BREAKING: U.S. Department of Defense Begins Military Mapping Operation in Nigeria
As Donald Trump orders the Pentagon to prepare for possible military action in Nigeria, U.S. defense officials warn that intervention could spark regional instability and fail to end the long-running insurgency fueled by Boko Haram and ISWAP.
Amid escalating violence in northern Nigeria, the U.S. Department of Defense has begun drawing up contingency plans following an order from President Donald Trump to “prepare for possible action” against Islamist militants accused of attacking Christians.
The directive, announced via the former president’s social media accounts over the weekend, calls for a potential military intervention to “protect cherished Christians” in Nigeria — a move that has rattled global observers and triggered cautious responses from defense officials.
According to reports, officers from U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) have developed three operational plans — light, medium, and heavy — each escalating in scope and intensity. The plans, now under review by the Pentagon Joint Staff, outline options ranging from advisory support for the Nigerian military to full-scale strikes on militant targets.
Defense insiders told reporters that any such intervention would be “symbolic at best,” warning that an Iraq- or Afghanistan-style mission would be required to meaningfully counter the insurgency. “It would be a fiasco,” said retired Maj. Gen. Paul D. Eaton, an Iraq War veteran. “Airstrikes alone might shock and awe but won’t solve decades of sectarian violence.”
Officials familiar with the discussions said the light option would see U.S. intelligence and surveillance support for Nigerian forces combating Boko Haram and ISWAP, both of which have targeted Muslims and Christians in the country’s northeast.
The medium option proposes limited drone strikes using MQ-9 Reaper and MQ-1 Predator aircraft. However, this has been complicated by the loss of two U.S. drone bases — Agadez and Niamey — both now occupied by Russian forces in neighboring Niger.
The heavy option includes deploying a U.S. aircraft carrier to the Gulf of Guinea, alongside long-range bombers, to launch deep strikes in Nigeria’s north. But Pentagon sources say this is “not a national security priority” given current U.S. deployments in the Middle East, Pacific, and South America.
Military analysts warned that the complexity of Nigeria’s crisis — rooted in land disputes, ethnic tensions, and political corruption — means external force alone cannot bring peace. “This isn’t purely a religious war,” a senior official said. “Farmers and herders have clashed for decades, and insurgents have exploited that chaos.”
The Nigerian government has welcomed potential U.S. assistance but cautioned that any action must respect national sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Meanwhile, U.S. officials privately admit they are uneasy about the order’s political undertones. Trump’s message — echoing his earlier decision to label Nigeria a “Country of Particular Concern” — has been viewed as part of a wider attempt to reassert U.S. influence in Africa amid growing Russian and Chinese engagement.
The U.S. Africa Command, headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany, has forwarded its operational options to Washington for final assessment. Sources confirmed that Gen. Dagvin R. M. Anderson, AFRICOM’s new commander, is scheduled to visit Nigeria next month for consultations with top military officials.
However, as tensions mount, both U.S. and Nigerian authorities face growing pressure to de-escalate and pursue diplomatic solutions before a fragile region becomes the stage for yet another prolonged conflict.