I am alarmed at the news of the killing of officers and men of the Nigerian Army. One was a 63 Nigerian Army trooper, a civil war vet who did his best to keep Nigeria intact.
In the normal schedule of men-allotment during battle conditions, a sergeant leads a squad of four troopers, a lieutenant leads a platoon of twelve troopers and a captain leads a company of two or more platoons (let us say five platoons of sixty troopers). And a major? He is an upward moving admin officer. Now, how come bandits ambushed and finished off a half-platoon contingent of soldiers consisting of a major, a captain, and four soldiers? Is the Nigerian Army so terribly short of personnel nowadays?
This brings up the kernel of the matter that should excite our military planners, that of activation of native national guard battalions that can be federalised in times of national crises but whose main function is maintaining the peace in their states or local domains of identification. Thus, there ought to be a Benue National Guard Brigade consisting of Tiv and Idoma battalions protecting the Gwer-Adoka flank and other combustibles places. There ought also to be a Kaduna National Guard brigade consisting of Atyap battalion and battalions of the other tribal make up. Ditto one for Plateau and Niger and other distressed states. The national guard security complement concept works very well in the US. It should be operational here pronto.
Sunday Adole Jonah, Department of Physics, Federal University of Technology, Minna, Niger State