After the US warned
that more strikes may follow its surprise Christmas Day attack on suspected
terrorist targets in Nigeria, officials in the
West African nation suggested they’d be open to continued intervention.
“I believe this is an
ongoing thing and we’re working with the US,” Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf
Tuggar told Channels Television Friday. “It’s a new phase of an old conflict.”
Nigeria is coordinating the effort with the US and
more American attacks are expected, according to senior Nigerian officials who
asked not to be identified to discuss matters that aren’t public.
The US hasn’t said anything publicly about possible
further strikes, but Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth included the words, “more to come” in
his tweet announcing the attack on Christmas Day. President Donald Trump, spending the
holidays at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, reposted his announcement of the
strike Friday without further comment...While Trump ran on a platform of
pulling the US back from conflicts around the world, he’s spent much of his
first year in office on foreign policy...He’s
used force far from US borders repeatedly, from attacks against alleged
terrorists in Somalia, Yemen and Syria to a massive
strike on Iran’s nuclear installations. The president has mounted a
widening campaign against Venezuela’s government, involving seizing
oil tankers and striking
boats that are allegedly ferrying drugs.
The strikes in Nigeria drew praise from some of
Trump’s allies, including far-right provocateur Laura Loomer, who has
criticized the US military’s actions in the Caribbean...The president has
called out Nigeria in recent months for what he and his supporters claimed were
attacks targeting Christians.
“Simplistic
labels don’t solve complex threats,” Tuggar wrote on X Friday.
“Terrorism in Nigeria is not a religious conflict; it is a regional security
threat.”
He said the US strikes
were based on intelligence from the government in Abuja and followed a
conversation with Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Rubio spoke with Nigeria’s
foreign minister multiple times Thursday before the attacks, according to a US
official familiar with the matter.
The US released no details on the strikes
themselves — beyond a video of a missile being launched from a
warship in a social media post from the Pentagon — or what damage they had
done.
Trump told Politico in
an interview published Friday that the attack “decimated” terrorist camps. He
also said he’d delayed the strike by a day to land on Thursday, calling it a
“Christmas present.”
. The Defense Ministry said the targets were linked
to Islamic State.
Nigeria’s information minister, Mohammed
Idris, said on X that the strikes were launched from vessels in
the Gulf of Guinea and used MQ-9 Reaper drones. They fired 16
GPS-guided munitions that neutralized Islamic State elements seeking to enter
the country from the Sahel corridor, he said.
“Given what we know for now about the attacks, they
are largely a signal for something larger,” said Confidence MacHarry, a security
analyst at SB Morgen Intelligence in Lagos. “It is very likely that future
attacks will do more damage.”...In
November, Trump threatened military action if attacks continued. Shortly
afterward, terrorists abducted more than 200 children from a Catholic school.
They were released earlier this week, according to the government.