Skip to main content

While headlines celebrate successful strikes, ordinary citizens still endure insecurity daily: Nigerians Question the Impact of U.S.-Nigeria Military Collaboration.

 

While headlines celebrate successful strikes, ordinary citizens still endure insecurity daily: Nigerians Question the Impact of U.S.-Nigeria Military Collaboration.

By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo


Nigeria’s conflict-ridden regions, the sound of gunfire and the sight of burning villages remain a grim reality, even as government officials present international military cooperation as a turning point in the fight against insecurity. Joint operations between the Nigerian Armed Forces and the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) have been announced with significant attention, with promises to weaken extremist groups and restore stability. Yet for many citizens, the daily experience of insecurity tells a different story. Despite airstrikes and intelligence-sharing, insurgents and bandits continue to expand their reach, leaving communities questioning whether this collaboration has made any tangible difference in their lives.


Despite high-profile joint operations between the Nigerian Armed Forces and AFRICOM, many Nigerians argue that the partnership has not translated into meaningful security improvements on the ground.


Recent strikes in northeastern Nigeria reportedly killed 175 militants and eliminated senior ISIS commanders, including Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, described as Daesh’s global number two. These operations demonstrate the combined military and intelligence capabilities of both nations. However, analysts and citizens alike maintain that such tactical victories have not significantly reduced the broader wave of violence affecting communities across the country.


Boko Haram and ISWAP remain deeply entrenched in the northeast, particularly in Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa states. In the northwest and north-central regions, bandit networks continue to dominate, with Sokoto, Kaduna, and Niger states experiencing repeated attacks. Plateau State has also become a major flashpoint for inter-communal clashes, farmer-herder conflicts, and suspected land-grabbing activities, resulting in mass killings, displacement, and humanitarian concerns.


Security experts caution that while joint strikes may weaken militant capabilities, they do not dismantle the socio-economic foundations sustaining insurgency. Terrorist groups remain embedded within local economies, relying on extortion, illicit trade, and community-level recruitment. Destroying camps may disrupt immediate operations, but it does not eliminate the networks that continue to fuel violence.


For many Nigerians, the collaboration feels distant from their everyday realities. Villages still experience night raids, homes continue to be destroyed, and thousands of residents remain displaced. The perception among many citizens is that while international headlines celebrate successful strikes and military achievements, ordinary people continue to endure insecurity daily.


Nigeria has consistently emphasized that U.S. forces operate strictly in a non-combat and technical support capacity, reinforcing the country’s commitment to protecting its territorial sovereignty. While politically important, this arrangement means that the burden of frontline combat operations largely falls on Nigerian security forces, which are already stretched across multiple conflict zones nationwide.


The contradiction remains difficult to ignore. Despite increased intelligence-sharing and joint military operations, insurgent and bandit groups continue to intensify their activities in several parts of the country. Many Nigerians are therefore left asking whether international military collaboration is truly shifting the balance in favor of peace and security, or whether deeper political, economic, and social reforms are needed to complement military action and address the root causes of violence.


Daniel Nduka Okonkwo is a Nigerian investigative journalist, publisher of Profiles International Human Rights Advocate, and a policy analyst whose work focuses on governance, institutional accountability, and political power. He is also a human rights activist and advocate, with a strong commitment to justice and transparency.


His reporting and analysis have been featured in Sahara Reporters, African Defence Forum, Daily Intel Newspapers, Opinion Nigeria, African Angle, NewsBreak (local.newsbreak.com), Vanguard Newspaper, Daily Trust Newspapers, and other international media platforms.


He writes from Nigeria and can be reached at dan.okonkwo.73@gmail.com.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A DECADE OF SILENCE: HOW NIGERIA’S POLICE FORCE LEFT APPROXIMATELY 1,850 GRADUATE OFFICERS IN A PROLONGED PROMOTION PROCESS

 A DECADE OF SILENCE: HOW NIGERIA’S POLICE FORCE LEFT APPROXIMATELY 1,850 GRADUATE OFFICERS IN A PROLONGED PROMOTION PROCESS EXCLUSIVE REPORT By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo Tonight, while the nation sleeps, heroes in uniform stand guard, our police officers, the living shield between chaos and safety. Their courage is not a favour but a duty fulfilled with sacrifice. Ensuring that such service is matched with fair and transparent career progression remains essential to institutional integrity and morale. A duly initiated upgrading exercise in 2015 raised the expectations of nearly two thousand educated police officers. Nearly a decade later, according to available accounts and officer testimonies, the process remains unresolved, even as their peers have advanced and reform discussions continue within the sector. In June 2015, the Nigeria Police Force issued an official wireless signal to officers across commands, inviting graduate Inspectors and rank and file personnel who had acquired un...

With Government Backing, Lingering Questions Remain: When Will Brekete Family Smart City Be Ready?

With Government Backing, Lingering Questions Remain: When Will Brekete Family Smart City Be Ready? By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo Real estate development, whether residential, commercial, or mixed-use, is rarely a simple undertaking. It demands structured planning, strict legal compliance, financial discipline, and consistent on-site execution. From land acquisition and project phasing to infrastructure delivery and final habitation, each stage must be carefully coordinated to translate vision into reality. The Brekete Family Smart City Estate, an ambitious private-led housing project initiated by renowned broadcaster and activist Ahmed Isa, was conceived with that same vision: to deliver a modern, inclusive, and smart urban community for ordinary Nigerians. Yet, more than a decade after subscriptions began, the project remains largely undeveloped, raising persistent questions among subscribers: when will it finally be ready? Subscriptions for the Brekete Family Smart City Estate opened betwe...

Over 200 Nigerian politicians, governors, senators, security chiefs, senior civil servants, and other politically connected individuals have stashed at least $7 billion in Dubai properties across at least 1,824 traced assets, making Nigeria the second-largest source of foreign property buyers in Dubai after India

Over 200 Nigerian politicians, governors, senators, security chiefs, senior civil servants, and other politically connected individuals have stashed at least $7 billion in Dubai properties across at least 1,824 traced assets, making Nigeria the second-largest source of foreign property buyers in Dubai after India By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo The $7 billion figure is drawn from three separate documented investigations spanning more than a decade. A 2012 report established that Nigerians had invested up to $6 billion in Dubai real estate over the preceding three years alone. The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, drawing on the C4ADS Sandcastles property dataset, subsequently identified 800 Dubai properties linked to Nigerian politically exposed persons, valued at approximately $400 million as of 2020. By 2024, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project’s landmark Dubai Unlocked investigation, conducted with more than 70 international media partners, had traced that figure ...