrAZ-6322Utility TruckUkraine4000Some locally manufactured.

Engineering Vehicles

NamePhotoTypeCountry of OriginIn ServiceNotes
BOZENA 5Unmanned ground vehicleSlovakiaclearance of all conventional antipersonnel and antitank land mines and for IED removal assistance.
Vickers AVLBArmored Bridge-layerUnited Kingdom26
Vickers ARVArmored Recovery VehicleUnited Kingdom12

Utility Vehicle

Artillery

Air defence