
Soldiers’ deployment for internal security weakening police – Buratai
A former Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, on Monday said the increasing deployment of members of the Armed Forces of Nigeria for internal security is weakening the capacity of the Nigeria Police Force and other civilian security agencies.
Buratai, a retired Lieutenant-General, stated this at National Defence College, Abuja, when he delivered the keynote address at the 2026 Armed Forces Celebrations and Remembrance Day’s lecture.
According to him, the military’s widespread presence across Nigeria’s 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory, is gradually eroding the growth and effectiveness of the police and internal intelligence institutions that should ordinarily lead internal security operations.
The retired top army officer said, “The extensive deployment of the Armed Forces of Nigeria in internal security provides immediate stability, but it also perpetuates a cycle of dependency that weakens civil police capacity and strains defence resources.”
He further noted that the result is a dangerous imbalance that has made the military overstretched, and makes defence budgets diverted to routine policing duties, and the Armed Forces’ preparedness for conventional threats is reduced.
Buratai noted that constitutionally, the primary roles of the Armed Forces of Nigeria are to defend the nation against external aggression, protect territorial integrity, suppress insurrection and provide aid to civil authorities when required.
He, however, stressed that internal security should fundamentally be civil-driven and intelligence-led, with the police and state security services in the lead.
He called for a clear, time-bound and conditions-based exit strategy that would gradually return internal security responsibilities to civilian authorities while preserving the military’s readiness for its core mandate.
The former Army chief said Nigeria’s long-term security and democratic stability depend on strong, well-equipped police and intelligence services, with the military reserved for exceptional situations.
Earlier, the Minister of Defence, General Christopher Musa (retd), called for a coordinated crackdown on the use of local transportation systems by criminal networks to move weapons, drugs and other illicit materials across the country.
Musa said tackling the problem requires the involvement of local governments, traditional rulers, religious leaders and community members, describing security as a shared responsibility that goes beyond the armed forces alone.
Nigerians can now invest ₦2.5 million on premium domains and profit about ₦17-₦25 million. All earnings paid in US Dollars. Rather than wonder, click here to find out how it works.
Join Daily Trust WhatsApp Community For Quick Access To News and Happenings Around You.
Community Reactions
AI-Powered Insights
Related Stories
NIGERIA DAILY: How Nigeria’s Elections Have Changed Since 1999

US revoked 100,000 visas since Trump return, 8,000 students affected

Rivers’ Crisis: Why Fubara is yet to receive impeachment notice


Discussion (0)