By SNC Nwagu
Executive Summary
Nigeria’s foreign policy has remained glued to conventional, kinetic diplomacy instead of a homegrown narrative that leverages its abundant resources.
Soft power diplomacy—cultural and ideological outreach plus international institution‑building—is being eroded by the recent round of ambassadorial appointments, which heavily tilt toward non‑career diplomats (former politicians, many with corruption histories or pending indictments), while the principle of Federal Character (equitable state representation) is only superficially observed.
This pattern weakens Nigeria’s soft‑power projection, erodes diplomatic professionalism, and damages the nation’s international reputation—essentially enthroning professional incompetence.
Background
Nigeria’s foreign policy has long been described as “ideologically inconsistent, operationally barren, philosophically and intellectually vague, an exercise in conceptual confusion and groping in the dark” (Adeboye, 1999).
Since the Fourth Republic, strategic alliances and economic diplomacy have been sidelined for political and psychological gratification.
Appointments of non‑career diplomats—mostly politicians lacking requisite foreign‑policy knowledge—have undermined diplomatic success and constrained state autonomy.
As Nye (2011) notes, soft power derives from domestic and foreign policies, actions, and inherent national qualities, not just policy choice. With looming U.S. security concerns (insecurity/“Christian genocide” narrative) and a battered economy, a review of these appointments is imperative.
Statement of Problems
– Predominance of Non‑Career Diplomats: ≈ 65 % have no prior Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) experience; many are ex‑governors, senators, or 2023 election losers.
– Corruption & Legal Issues: At least four appointees have pending EFCC/CCB cases or past convictions for fraud, misappropriation, and money‑laundering.
– Federal Character Misalignment: Some states get 2‑3 slots while 12 states (North‑East, North‑West) are under‑represented despite qualified career officers.
– Lack of Strategic Competence: Ambassadors to key missions (US, UK, EU, China) lack expertise in trade, security, development cooperation—representation is prioritized over merit.
– Due Process Gaps: Shortlisting, vetting, Senate screening lack transparency; patronage dominates.
Impact on Soft Power
– Reduced institutional memory, policy continuity, and mastery of diplomatic protocol.
– Violation of Public Service Rules (integrity clause), tarnishing Nigeria’s image.
– Perception of favouritism, eroding national cohesion and constitutional Federal Character compliance.
– Weakened advocacy for strategic interests (security partnerships, trade tariffs, debt relief).
– Undermined accountability and public trust—cornerstone of democratic governance.
Overview
For Nigeria to achieve its national strategic interests and strengthen soft‑power diplomacy, diplomats must be experienced, trained, and merit‑based. Political reward systems, weak institutional gate‑keeping, and inconsistent legal enforcement must be addressed. Section 14(3) of the Constitution (Federal Character) should be applied with integrity, not as a shield for unqualified appointments
Recommendations
5.1 Immediate Corrective Measures
1. Suspend pending vetting.
2. Integrity clearance (EFCC, ICPC, NJC) must take priority over party affiliation.
3. 5.2 Structural Reforms
– Re‑balance career vs. political appointments:
– Minimum 60 % career diplomats (MFA cadre).
– Maximum 40 % political/technical experts (security, trade) with proven expertise.
– Transparent process: public advertisement, merit‑based shortlist by inter‑ministerial panel (MFA, PSC, National Security Adviser), Senate confirmation hearings (public, recorded).
– Legal safeguards: Amend the Ambassadors (Appointment) Act to bar anyone with pending indictments or criminal convictions; introduce a “Fit‑and‑Proper” test (integrity, financial disclosure, conflict‑of‑interest check
5.3 Capacity Building
– Two‑week intensive training for political appointees on diplomatic protocol, international law, MFA systems.
– Pair each non‑career ambassador with a senior career deputy for knowledge transfer
5.4 Institutional Measures
– Legislate a Diplomatic Integrity Pledge (signed by all appointees, enforceable by recall on breach).
– Publish an annual Nigeria Diplomatic Performance Index (competence, integrity, impact) to drive accountability.
Conclusion
The current appointment pattern jeopardises Nigeria’s soft‑power assets—credibility, cultural influence, and economic diplomacy.
Balancing Federal Character with merit, integrity, and professionalism will restore confidence at home and elevate Nigeria’s global narrative.
Ogbuzuru SNC Nwagu, Esq. Writes from Enugu – Coal City State.