Nigerian Foreign Policy and Military Cooperation in Africa
Franc Ter Abagen, Ph.D and Sabastine Ataka
Abstract
This paper delivers a general background study of Nigeria’s foreign and military cooperation
in Africa. The paper argues that the focus of Nigeria’s foreign and defence policies from 1960
till date was dictated and conditioned by the prevalent internal and external threats to national
security and the urge to be Africa’s security guarantor. Promoting democratic governance
was not a major feature of policy since, immediately after independence, Nigeria was strongly
focused on supporting the decolonisation of the African states through the instrumentality of
the OAU. While most African countries were still under colonial rule, Nigeria’s strategic
interests were primarily to support peace, decolonisation and economic development in Africa.
The paper also notes that, over four decades of its external relations before the return to
civilian rule in May 1999, the most visible employment of Nigeria’s armed forces in pursuit
of the country’s foreign policy objectives was in support of various UN peacekeeping missions
within the African continent and around the world. In addition to this, it is also argued that
a central goal of Nigerian foreign and defence policies from 1966 till date, was to fulfil its
manifest destiny as a regional leader in sub-Saharan Africa, but not to promoting the
democratisation of the African states. However, this paper makes use of a descriptive and
historical approaches to analyse the salient characteristics of Nigerian foreign and defence
policies before the return to the civilian government in 1999.
Key words:
Nigerian, Foreign Policy, Military Cooperation, Africa
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