In the wake of mounting public anxiety over escalating violence across several Nigerian states, the Defence Headquarters has issued a stirring rebuttal to The PUNCH’s April 27 editorial titled “Insecurity and Incompetence of Security Chiefs.”
The military’s response, signed by Brigadier General Tukur Gusau, Director of Defence Information, firmly rejects the “clueless” label pinned on Nigeria’s top security brass, arguing instead that the nation’s security landscape is not one that lends itself to quick fixes or blanket condemnation.
While acknowledging the urgency and tragedy of the situation, the military insists that Nigeria’s security chiefs are far from idle. “They are engaged in continuous strategic, kinetic, and intelligence operations across the federation,” the statement reads, listing coordinated aerial bombardments, cross-border partnerships with regional forces, and community-based collaborations like Amotekun and vigilante groups among the efforts being deployed.
The heart of the military’s argument is simple: Nigeria’s security crisis is not a product of incompetence but of complexity. From the collapse of rural economies and ethnic fragmentation to the influx of weapons and fighters from North Africa’s failed states, the statement describes a security web tangled by years of neglect, global terrorism dynamics, and a deteriorating economic ecosystem.
Defence authorities warn that expecting the military to “instantly” resolve such deeply rooted insurgencies betrays a misunderstanding of modern counter-insurgency warfare, which demands more than bullets—it requires diplomacy, deradicalisation, reconstruction, and sustained political will.
Critics had accused the military leadership of passivity, waiting on presidential directives. But Brigadier General Gusau responds that alignment with civilian authority is a hallmark of constitutional democracy, not a sign of weakness.
President Bola Tinubu’s emphatic “Enough is enough” was interpreted not as a military rebuke, but as a reinforcement of political commitment.
Importantly, the military invites Nigerians and the media to pivot from outrage to engagement. The call is not for blind loyalty but for constructive patriotism: demand reform, yes—but also amplify success, support border security, and participate in building a credible local security framework.
“Rather than call for the resignation of security chiefs,” the statement urges, “what the nation needs is a collective surge of citizen vigilance, responsible media advocacy, and political unity.”
As Nigeria battles one of the most protracted and multifaceted security challenges in its history, the message is clear: this war cannot be won through condemnation alone—it requires cooperation, context, and national cohesion.