In a dramatic and lethal show of force, U.S.-backed airstrikes have unleashed a torrent of precision firepower on two ISIS-linked terror camps in northwestern Nigeria, marking a rare and aggressive joint military operation between Washington and Abuja that signals a major escalation in the region’s shadow war.
The Nigerian government confirmed the strikes, executed on Thursday, targeted foreign Islamic State fighters infiltrating from the volatile Sahel region. The camps, hidden within the dense Bauni forest of Sokoto State, were obliterated by a barrage of 16 GPS-guided munitions fired from MQ-9 Reaper drones operating from maritime platforms in the Gulf of Guinea. The operation, approved by President Bola Tinubu, followed what officials called “extensive intelligence gathering, operational planning, and reconnaissance.”

“Numerous Perfect Strikes”: A President’s Declaration of War
U.S. President Donald Trump announced the action on his Truth Social platform, framing it as a decisive blow against militants “targeting Christians in the region.” In a statement that promised further action, Trump declared the mission “numerous perfect strikes” and warned ominously, “there will be more to come.”
According to Nigerian intelligence, the targeted camps were being used by foreign ISIS elements collaborating with local affiliates to orchestrate large-scale attacks inside Nigeria’s borders. The government statement emphasized that no civilian casualties were reported, though debris from the aerial assault rained down on towns in both Sokoto and Kwara states, a visceral reminder of the firepower unleashed from the skies.
Why It Matters
This coordinated blitz represents a significant pivot in counter-terrorism strategy. It marks a rare publicized joint kinetic action between Nigeria and the United States, underscoring Washington’s deepening security involvement as Islamist violence metastasizes southward from the Sahel into more stable West African nations.
The operation exposes a terrifying new reality for Nigerian security forces: the battle is no longer solely against homegrown jihadists. The confirmed presence and targeting of foreign ISIS fighters signals a dangerous expansion of the conflict, transforming a domestic insurgency into a front in a global terrorist network’s regional ambitions.
Sokoto State authorities moved quickly to confirm the strikes and urge public calm, stating the operations were “geared towards securing the state and ensuring the protection of lives and property.” The Nigerian government vowed further action, declaring its full commitment to dismantling transnational extremist networks.
















