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By Christopher Okoro
The appointment of General Christopher Gwabin Musa (Rtd.) as Honourable Minister of Defence was greeted with cautious hope. Here was a retired Army General with deep operational experience, stepping in at a time when the country desperately needed further security direction. The narrative was simple and compelling: the “magic wand” to confront insecurity had been found.
Yet the narrative has shifted. Instead of measurable relief, communities continue to count casualties, farmers are abandoning land, and troop morale remains under strain. As insecurity deepens and public frustration grows, the central question is no longer about potential, but about performance: what has changed under Gen. Musa’s watch at the Ministry of Defence?
Months into his tenure , the gap between promise and reality is widening. What was sold as a new era of decisive, intelligence-led security management is yet to translate into lived relief for Nigerians.
On paper, there have been several doctrinal reviews and promises of “non-kinetic” and “whole-of-government” approaches. On the ground, however, the metrics tell a different story. Kidnapping for ransom has become more commercialized, attacks on farming communities in the North-Central and North-West persist, and the number of Internally Displaced Persons remains stubbornly high. The disconnect between policy announcements in Abuja and the daily realities in theatres of operation suggests that strategy is not cascading effectively to tactical commanders or to the communities that need protection most.
Across Nigeria today, the security architecture appears overwhelmed. Citizens sleep with one eye open. School attendance in volatile zones has dropped as parents fear abductions. Farmers have abandoned vast stretches of farmland due to banditry and insurgent attacks. Tragically, even serving and retired officers have not been spared, with several killed both in the line of duty and outside it.
Under a minister who rose from the ranks of the Armed Forces, the expectation was decisive action. Instead, critics argue, the narrative has shifted from operations to optics.
Multiple sources say the Minister is increasingly focused on sub-national political activities in his home state, at the expense of national security coordination. “He is now more visible at political gatherings and award ceremonies in his community and constituency than at security briefings,” a senior security analyst told our association . “The question Nigerians are asking is: award for what?”
With insecurity now at a critical threshold, we are calling on the Minister to match potential with performance and put on mechanisms to checkmate the insecurity ravaging the country. The era of praise-singing is over, Nigerians are dying. Inaction in the face of deteriorating security is no longer tenable despite the increased funding by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. It is time for action and not being guest speaker at every church or society forum that contributes nothing in enhancing security.
For a leadership once hailed as the answer Nigeria had been waiting for, the challenge now is to prove that the “magic wand” was not just a campaign slogan.
The magic wand has not worked because security is not magic. It is planning, logistics, welfare, intelligence, and trust. Nigerians are still waiting to see those elements come together under General Musa. Until they do, the headline will remain the same: insecurity deepens, and questions mount.
Christopher Okoro is the Publicity Secretary of the Association of United Front Security Watch.
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