Rebuilding Liberia’s Defense: Reviving the 1986 Framework to Strengthen Civilian Oversight, Professionalize the AFL, and Drive National Development

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April 27, 2026

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Rebuilding Liberia’s Defense: Reviving the 1986 Framework to Strengthen Civilian Oversight, Professionalize the AFL, and Drive National Development

Liberia has long maintained close historical and doctrinal ties with the United States military, and a coherent reform of its national defense architecture would benefit from revisiting the framework established under the 1986 National Defense Law.

By Ekena Wesley Darby, contributing writer

That law clearly organized the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) into an Army, Air Force, and Navy under the authority of the Ministry of National Defense (Liberia), a structure that would provide the House of Representatives of Liberia and the Liberian Senate with clearer institutional visibility into defense headquarters operations, thereby strengthening transparency in budgeting, funding allocation, and expenditure oversight. At the ministerial level, firm civilian control should remain central while enhancing coordination with military leadership, particularly through an empowered engineering battalion capable of executing civil–military projects such as national road construction, estate housing initiatives in areas like Cabra and SKD Boulevard, and broader infrastructure development across rural regions.

Recruitment into the AFL should be standardized, merit-based, and restricted to verified Liberian citizens with at least a high school diploma or associate degree, while also integrating skilled professionals in health, engineering, law, and the liberal arts to build a balanced and capable force. Expanding personnel strength to approximately 8,000 would require a structured training pipeline progressing from Basic Training to Advanced Individual Training (AIT), followed by Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO) development, Officer Candidate School (OCS), and advanced officer education aligned with Military Occupational Specialties (MOS).

Simultaneously, the government should prioritize the construction of modern barracks situated outside densely populated civilian areas to enhance operational security and professionalism, while introducing a nationwide ROTC program under the Ministry of Education (Liberia) to cultivate discipline, leadership, and a sustainable pipeline of future officers.

Ekena Wesley
Darby
Delaware County, PA
+16107650305
Email: [email protected]

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