• About us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Friday, July 17, 2026
  • Login
NewsPeg Magazine logo
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • Business
    • Politics
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Health
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • Business
    • Politics
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Health
No Result
View All Result
NewsPeg Magazine logo
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

National Security Begins in the Information Space

By Wole Oni

newspegonline24 by newspegonline24
July 17, 2026
in Uncategorized
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

For decades, national security was understood largely in military terms. Governments invested in soldiers, intelligence services, law enforcement agencies, and weapons to defend the state against external aggression and internal threats. While these remain indispensable, the digital age has fundamentally altered the security landscape. Today, one of the most contested battlefields is not a forest, a border, or a trench—it is the information space.

Every minute, millions of Nigerians consume, share, and react to information on social media. Platforms such as Facebook, X, TikTok, Instagram, WhatsApp, and YouTube have become indispensable tools for communication, commerce, education, political engagement, and social interaction. They have democratized access to information and amplified voices that previously went unheard. Yet, these same platforms have also become fertile ground for misinformation, disinformation, hate speech, cybercrime, extremist propaganda, and foreign influence operations.

The implications for national security are profound.

A false rumour shared on social media can spark communal violence before security agencies have time to respond. Manipulated videos and fabricated images can inflame ethnic and religious tensions, deepen political divisions, and erode public confidence in democratic institutions. Terrorist organisations and criminal networks increasingly exploit digital platforms to recruit vulnerable young people, spread extremist narratives, coordinate illicit activities, and glorify violence. Cybercriminals use the same technologies to steal identities, defraud citizens, and compromise critical systems.

These realities demand that we rethink what national security means in the twenty-first century.

Military operations will always remain an essential component of national defence. However, no amount of kinetic action can sustainably address insecurity if the information environment remains vulnerable to manipulation. Winning the battle against terrorism, violent extremism, organised crime, and foreign interference increasingly requires winning the battle for public trust and credible information.

This is why strategic communication should be recognised as a core instrument of national security.

Strategic communication is not propaganda, nor is it government publicity. It is the deliberate, coordinated, and transparent communication of accurate information that helps citizens make informed decisions, counters false narratives, and strengthens public confidence in state institutions. During security emergencies, silence often creates a vacuum that rumours and malicious actors quickly fill. Government must therefore communicate early, consistently, and credibly.

Equally important is the need to strengthen media and information literacy. Every Nigerian with a smartphone has become both a consumer and a publisher of information. This new reality places enormous responsibility on citizens to verify information before sharing it. Schools, universities, media organisations, civil society groups, and government institutions should work together to equip citizens with the skills to identify fake news, recognise manipulated content, and resist online manipulation.

Social media companies also have responsibilities. Governments should engage constructively with digital platforms to address coordinated disinformation campaigns, remove content that incites violence or promotes terrorism within the bounds of the law, and improve mechanisms for crisis communication. Such partnerships must be guided by transparency, accountability, and respect for constitutional rights, particularly freedom of expression. Blanket censorship and indiscriminate restrictions on digital platforms are unlikely to produce sustainable security outcomes. Instead, they risk driving harmful content into less visible spaces while undermining public trust.

Cybersecurity must also become a national priority. As public services, financial systems, and critical infrastructure become increasingly digital, protecting cyberspace is no longer simply an IT issue; it is a national security imperative. Governments, businesses, and citizens alike must embrace stronger cyber hygiene, invest in resilience, and develop the capacity to respond to emerging cyber threats.

Perhaps the most important lesson from recent years is that governments cannot address these challenges alone. National security is no longer the exclusive responsibility of soldiers, police officers, or intelligence agencies. Traditional rulers, religious leaders, journalists, educators, civil society organisations, the private sector, technology companies, and ordinary citizens all have important roles to play in protecting the information environment.

This is the essence of a whole-of-society approach to national security.

Communities are often the first to detect early signs of tension. Religious and traditional leaders frequently possess the credibility to calm emotions before conflicts escalate. Journalists and fact-checkers help separate truth from falsehood. Civil society organisations strengthen accountability and promote dialogue. Young people, who constitute the largest users of social media, can become ambassadors for digital responsibility rather than unwitting amplifiers of misinformation.

For Nigeria, the Office of the National Security Adviser is well positioned to coordinate this broader national effort. Consistent with its statutory mandate to coordinate national security activities and advise the President, the ONSA can provide strategic leadership by developing a National Security Strategic Communication Framework, promoting a National Information Integrity Strategy, strengthening partnerships with state governments and civil society, and improving coordination among security institutions.

A monthly publication by the ONSA could become an important component of this effort. Properly conceived, it would not serve as a publicity bulletin but as a strategic communication platform that explains government policies, promotes national resilience, highlights inter-agency collaboration, counters misinformation with verified information, and fosters informed public discourse on national security issues. Such a publication would help bridge the information gap that often allows rumours, speculation, and hostile narratives to flourish.

The future of national security will depend not only on the strength of our armed forces or the sophistication of our intelligence services but also on the resilience of our society and the integrity of our information ecosystem. In an age where a misleading post can spread across the country within minutes, safeguarding the information space is no longer optional. It is a strategic necessity.

If we are to build a safer, more resilient Nigeria, we must recognise a simple but powerful truth: national security begins not only at our borders but also in the minds of our citizens and in the information they receive, trust, and share.

 

Wole Oni is a public affairs analyst and a development communication specialist.  He writes from Abuja.

 

ShareTweetSend
Previous Post

IGP Disu Salutes Fallen Police Hero, Commends Team Behind Oyo Schoolchildren Rescue

Next Post

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

newspegonline24

newspegonline24

Related Posts

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years
Uncategorized

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

July 17, 2026
IGP Disu Salutes Fallen Police Hero, Commends Team Behind Oyo Schoolchildren Rescue
Uncategorized

IGP Disu Salutes Fallen Police Hero, Commends Team Behind Oyo Schoolchildren Rescue

July 17, 2026
Troops Recover Cache of Arms as Three Kidnap Victims Regain Freedom in Benue
Uncategorized

Troops Recover Cache of Arms as Three Kidnap Victims Regain Freedom in Benue

July 17, 2026
Next Post
Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Editor's Choice

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

July 17, 2026

National Security Begins in the Information Space

July 17, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
NDLEA Raids Lagos Night Club, Arrests Pretty Mike, Uncovers Cocaine Syndicate and Female Loud Distributor in Citywide Crackdown

NDLEA Raids Lagos Night Club, Arrests Pretty Mike, Uncovers Cocaine Syndicate and Female Loud Distributor in Citywide Crackdown

October 26, 2025
Imo Monarch Raises Alarm as 22-Year-Old Abandoned Road Threatens to Cut Off Okwuohia Community

Imo Monarch Raises Alarm as 22-Year-Old Abandoned Road Threatens to Cut Off Okwuohia Community

August 26, 2025
NIMC Trains Corps Members for Nationwide NIN Ward Enrollment Initiative

NIMC Trains Corps Members for Nationwide NIN Ward Enrollment Initiative

June 24, 2025
FG Rescues 11 Nigerian Miners Stranded in Central African Republic, Brings Them Home Safely

FG Rescues 11 Nigerian Miners Stranded in Central African Republic, Brings Them Home Safely

August 15, 2025

MEDIA FOUNDATION SEEKS UPGRADED DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE IN NIGERIA

4
Maiduguri Beyond the Smoke: Secured By Sacrifice, Reclaimed by Hope

Maiduguri Beyond the Smoke: Secured By Sacrifice, Reclaimed by Hope

3

Easter/Eid-el-Fitr: FRSC Records Massive Reduction in Road Crashes.

2
GSAI TRAINS JOURNALISTS TO INTENSIFY ENGAGEMENTS REVOLVING AROUND INVOLVEMENT OF WOMEN IN POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE

GSAI TRAINS JOURNALISTS TO INTENSIFY ENGAGEMENTS REVOLVING AROUND INVOLVEMENT OF WOMEN IN POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE

2
Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

Navy Sustains Pressure on Oil Thieves as Nigeria Records Highest Crude Output in Six Years

July 17, 2026

National Security Begins in the Information Space

July 17, 2026
IGP Disu Salutes Fallen Police Hero, Commends Team Behind Oyo Schoolchildren Rescue

IGP Disu Salutes Fallen Police Hero, Commends Team Behind Oyo Schoolchildren Rescue

July 17, 2026
Troops Recover Cache of Arms as Three Kidnap Victims Regain Freedom in Benue

Troops Recover Cache of Arms as Three Kidnap Victims Regain Freedom in Benue

July 17, 2026
NewsPeg Magazine

Newspeg is a General interest Magazine conceived by Nigerian Media practitioners of like minds across ethnic and geo-political divides of the country, for the purpose of creating uniqueness in Magazine reporting in Nigeria and repositioning the country for the needed growth.

Follow Us

  • About us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2026 Newspeg magazine - powered by Xtended.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • World
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Editorial
  • Columns
  • More

© 2026 Newspeg magazine - powered by Xtended.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In