The Ghanaian Army
How a Colonial Formation Ruined a Nation’s Future
“Should the Ghanaian economy continue to deteriorate, it may become necessary to encourage moderate elements within the armed forces to take action to restore stability.”
The Ghanaian army did not ruin Ghana’s trajectory single‑handedly. But it was the instrument that made ruin possible. Its formation—colonial, foreign‑trained, ideologically empty, and unaccountable—produced a culture of men who saw the state as their inheritance. The list of successful coups is well known. The list of attempted ones is longer. Together they form a portrait of an institution that has treated the constitution as an obstacle and the people’s sovereignty as a prize to be seized.
Ⅰ. The Colonial Formation
The Gold Coast Regiment was never intended to defend a free nation. It was a colonial enforcement body—raised to suppress local resistance, protect European trade, and enforce imperial order. After independence, the regiment became the Ghana Armed Forces. But the training did not change. British officers stayed. The curriculum remained Sandhurst’s: loyalty to the Crown, discipline as unquestioning obedience, and a deep suspicion of civilian politicians. The officers who marched into Flagstaff House in 1966 had been taught that their loyalty was to a concept of “order” that was defined, ultimately, by their foreign instructors. They were not acting against their training. They were acting on it.
Ⅱ. The Cowboy Culture
Between 1966 and 2019, Ghana experienced at least twelve successful or attempted coups. Some were carried out by sergeants and junior officers; others were orchestrated by generals. The failed attempts—1967, 1975, 1982, 1983, 1989, 2019—are as damning as the successful ones. They prove that the desire to rule by force is not an aberration; it is the culture. Officers who failed were not deterred; they were replaced by others who tried again. The constitution was never the barrier—the army was.
This is the “cowboy” culture you have named. Cowboys operate outside formal law. They claim authority through force and treat the land as their own. In Ghana, the military cowboy does the same: he sees himself as above the constitution, as the ultimate arbiter of order, and as entitled to the resources of the state. The cowboy does not serve the nation. He serves himself.
Ⅲ. The Economic Looting
The military does not only seize political power. It seizes economic space. “GAF lands”—vast tracts of prime real estate in Accra, Tema, and other cities—are controlled by the military and rented out, with proceeds disappearing into opaque accounts. Officers run businesses under the protection of their uniforms. Defence budgets are among the largest in West Africa, yet they are never audited. A military that has looted the state does not suddenly respect the constitution. It defends its economic interests first.
The cost to Ghana’s development is staggering. Under military rule from 1972 to 1983, GDP per capita fell by more than a quarter. The same period saw the collapse of industries, the flight of skilled professionals, and the entrenchment of corruption. The “cowboy” who seizes power does not create wealth; he extracts it.
Ⅳ. The Training That Never Asked the Right Question
What do Ghanaian officers learn at Sandhurst, the US War College, or the National Defence College in Accra? They learn tactics, strategy, logistics, and command. They are taught to obey orders and to respect the chain of command. What they are not taught is the question that TSA would require: What does a sovereign military look like?
They are not taught the history of the Gold Coast Regiment’s role in suppressing the 1948 Ex‑Servicemen’s Union march—when Ghanaian veterans of World War II marched for their pensions and were shot by the same army they had served. They are not taught that the military’s purpose is not to guard the state but to protect the nation’s sovereignty from external threats and internal usurpers. They are not taught that their loyalty must be to the constitution, not to the commander, and that the ultimate check on their power is civilian oversight. The curriculum is the same one that produced the men of 1966. It has not been reformed. It is still producing cowboys.
Ⅴ. The 1948 Counter‑Example
The Ex‑Servicemen’s Union march of 28 February 1948 is the great counter‑example that Ghanaian military academies do not teach. Three veterans—Sergeant Adjetey, Corporal Attipoe, and Private Odartey Lamptey—were shot by British‑led colonial forces while marching peacefully to present a petition to the governor. Their deaths ignited the 1948 riots that catalysed the independence movement. The veterans were not demanding power. They were demanding what they were owed. They embodied a vision of service that the colonial army had trained them to betray.
What would Ghana look like if its military had been formed around that vision—of service to the nation, not to a foreign power’s conception of order? What if every officer learned the names of those three veterans and was asked: What does it mean to serve the people? That question has never been asked in the Ghana Armed Forces. It is the question TSA poses.
⚖️ The Verdict
The crime is not the soldiers who carried out coups. The crime is the formation that produced them—an education that taught them to be loyal to a foreign power’s conception of order rather than to their own country’s constitution. The Ghanaian army is a victim of that formation, and its victims are the generations of Ghanaians who lost the future they were promised in 1957.
The list of coups and attempted coups is evidence of a culture, not a series of accidents. The economic looting is evidence of an institution that has never been held accountable. The absence of TSA in military training is the original sin—the failure to ask the one question that might have prevented it all: Whom does this institution serve?
The jury question: If every Ghanaian officer had been taught the story of the 1948 Ex‑Servicemen’s Union, and had been required to answer the question “What does it mean to serve the people?”, would 24 February 1966 have happened? And if not, what else might Ghana have built? The comment section is open. Your testimony is evidence.
⚒️ FORGING THE KEYS — THE SOVEREIGN RESPONSE
The student who reads this prosecution—and the officer who reads it—can now ask:
- “What was the Gold Coast Regiment trained to do, and how does that legacy survive in my institution?”
- “Whose interests does my oath serve? The president’s? The constitution’s? The people’s?”
- “What would a military academy look like if it were designed by Ghanaians, for Ghanaian sovereignty?”
The TSA Starter Kit provides the framework for deconstructing institutions—ten questions every African should ask any institution that claims to serve them. Download it free.
The Awakening Intelligence archive contains prosecutions of colonial legacies in education, governance, and security. Read the archive.
And the Sovereignty Briefs—especially The Stolen Architectures and Sankocracy—detail the institutional rebuilding that must follow the deconstruction. Browse the shop.
The machinery of military impunity was built over decades. The machinery of sovereign accountability begins with one question asked in every military academy: “Whom do you serve?”
Reader’s evidence: If you are a veteran, a serving officer, a family member of a coup victim, or a Ghanaian who has witnessed the military’s economic influence, your testimony is evidence. Add it in the comments.
Contested claim: “The military saved Ghana from corrupt civilians.” The prosecution does not deny that some civilian governments were corrupt. It asks: did military rule produce less corruption? Did it restore sovereignty? The data and the record answer those questions. The comment section is open for debate.
We don’t just analyze the chains. We forge the keys.