National Security Adviser (Nigeria) Explained

Post:National Security Adviser
Member Of:
First:Muhammadu Gambo Jimeta (civilian)
Aliyu Mohammed Gusau (military)
Appointer:President of Nigeria
Reports To:President of Nigeria
Department:Office of the National Security Adviser
Insignia:Seal of the President of Nigeria.svg
Incumbentsince:26 June 2023
Incumbent:Nuhu Ribadu
Insigniasize:130
Constituting Instrument:National Security Agencies Act[1]

The Nigerian National Security Adviser, commonly referred to as the NSA,[2] is a senior official of the federal government of Nigeria, based at the Three Arms Zone in Abuja, FCT.[3] [4] The national security adviser acts on behalf of the president of Nigeria, co-ordinating the management of all national security matters as principal adviser on state security. The position is a statutory member of the National Security Council (NSC) and Federal Executive Council (FEC), and chairs meetings of the Nigerian intelligence agencies. The NSA is supported by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), which includes executive staff drawn from intelligence, the armed forces, law enforcement and paramilitary units who primarily fulfil roles assigned them by the NSA at any given time in furtherance of the national security strategy of Nigeria.[5] The National Security Adviser serves at the pleasure of the President and does not require confirmation from the Nigerian Senate.[6] The duties of the NSA varies from administration to administration; and depends not only on the qualities of the person appointed to the position, but also on the style and management philosophy of the incumbent President.[7] Historically, appointment to the office has been held by senior police officers, and, the top brass of military officers up to, and, including three- and four-star generals.[8]

History

The National Security Organisation was established after the assassination of Murtala Muhammed with legal instrument Decree Number 27 of 1976 to co-ordinate internal security, foreign intelligence and counterintelligence activities; this was part of a larger reorganisation that saw the demobilisation of the Nigerian Armed Forces and the Nigerian Civil Service. The Decree did not establish the position of the national security adviser, but it did create a director-general in charge of the staff. In 1979, the NSO became part of the Executive Office of the President under Shehu Shagari. The Shagari administration maintained the NSO and appointed Bukar Shaib special adviser on national security, who was later succeeded in 1983 by Shehu Ahmad Said Galadanchi. These two were special advisers to the president and not national security advisers.[9]

The coup d'etat of 1983 led to the promulgation of Decree Number 2 of 1984 by Muhammadu Buhari, which entrusted the NSO with unprecedented powers "to detain without charge persons suspected of acts prejudicial to state security or harmful to the economic well-being of the country": the detention of individuals deemed to be enemies of the state without charge, and the limitation of civil rights and individual liberties transformed the NSO's mandate from its main focus on national security to regime state security with the state persecuting individuals through intimidation, harassment and secret imprisonment.[10]

Decree Number 19 of 1986 (National Security Agencies Act) created the position of Coordinator of National Security in 1986 and Aliyu Gusau was appointed as national security coordinator by Ibrahim Babangida. In this new role, Gusau coordinated the dismantling of the NSO (who's notoriety had led to the fall of the Buhari regime) into three succeeding agencies, the State Security Service, the National Intelligence Agency and the Defence Intelligence Agency.[11] Gusau later became the first military national security adviser in 1993 merging both roles as coordinator of national security and national security adviser under the Office of the National Security Adviser. Muhammadu Gambo Jimeta was the first civilian national security adviser in 1990 during the Babangida administration. The politico-military situation of the early 1990s required the need for a central body for coordination, control and supervision of national security.[12] Jimeta at the time did not have a schedule of operation for his new office, during the move of the seat of government from Lagos to Abuja, and most national security issues then were still tentatively under the purview of the Coordinator of National Security. The system established has remained largely unchanged since then, particularly since President Ibrahim Babangida signed into law the National Security Agencies Act of 1986, except for under Sani Abacha when his chief bodyguard Hamza al-Mustapha was in charge of security for the regime. The return to democracy under the Constitution of Nigeria in 1999 established the National Security Council (NSC).

Aliyu Gusau held the office twice in the Fourth Republic[13] under President Olusegun Obasanjo's administration he enhanced the importance of the office, controlling the flow of information to the president and meeting with him multiple times per day. Gusau also holds the distinction of serving as national security adviser under both the military dictatorship and non-consecutive democratic administrations: the Obasanjo administration and the Goodluck Jonathan administration. The Terrorism (Prevention) Amendment Act, 2013 empowered the national security adviser establishing the National Counter-Terrorism Centre under his office to coordinate national security in response to the Boko Haram insurgency.[14] [15] Gusau holds the record for total term of interspersed service (2,906 days); and his deputy Kayode Are holds the record for shortest term, at just 17 days in an acting role.

List

The table below contains a list of persons who have held the position since it was formally established in 1990:

[16]
No.NameTerm of officePresident(s) served under
StartEnd
1Muhammadu Gambo JimetaJanuary 19902 January 1993Ibrahim Babangida
2Aliyu Mohammed Gusau2 January 199330 August 1993
3Ismaila Gwarzo30 August 1993 9 June 1998Ernest Shonekan
Sani Abacha
4Abdullahi Mohammed9 June 199829 May 1999Abdulsalami Abubakar
5Aliyu Mohammed Gusau29 May 19991 June 2006Olusegun Obasanjo
6Abdullahi Sarki Mukhtar1 June 20068 March 2010Olusegun Obasanjo
Umaru Musa Yar'Adua
7Aliyu Mohammed Gusau[17] 8 March 201018 September 2010Goodluck Jonathan
Kayode Are (acting)18 September 20104 October 2010
8Owoye Andrew Azazi4 October 201022 June 2012
9Sambo Dasuki[18] 22 June 201213 July 2015
10Babagana Monguno13 July 201526 June 2023Muhammadu Buhari
Bola Tinubu
11Nuhu Ribadu26 June 2023presentBola Tinubu

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCIES ACT- of June 5, 1986 .
  2. The National Security Advisor and Secretary of the National Security Council
  3. Web site: National Counter Terrorism Centre, Abuja, Nigeria . 2024-10-31 . www.dblo.co.uk . en.
  4. Web site: 2023-04-30 . Coalition Partner Nigeria inaugurates National Counter Terrorism Centre - The Global Coalition Against Daesh . 2024-10-31 . en-GB.
  5. Web site: https://statehouse.gov.ng.
  6. Web site: 5 February 2020 . Senate inaugurates committee on national security . 2020-02-18 . Punch Newspapers . en-US.
  7. News: 2015-08-25 . Nigeria ex-security adviser charged . 2020-02-18 . BBC News . en-GB.
  8. Web site:
  9. Web site: Teniola . Eric . Much ado about national security adviser .
  10. Web site: Nigerian Security Organisation (NSO) - Nigeria Intelligence Agencies . 2024-11-03 . irp.fas.org.
  11. Web site: Nigerian Security Organisation (NSO) - Nigeria Intelligence Agencies . 2020-02-18 . fas.org.
  12. Web site: NATIONAL SECURITY STRATEGY DEVELOPMENT .
  13. Web site: About Us - Gusau Institute . 2020-02-18 . gusauinstitute.com.
  14. Web site: Terrorism (Prevention) Amendment Act, 2013 .
  15. Web site: National Counter-Terrorism Centre .
  16. Web site: List of National Security Advisers . 2020-02-18. Nigerian Bulletin - Naija Trending News. 3 December 2015 . en-US.
  17. Web site: Protector of the State: The role of Aliyu Mohammed Gusau as NSA. 2010-03-13. Vanguard News. en-US. 2020-02-18.
  18. Web site: Guest Post: Nigeria's New Security: Dasuki in, Azazi out. Council on Foreign Relations. en. 2020-02-18.