Africa
Donald Trump’s Threat of Military Action in Nigeria: A Dangerous Rhetoric, Not a Solution -By Turaki Abdulhamid Yahya
Trump’s rhetoric exposes a deeper misunderstanding of Nigeria’s sovereignty. Nigeria is an independent nation, capable of solving its internal problems without external military intrusion. What the country needs is not bombs or foreign troops, but credible, just, and visionary leadership; leadership that protects all citizens equally, regardless of faith or ethnicity, and rebuilds institutions that have long been weakened by corruption and neglect.
Donald Trump’s statement is not about saving Nigerians; it’s about political optics and Western dominance. He does not care about Nigerian Christians, Muslims, or anyone else. His concern is not peace, but power.
The recent statement credited to U.S. President Donald J. Trump (@POTUS), suggesting possible military intervention in Nigeria to “protect Christians from genocide,” has once again raised troubling questions about America’s foreign policy motives and its selective humanitarian concern.
While the idea may sound noble on the surface, history tells us that U.S. military interventions rarely bring peace; they bring chaos. From Afghanistan to Iraq, Libya, and Syria, every supposed rescue mission has left nations shattered, divided, and struggling to recover. Nigeria must not become the next casualty of America’s misguided sense of global guardianship.
Nigeria is indeed facing difficult times; with persistent insecurity, widespread poverty, high unemployment, decaying infrastructure, and a growing digital divide. These realities have created deep frustrations across the country. Communities, especially in the northern regions, have endured unimaginable suffering, from the terror of Boko Haram and the violence of armed banditry to the kidnappings that have haunted countless families.
But it would be naive to frame Nigeria’s tragedies as a religious genocide. Both Muslims and Christians have been victims of this national tragedy. To reduce the complex Nigerian crisis to a “war on Christians” is to misread the nation’s realities and to invite a foreign solution that could inflame, not heal.
The United States has consistently portrayed itself as a global defender of democracy and religious freedom, yet its interventions have often left countries more broken than they were. If America could not bring lasting peace to Afghanistan, Iraq, or Libya, how can it claim to rescue Nigeria?
Moreover, Trump’s rhetoric exposes a deeper misunderstanding of Nigeria’s sovereignty. Nigeria is an independent nation, capable of solving its internal problems without external military intrusion. What the country needs is not bombs or foreign troops, but credible, just, and visionary leadership; leadership that protects all citizens equally, regardless of faith or ethnicity, and rebuilds institutions that have long been weakened by corruption and neglect.
From the lens of the Dependency/Structuralist Paradigm, Nigeria’s challenges reflect not only internal governance failures but also a historical pattern of external control and influence. For decades, Western powers have sustained economic and political structures that keep developing nations dependent. Military intervention, therefore, would only reinforce that dependency, a modern form of control disguised as compassion.
Therefore!
Nigeria must reject this narrative. Our salvation will not come from Washington or any other foreign capital. It will come from within; through accountable governance, civic responsibility, and national unity.
Nigeria’s true victory will not be in inviting outsiders to fight our battles, but in reclaiming our dignity, rebuilding our society, and redefining our destiny on our own terms.
Turaki Abulhamid Yahya,
Writes From the Department of Mass Communication, Federal University Kashere, Gombe State.