• Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
  • E-Book
Search
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
PRNIGERIA PRNigeria News
PRNIGERIA PRNIGERIA
  • Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
  • E-Book
Home Features Nigeria’s Strategic Partnerships: What the French Military Academy’s Visit to NDA Really...
  • Features

Nigeria’s Strategic Partnerships: What the French Military Academy’s Visit to NDA Really Means

By
Senator Iroegbu
-
October 29, 2025
Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)
Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)

Nigeria’s Strategic Partnerships: What the French Military Academy’s Visit to NDA Really Means

By Senator Iroegbu

The recent visit of Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)—France’s foremost military academy—to the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) in Kaduna may have seemed like another routine diplomatic engagement. But its more profound implications for Nigeria’s national security, strategic autonomy, and regional leadership are far more profound.

At a time when social media critics are quick to politicise every foreign engagement, the symbolism of this visit deserves sober reflection. It wasn’t about subservience or colonial nostalgia. It was an affirmation of mutual respect, professional excellence, and Nigeria’s growing capacity to engage the world on its own terms.

Unfortunately, there is a popular but dangerous misconception that any cooperation with Western nations represents neo-colonial dependence. This mindset, disguised as patriotism, is in fact strategic illiteracy. True sovereignty is not measured by whom you refuse to engage, but by your ability to partner with powerful nations as an equal while preserving independent decision-making.

 

The Commandant of one of the world’s most prestigious military academies did not visit Nigeria as a benefactor to a client state. He came as a peer, recognising that the NDA—after over six decades and more than 20,000 graduates—has matured into a globally respected institution, currently hosting cadets from 14 allied countries. The French visit was earned, not solicited. It was Nigeria’s capacity, not its dependency, that drew attention.

Look to the Sahel for caution. The Alliance of Sahel States—Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger—chose to expel Western forces and sever partnerships with France, only to replace them with heavy dependence on Russia’s Wagner Group, now rebranded as Africa Corps. The results? Escalating insecurity, deteriorating governance, and rising civilian casualties.

They traded one external dependency for another, gaining rhetorical sovereignty but losing absolute control. This is not the path Nigeria should emulate. The smart path is the one that balances partnerships, diversifies alliances, and builds capacity across multiple fronts without ideological rigidity.

Against this backdrop, Nigeria’s geography and regional role demand multilingual, multinational competence. We are surrounded by Francophone nations, including Niger, Chad, Cameroon, and Benin. For our Armed Forces, proficiency in French isn’t a luxury; it’s an operational necessity for border coordination, intelligence sharing, and peacekeeping.

Read Also:

  • Yuletide: CDS, COAS Laud Troops’ Operational Gains in Sokoto
  • Finally, NAF C-130 Aircraft Lands in Portugal for Scheduled Maintenance
  • Finally, NAF C-130 Aircraft Arrives Safely in Portugal for Maintenance

Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)
Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)

Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)
Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy, Commandant of the École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM)

The NDA–ESM collaboration directly addresses this need. It enhances leadership development, language proficiency, and training methodology. Far from diminishing Nigeria’s sovereignty, it strengthens our defence capabilities and reinforces our regional leadership role in ECOWAS, the African Union, and United Nations missions.

Partnerships like these are not about dependency; they are about mutual learning and growth. French cadets will also gain exposure to African security dynamics and cultural diversity—critical experiences for future global officers.

To this end, Nigeria’s defence and foreign policy must be guided by one principle: national interest, not by emotional reactions to historical grievances, nor by blind alignment with any global bloc. The question we must always ask is: Does this partnership serve Nigeria’s long-term security and development objectives?

If the NDA–ESM partnership enhances training quality, language capability, and international recognition, then it passes that test. And this is only one among many—Nigeria maintains robust defence relations with the United States, United Kingdom, China, Russia, India, and several African nations. Our policy is not “either/or.” It is strategic flexibility—extracting value from multiple sources while maintaining autonomy.

Real patriotism is not loud rejection of foreign engagement; it is the quiet, steady pursuit of excellence. It means making pragmatic decisions that strengthen our national capacity, regardless of where functional expertise originates. It means wanting Nigerian officers to be among the best trained in the world—and knowing that achieving that standard requires learning from global best practices.

The NDA–ESM partnership exemplifies this approach: selective, strategic, and mutually beneficial. It reflects confidence, not submission. It reflects maturity, not dependence.

As other nations in the Sahel drift into isolationism and populist anti-Western rhetoric, Nigeria is charting a more balanced course—engaging without capitulating, cooperating without compromising sovereignty. That’s not weakness; that’s wisdom. It’s the kind of leadership Africa urgently needs: autonomy rooted in strength, not isolationism driven by insecurity.

The world’s power dynamics are shifting. Nations that will thrive are those able to build strategic bridges—not walls. Nigeria’s Defence Academy, by opening its gates to peer collaboration, is quietly doing just that.

In a nutshell, the visit of General Charpy to the NDA was more than a diplomatic gesture. It was recognition of excellence, a celebration of partnership, and a demonstration of Nigeria’s growing stature in global military education. It tells a story of a country confident in its identity, secure in its sovereignty, and determined to engage the world on its own terms.

Nigeria’s national interest must come first—not East, not West, but Nigeria first. The NDA’s example shows that by engaging wisely, learning broadly, and acting decisively, we can build a military—and a nation—worthy of our aspirations.

Senator Iroegbu is a security, geopolitics and development analyst. Email: [email protected]

VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
PRNigeria.com EconomicConfidential.com PRNigeria.com/Hausa/
EmergencyDigest.com PoliticsDigest.ng TechDigest.ng
HealthDigest.ng SpokesPersonsdigest.com TeensDigest.ng
ArewaAgenda.com Hausa.ArewaAgenda.com YAShuaib.com
  • TAGS
  • economy
  • Lt-Gen. Emmanuel Charpy
  • Nigerian Defence Academy
Previous articleNigeria’s Future Lies in Its People, Not Oil, Says Tinubu at CIPM Conference
Next articleList of Nigeria’s Chiefs of Air Staff: NAF Leadership from 1963 to Present
Senator Iroegbu
Senator Iroegbu
Xing

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Ishola Ayodele, Columnist Spokesperson's Digest

AI, Ethics, and the Soul of Public Relations

Publisher of Newsdigest, Gidado Shuaib, CEO of IMPR Yushau Shuaib, ED CISLAC, Awwal Musa Rafsajani, Chairman IMPR Prof Sule Yah Sule and the Convener, Lawal Dahiru at 2025 Arewa Stars Awards

My First IMPR Retreat: Lessons, People and Perspective

Media Rights Agenda

Media Rights Agenda Bags International Award for Media Freedom, Digital Rights

Oluwatosin Ajayi, IPI and a new tone for press freedom

Dangote’s Allegation: Why Is Farouk Ahmed Silent on the Corruption Claims, By Yushau A. Shuaib

CP Jimoh Moshood

Policing against New Wave of ‘Virtual Kidnapping’ Fraud

On Anti-Banditry, Things Need to be Done Differently, By Professor Usman Yusuf

Face to Face with Kannywood’s Masquerades: Why Reputation and Digitalisation Now Matter

Abubakar Malami, SAN, Minister of Justice

When Power Fades: Nigeria’s Political Reckoning and the Fall of Untouchables

CP Jimoh Moshood

Legislative Praise and the Politics of Policing in Lagos, By Adebisi Adams Oyeshakin

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Silent Sackings: Tinubu’s Peculiar Ways of Easing out Bad Eggs

Adewale Adeniyi Bashir, Comptroller General of Customs (CGC)

JUST IN: Customs Penalizes Banks Over Delayed Revenue Remittance

Recent Posts

  • Yuletide: CDS, COAS Laud Troops’ Operational Gains in Sokoto
  • Finally, NAF C-130 Aircraft Lands in Portugal for Scheduled Maintenance
  • Finally, NAF C-130 Aircraft Arrives Safely in Portugal for Maintenance
  • CAS Celebrates Christmas with Frontline Troops, Reaffirms NAF’s Commitment to Welfare, Security
  • Army Disowns Fake DSSC Recruitment Advertisement, Warns Public Against Fraud
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
© 2020 PRNigeria. All Rights Reserved.
Latest News
Yuletide: CDS, COAS Laud Troops’ Operational Gains in SokotoFinally, NAF C-130 Aircraft Lands in Portugal for Scheduled MaintenanceFinally, NAF C-130 Aircraft Arrives Safely in Portugal for MaintenanceCAS Celebrates Christmas with Frontline Troops, Reaffirms NAF’s Commitment to Welfare, SecurityArmy Disowns Fake DSSC Recruitment Advertisement, Warns Public Against FraudPolice Arrest 2 Kidnap Kingpins, Recover Cash,  AK-47 in KwaraTroops Foil Christmas Day Attack in Plateau, Kill Notorious Bandit, Recover ArmsTincan Island Customs Surpasses 2025 Revenue Target, Rakes in N1.57trnHow U.S. Drones from Ghana Hit Sokoto Terrorist Enclaves After the Nigeria–AFRICOM Intel DealNigeria, U.S. Launch Joint Precision Operation Against Foreign ISIS Fighters in North-WestGUIDELINES: How to Apply for 2025 Nigeria Police RecruitmentNigerian Navy Shortlists Candidates for Basic Training SchoolArtillery Commander Visits OPHK, Pledges Sustained  Support for N'East OperationsPresidency Debunks Rumours of Gbajabiamila’s Replacement as Chief of StaffUS Security Institute Names NDLEA Boss Marwa Security Leader of the Year 2025
X whatsapp