Nigeria, Türkiye Sign Defence Pact on Training, Technology

By Nokai Origin, Abuja

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Nigeria has secured a wide-ranging defence cooperation framework with Türkiye, spanning training, technology transfer, air and naval capability development, and border security coordination, following bilateral talks at the Antalya Diplomacy Forum.

The agreements, led by the Minister of Defence, Christopher Musa, signal a shift towards capability expansion through structured international partnerships, with immediate and long-term implementation timelines.

Central to the engagement is a structured training pipeline for Nigerian Armed Forces personnel, covering Special Forces operations, counterterrorism, intelligence integration, counter-drone and counter-IED operations, as well as United Nations pre-deployment training.

Both sides agreed on the immediate deployment of an initial cohort of Nigerian personnel to Türkiye, alongside language training and participation in field exercises.

A major outcome is the planned establishment of a military training facility in Nigeria, with a temporary site to be provided and a permanent coastal location already identified signalling a long-term institutional footprint for bilateral training.

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The partnership includes commitments to defence industrial cooperation, focusing on technology transfer, maintenance training, and potential co-development of platforms.

Engagements are expected to deepen through participation in platforms such as IDEF 2026, aimed at strengthening indigenous defence capabilities and reducing reliance on external systems over time.

Türkiye indicated readiness to support Nigeria with advanced surveillance systems, unmanned aerial platforms, satellite-enabled monitoring, and counter-drone technologies.

Discussions also covered specialised air and ground platforms, including infantry fighting vehicles tailored to Nigeria’s operational terrain and evolving threat environment.

Both countries agreed to commence technical engagements on integrated border management systems, enhanced intelligence sharing, and coordinated responses to technologically adaptive non-state actors.

This aligns with Nigeria’s ongoing efforts to tighten border control and disrupt cross-border threat networks.

In the aviation domain, the agreement targets improved maintenance systems, supply chains, and lifecycle support to boost operational flight hours and readiness.

Potential acquisition and sustained support for helicopters and unmanned systems were also discussed.

On the maritime front, Nigerian naval representatives are to engage Turkish counterparts to evaluate suitable naval platforms and expand specialised maritime training, with a focus on strengthening maritime domain awareness.

Türkiye also offered to share expertise in disarmament and rehabilitation programmes, particularly in managing surrendered combatants and supporting long-term reintegration efforts.

Both parties adopted a phased implementation strategy, with immediate actions including training deployments, technical exchanges on surveillance systems, and planning for training infrastructure in Nigeria.

“The outcomes of this engagement mark a significant step forward in Nigeria–Türkiye defence relations,” General Musa said, adding that the focus would be on delivering measurable results aligned with national security priorities.

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