Nigeria Training
General Babangida and senior armed forces officers
overseeing Exercise Fast Strike
Courtesy Embassy of Nigeria, Washington
Nigeria boasted comprehensive and almost completely
indigenized professional military training institutions,
including the national triservice Nigerian Military
University,
the Command and Staff College, and the National Institute
for
Policy and Strategic Studies. In addition, each service
maintained extensive training programs for its own needs.
The central pillar of the military training
establishment was
the Nigerian Military University. Founded in 1964 in
Kaduna as
the Nigerian Defence Academy, this unique academy for
regular
commissioned officer candidates in 1983 had a staff of
about
1,100. The academy was upgraded and redesignated as the
national
Nigerian Military University in 1985 and awarded its first
degrees in September 1988. By 1989 it had trained about
5,300
officers, including 300 from other countries. In a message
to the
104 graduating officers in September 1990, President
Babangida
announced that the academy would be moved to a permanent
site by
mid-1992. For prospective army officers, the academy
offered a
two-and-a-half-year program leading to commissions as
second
lieutenants. Naval and air force cadets attended an
eighteen-
month joint training program, after which successful
candidates
advanced to specialized training with their chosen service
before
commissioning. During the 1970s, to meet the demand for
officers
the academy also offered a six-month short service
commission
course for army and air force personnel selected from the
ranks.
In June 1980, President Shagari announced plans to
establish both
a naval and an air force academy, but as of 1990 they had
not
been implemented.
The need for both a national defense academy and a
command
and staff college was occasioned by the manpower explosion
during
the civil war, the acute shortage of officers, the poor
quality
of professional training, and the diversity of foreign
training
experiences. In 1975 the Nigerian army sought assistance
from
Britain in establishing a staff college at Jaji, near
Kaduna, the
site of the Nigerian Army School of Infantry. The college
opened
in May 1976 with two senior officers' courses lasting five
and
one-half months, with a curriculum derived from the
British Army
Staff College at Camberley but specially tailored to
Nigerian
circumstances and needs. The first course had forty army
officers, and the second fifty officers, including two
each from
the navy and air force.
Concurrently, planning proceeded for an eleven-month
course
for field-grade officers, which began in September 1977
with 70
officers; this course was increased to the planned 100 the
next
year. This five-term course covered staff duties,
organizations,
and logistics; operational staff duties, command, and
intelligence; basic tactics; training and
counterrevolutionary
warfare; advanced counterrevolutionary warfare; and other
general
subjects. Students from Guyana, Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania
also
attended the 1978 course, by which time air and naval
wings had
been formed.
The junior division of the Army Command and Staff
College for
senior lieutenants and junior captains opened in April
1978 (it
was renamed the Command and Staff College later in 1978).
Four
ten-week courses were offered annually, initially with
thirty
students but later increased to forty. By 1987 the course
had
expanded to eighteen weeks and was run generally along the
lines
of the junior division of the British Staff College at
Warminster. Also at Jaji was a Demonstration Battalion,
the Army
School of Artillery, and armor support from a composite
armored
battalion in Kaduna.
The air faculty opened with twenty students in
September
1978, the same year the NAF set up a junior division at
the air
base in Kaduna. At that time, the joint service nature of
the
college at Jaji resulted in its being redesignated the
Command
and Staff College. The navy faculty was established in
September
1981 with twelve students, and in August 1984 a junior
navy
division was set up with assistance from the British Royal
Navy.
The transfer of the junior air faculty from Kaduna to Jaji
completed the process of expansion and consolidation of
this
unique full-fledged staff college, with junior and senior
divisions of all three services at the same campus.
In addition to technical military training, the Command
and
Staff College increased attention to internal security and
aid to
the civil authority. Students and instructors from the
Police
Staff College at Jos, Nigerian Prison Service officers,
and
senior Ministry of Defence civil servants joined the army
senior
division. Jaji also attracted officers from other African
states.
Students from Benin, Ethiopia, Ghana, Sierra Leone,
Tanzania,
Uganda, and Zimbabwe regularly attended, and the first
Botswanan
officers attended the 1986-87 course. In 1986 it was
decided that
the training program would be fully indigenized.
Henceforth,
contracts with expatriate staff were not renewed, and
foreign
faculty members were accepted only on an exchange basis.
At that
time, there were forty-seven directing staff--thirty-eight
Nigerian, seven British, and two Ghanaian, the latter
under a
long-standing exchange program. By 1986, 1,172 officers
had
graduated from Jaji's senior divisions, and 1,320 from the
junior
divisions.
Each service also operated its own training
institutions and
facilities. The army's Training and Doctrine Command,
based at
Minna, had overall responsibility for developing,
conducting, and
evaluating army training and doctrine. It was organized
into six
directorates and two departments with sixteen training
schools,
including infantry, intelligence, signals, airborne, and
amphibious warfare. Since 1985 it has used the United
States-
designed Systems Approach to Training, under which each of
the
army's four divisions prepared and conducted a
comprehensive
annual training program.
The multiprogram Nigerian Army School of Infantry
(NASI) was
the largest single-service school. In late 1988, it was
announced
that 5,040 officers and soldiers and 13 NAF officers had
completed instruction at NASI during the previous three
years;
other graduates includes 146 police, 2 civilians from the
DIC,
and 145 military personnel from other African countries,
mainly
Zimbabwe. The number of officers in the various courses in
1988
was 273 airborne, 376 young officers course, 112 range
management
course, 67 quartermaster and direct short commission, 75
company
commanders course, 15 unit sappers, and 23 mortar platoon.
The navy's schools for officer and basic seamanship
technical
training were at the training complex at NNS Quorra, where
the
curriculum included navigation, diving, communications,
and
gunnery. Officer training at the Nigerian Naval College,
Onura,
entailed a two-year military and academic program followed
by two
years' shipboard and operational experience before
commissioning
as sublieutenants. The last class of forty-five midshipmen
graduated in July 1990, after which the Nigerian Military
University took over officers' training.
The Naval Training Command, established in November
1986,
included several major subordinate facilities: NNS Onura
and NNS
Akaso near Port Harcourt; NNS Quorra at Apapa; the Diving
School
at Navytown in Ojo; the Navy Technical Training Centre,
Sapele;
the Dockyard Apprentice School near Lagos; and the NNS
Logistic
Centre. The navy relied primarily on West German and
British
firms to help establish its technical and professional
schools. A
new Underwater Warfare School, built by Dornier of
Germany,
opened in 1990 with more than 600 students. In late 1989,
plans
to set up a naval military school were still delayed by
budgetary
limitations, but officer training cooperation was being
explored
with India. By 1990 about 85 percent of naval training had
been
localized, resulting in annual savings of N100 million.
For its part, the NAF Training Command operated three
flying
schools offering comprehensive flight, armaments,
helicopter, and
paratrooper training, and a Technical Training Group
(TTG). The
air force had specialized schools for such subjects as
primary
and advanced flying, helicopter weapons, and tactical
training.
Primary flight training was conducted at the 301 Flying
Training
School at the Nigerian air base in Kaduna, under the air
force
Tactical Training Group. British Bulldogs were the primary
trainers, and Aermacchi MB-339ANs were used for basic and
advanced flight training. In July 1989, the Student Pilot
School
graduated eleven of the fourteen candidates who started
the
course. Since its inception in 1964, more than 600 pilots
from
the NAF and from other African countries have graduated.
In 1987
the Tactical Air Command at Makurdi acquired sophisticated
British Aerospace flight simulators to reduce accidental
crashes.
When fully operational, the NAF helicopter training school
at
Enugu also planned to train pilots from other African
countries.
The TTG at Kaduna comprised officers' schools for
engineering, logistics management, communication and
electronics,
air management, and aircraft maintenance. Its modern
aircraft
training and maintenance support equipment included
electroplating shops, a heat-treatment laboratory, and
forging
and welding shops, and permitted the NAF to achieve a high
degree
of self-sufficiency. In 1987 the NAF ceased aircraft
maintenance
training abroad and began to set up an armament
engineering
department. The TTG fabricated nearly all the spare parts
and
components used to maintain the NAF's equipment; by then
about 80
percent of NAF training was done locally. In 1989 it was
announced that the TTG would be affiliated with the
Nigerian
Military University in Kaduna and redesignated the NAF
Institute
of Technology. Comparable to university-level colleges of
technology, the new institute would offer degree programs
and
train air force personnel in automotive and aircraft
trades and
weapon services.
Finally, the National Institute for Policy and
Strategic
Studies at Kuru, near Jos, afforded senior officers an
opportunity to study and to reflect on domestic and
international
security affairs. Its programs were similar to those of
senior
service schools and "war colleges" in other countries. A
separate
national defense institute was reported to be in planning
in
1990.
Data as of June 1991
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