The Nigerian Army is formalizing the integration of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and dedicated combat aviation into its frontline operations to counter asymmetric threats in the country. During the recent Nigerian Army Combat Arms Training Week held in Jaji, Kaduna, Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Waidi Shaibu emphasized that the force is moving toward a strategy defined by intelligence, surveillance, and precision strikes. The transition from purely traditional maneuver concepts to military-specification tactical systems aims to close the reconnaissance gap between ground units and air support.
The Nigerian army recently expanded its pilot cadre, graduating 27 specialized drone operators at the Giginya Military Cantonment in Sokoto, under Operation FANSAN YAMMA. These pilots are tasked with spearheading intelligence gathering in the North-West zone, where banditry and kidnapping occur most. To support this infrastructure, the military commissioned the country's first state-of-the-art Land Warfare Wargaming Centre at the Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Jaji. The facility allows commanders to run simulated combat scenarios using data collected from the field.
Restructuring the force has required a formal amendment to the Order of Battle (ORBAT) to absorb unmanned tech into standard operating procedures. By embedding unmanned assets into daily command networks, the Nigerian army is moving away from ad hoc drone use toward a standardized framework. This includes the deployment of the American-made Aerosonde Mk 4.7 and the Turkish Bayraktar TB2 combat UAVs. The acquisition of these platforms follows a $25.6 million contract with Textron Systems for 3 Aerosonde Mk 4.7 systems, which include vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) capabilities for operations in severe environments.
AVIATION INFRASTRUCTURE AND PLATFORM ACQUISITION
A critical component of this modernization is the construction of a $3.2 million aviation hangar at the Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Airport in Minna, Niger State. This facility will serve as the primary hub for the Nigerian army's growing fleet of manned and unmanned aircraft. The hangar is expected to house 12 MD530 Cayuse Warrior attack helicopters, 10 Bayraktar TB2 drones, and about 8 Magnus MF-212 light attack aircraft. The MD530, a proven scout and light-attack platform, provides close air support with a payload capacity of approximately 680 kg, allowing it to carry various gun pods and rocket launchers.
In June 2024, the Nigerian Army procured 2 American Bell UH-1H utility helicopters for troop transport and casualty evacuation, alongside the Chinese-made Ziyan Blowfish mini-UAVs for localized surveillance in July, 2023. By operating its own fixed-wing and rotary assets, the Nigerian army reduces its reliance on the Nigerian Air Force for immediate tactical needs. This independent capability is intended to provide persistent “over-the-shoulder†reconnaissance for ground commanders, ensuring that imagery intelligence is translated into actionable data without the delays often associated with inter-service coordination.
This technical surge is partly a response to the evolving tactics of insurgent groups like the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP). ISWAP has increasingly used small quadcopters for battlefield reconnaissance and propaganda filming, such as during the Gubio ambush in July 2022. By institutionalizing counter-UAV defense systems and advanced signals intelligence, the Nigerian Army aims to deny insurgent groups the advantage it has exploited in the Lake Chad Basin.
The operational implications of these acquisitions suggest a more aggressive posture in the North-East and North-West theaters. The shift toward organic aviation enables faster response times for medical evacuations and more frequent precision strikes on insurgent logistics bases. As the army awaits the final delivery of the MD530 fleet and the completion of the Minna hangar, the focus remains on sustaining these advanced systems through long-term logistics partnerships with international firms and foreign military trainers.




