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HISTORY OF CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS IN NIGERIA - part 9: THE CURRENT TRANSITION (continued)
By
Nowa Omoigui, MD The profound question of how Nigerian civilians view their armed forces and whether they consider it a legitimate institution or merely "accept it" in the absence of an option is important. One posits that it is linked to the larger question of the legitimacy of Nigeria itself and the degree of expression the state structure allows at local levels. The military has to evaluate new ways of regaining trust and embedding
itself in the primordial national mindset. However, there is danger for civilians to think that the military has had its time and thus should be no one's priority at this time. But this is a mistake. In reality, the military is in complete shambles after so many years of neglect, much of it deliberately wrought by the destructive effect of factions of the military engaging in politics. While other
professional sectors have also suffered degradation, the undeniable fact that the military's experience is self inflicted puts the military in a difficult position in negotiating for its corporate interests - although most of the individuals that were involved in previous regimes have since been shown the way out of the military.
What this means in practical terms is that even though it does not articulate it institutionally, some residual elements within the military are eager for advocates in civil society. Members of civil society and the political elite should thus pause, hold their breaths and listen. In all the three services, the military requisitioning system has reportedly broken down. Instead of being supplied with logistics items, commanders are made to purchase items. Very often, the amount allocated is insufficient, so those involved tend to provide very little of what is actually required and then keep some of the money for themselves. This fraudulent system has been in existence for a long time and the military is experiencing withdrawal symptoms because
guidelines issued since the advent of civil rule have reduced spending prerogatives. Service Chiefs, for example, can spend only one million naira. Correspondingly, officers at lower command and staff rungs now have lower spending limits. Ordinarily this should not be a problem; but there is no system in place to have materiel consistently available for units to carry out their duties. In this vacuum, the potential exists that civil-military tension can
result because of the national sub-culture of poverty and job insecurity. Because of the absence of transparency in Nigerian society, military officers could be put in an awkward position to observe civil servants and politicians award contracts to themselves and line their pockets while military units in the field starve. So they feel shortchanged. Clearly - as was previously noted - the problem of widespread corruption should be more vigorously and
honestly tackled.
An important element of professionalism is job satisfaction. Different cohorts of officers need to be objectively assessed for job satisfaction. Further, the nuanced differences between military loyalty to the State, the Constitution, the Government, the Regime or perhaps the "Country" or "Nation" need to be negotiated and understood by the civilian leadership and the military in order to avoid ambiguity. Appropriate language in the Armed Forces Act and oaths of loyalty taken by servicemen at entry should reflect a common understanding of which
entity commands ultimate loyalty. In Nigeria, state security often means 'regime security' in the eyes of the political leadership and its supporters but such a view may not be shared either by the larger society or by factions in the military - a reality which has no doubt created tensions in civil-military relations in the past.
The civilian political elite should and must relate with the professional military in defining threats and then establishing constitutional and institutional defence policies on size and complexity, recruitment, training, career planning, retention, retirement, budgets and acquisitions, force deployment and power projection, rules of engagement and human rights protection. Other important areas include defence diplomacy, the relationship of the
military to the international community, peace operations and regional security issues. Such discussions should clarify the boundaries of acceptable involvement of the armed forces in national and international politics, its relationship with the media, NGOs, nascent environmental pressure groups and other new non-state actors.
The proposed dialogue between the military and civil society on civil-military issues can be greatly assisted by the media if they are appropriately trained on how it should be constructively achieved without the usual complicating Nigerian factors of ethnicity, religion, inaccuracy and plain mischief. There have certainly been many situations in the past where opinions expressed in the media have affected military morale and even operations.
One very disturbing trend in Nigeria is the tendency for some news outlets to publish obvious falsehoods.
Lastly, sustained commitment of external actors to the democratization process can be very important, assuming that the frequent tendency on the part of international actors to focus on individuals rather than systems and institutions can be checked. Often, aside from the domestic military, it is the only alternative check and balance to irresponsible behavior on the part of the political class. It also has ways of exerting leverage and enforcing
international normative assumptions in the thinking and attitude of the military to civilian supremacy.
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