In what security sources have described as the most serious coup attempt in Nigeria’s recent history, operatives of the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) under former Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa, successfully uncovered and thwarted a violent plot to topple the federal government and eliminate key national figures.
According to exclusive information obtained by PRNigeria, the conspiracy—detected several weeks ago by the DHQ’s internal intelligence network led by Chief of Defence Intelligence, Major General Emmanuel Undiandeye—was designed to simultaneously assassinate senior political and military leaders, including top officials in the Presidency, principal officers of the National Assembly, key security chiefs, and the National Security Adviser.
A top security source revealed that the operation, if successful, would have plunged Nigeria into chaos. “The coup would have been bloody beyond imagination,” the source said. “This was not a spontaneous move—it was a well-structured plan for mass elimination and the total paralysis of the nation’s leadership.”
The discovery follows the arrest of 16 military officers for alleged breaches of service regulations. Although both the Federal Government and the DHQ had earlier dismissed reports of a coup attempt as false, fresh intelligence indicates that a sophisticated plot was indeed uncovered and neutralized before it could be executed.
Investigations show that the plan was detected solely through the DHQ’s counterintelligence operations without the involvement of other security agencies. The suspects had allegedly procured tactical vehicles, disguise equipment, and gained access to strategic government zones in preparation for the coordinated strike.
Sources disclosed that forensic teams are now tracing financial transactions linked to the suspects. Billions of naira have reportedly been tracked to bank accounts connected to political sponsors believed to have financed the planned coup.
Contrary to speculation, none of the arrested officers have been tied to the Office of the National Security Adviser. Security insiders described most of the conspirators as disgruntled officers—those who had either failed promotion examinations or been stuck in stagnant postings for years.
“That frustration was weaponised,” one source said. “They were deceived into believing they were acting in the national interest, but in reality, they were being used for a dangerous political agenda.”
Analysts say the unusual mix of the conspirators—drawn from different ethnic and religious backgrounds—was remarkable, showing that the plotters were united only by their desperation for power. “It was a reckless alliance that defied Nigeria’s traditional fault lines,” one analyst observed.
In its response, the Defence Headquarters reaffirmed the military’s loyalty to democratic governance, assuring that the Armed Forces remain steadfast in defending the Constitution and the President.
Security experts have commended the DHQ for discreetly handling the crisis and preventing what could have been a catastrophic breakdown of order. However, they cautioned that the underlying grievances that inspired the coup attempt must be addressed to safeguard the stability of Nigeria’s democracy.
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