Chief of Defence Staff | |
---|---|
Standard of the Chief of Defence Staff | |
Ministry of Defence | |
Abbreviation | CDS |
Member of |
|
Reports to | Minister of Defence |
Seat | Defence Headquarters, Abuja |
Appointer |
President of Nigeria with advice and consent from Senate |
Constituting instrument | Constitution of Nigeria |
Formation | 1979 |
First holder | Ipoola Alani Akinrinade |
Website | Official website |
The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) is the professional head of the Nigerian Armed Forces and the most senior uniformed military adviser to the minister of defence and the president of Nigeria. The chief of the defence staff is based at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja and works alongside the Permanent Secretary of Defence. The Chief of Defence is the highest ranking officer to currently serve in the armed forces.
It is occupied by the most senior commissioned officer appointed by the President of Nigeria. The position was established for the first time under Nigeria's 1979 constitution.
The current chief of defence staff is General Christopher Musa, who succeeded General Lucky Irabor in June 2023.
Role[]
The Chief of Defence Staff gives operational directives to the Nigerian Armed Forces through the service chiefs and reports to the commander-in-Chief with administrative supervision of the Honourable Minister of Defence. It is the duty and responsibility of the CDS to formulate and execute policies, programmes towards the highest attainment of National Security and operational competence of the Armed Forces namely; the Army, Navy and Air Force. The CDS is assisted by the other Service Chiefs:
List of Chiefs of Defence Staff[]
The chiefs have been:[1]
№ | Chief of Defence Staff | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Defence branch | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ipoola Alani Akinrinade (born 1939) | Lieutenant General 15 April 1980 | 2 October 1981 | 1 year, 170 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
2 | Gibson Jalo (1939–2000) | Lieutenant General 2 October 1981 | 31 December 1983 | 2 years, 90 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
3 | Domkat Yah Bali (1940–2020) Defence Minister | General 1 January 1984 | August 1990 | 6 years, 212 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
4 | Sani Abacha (1943–1998) later military ruler | General August 1990 | 17 November 1993 | 3 years, 108 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
5 | Oladipo Diya (1944–2023) Chief of General Staff | Lieutenant General 17 November 1993 | 21 December 1997 | 4 years, 34 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
6 | Abdulsalami Abubakar (born 1942) later military ruler | Major General 21 December 1997 | 9 June 1998 | 170 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
7 | Al-Amin Daggash (born 1942) | Air Marshal 9 June 1998 | 29 May 1999 | 354 days | Nigeria Air Force | – | |
8 | Ibrahim Ogohi (born 1948) | Admiral 29 May 1999 | 27 June 2003 | 4 years, 29 days | Nigerian Navy | – | |
9 | Alexander Ogomudia (born 1949) | General 27 June 2003 | 1 June 2006 | 2 years, 339 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
10 | Martin Luther Agwai (born 1948) Later Commander of the UNAMID | General 1 June 2006 | 25 May 2007 | 358 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
11 | Owoye Andrew Azazi (1952–2012) | General 25 May 2007 | 20 August 2008 | 1 year, 87 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
12 | Paul Dike (born 1950) | Air Chief Marshal 20 August 2008 | 8 September 2010 | 2 years, 19 days | Nigeria Air Force | – | |
13 | Oluseyi Petinrin (born 1955) | Air Chief Marshal 8 September 2010 | 4 October 2012 | 2 years, 26 days | Nigeria Air Force | – | |
14 | Ola Ibrahim (born 1955) | Admiral 4 October 2012 | 20 January 2014 | 1 year, 108 days | Nigerian Navy | – | |
15 | Alex Sabundu Badeh (1957–2018) | Air Chief Marshal 20 January 2014 | 21 July 2015 | 1 year, 182 days | Nigeria Air Force | – | |
16 | Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin (born 1961) | General 21 July 2015 | 29 January 2021 | 5 years, 192 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
17 | Lucky Irabor (born 1965) | General 29 January 2021 | 23 June 2023 | 2 years, 145 days | Nigeria Army | – | |
18 | Christopher Gwabin Musa (born 1967) | General 23 June 2023 | Incumbent | 1 year, 163 days | Nigeria Army | – |
References[]
- ↑ "CDS CHRONICLES". The Defence Headquarters. https://defencehq.mil.ng/cds/chronicles.
External links[]
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The original article can be found at Chief of Defence Staff (Nigeria) and the edit history here.