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Trump’s Threat: Urging Tinubu To Stay The Course As History Favors The Resolute -By Isaac Asabor

History has never remembered those who surrendered to pressure; it celebrates those who stood firm when others faltered. Stay the course, Mr. President. When the dust settles, it will not be the noise of critics that defines Nigeria’s future, but the enduring strength, courage, and vision of those who never stopped fighting for it.

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The recent remarks credited to U.S. President Donald Trump, threatening Nigeria under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration, have stirred waves of apprehension among some Nigerians. Coming at a time when Tinubu is grappling with the twin challenges of insecurity and economic instability, such comments may appear like yet another attempt to rattle his leadership and question his resolve. Yet, for a leader who has braved tougher storms in politics and governance, Trump’s threat should not be a distraction, it should be a motivation.

President Tinubu must not rest on his oars. The fight against insecurity is not a battle to be waged halfway; it is a test of will, focus, and endurance. Nigeria’s path to peace and progress has always been riddled with obstacles, from insurgency in the North, banditry in the Middle Belt, to kidnapping and organized crime across the South. These are not problems that yield easily to rhetoric; they demand persistence, reform, and courage. And history is replete with leaders who, despite mockery, opposition, and external threats, held their ground and eventually turned the tide.

Take Abraham Lincoln, for instance. Before he became America’s most revered president, Lincoln was seen as a man of constant failures, a string of lost elections and business setbacks made many doubt his mettle. But when the U.S. was at the brink of disintegration, he stood firm, guided by conviction rather than convenience. His leadership through the Civil War preserved the Union and ended slavery. Lincoln’s story proves that greatness often emerges from moments of national despair, precisely the kind of moment Nigeria faces today.

Harry S. Truman, another unlikely leader, took the helm after the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt. He was ridiculed as an unprepared “machine politician,” and his decisions were heavily criticized, even despised, by many Americans. Yet, years later, history vindicated him. His decisive actions on the Marshall Plan, NATO formation, and post-war recovery proved that quiet determination often outlasts popular doubt. President Tinubu can draw a lesson here: enduring leadership is not about immediate applause but about laying foundations that future generations will appreciate.

 

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The same resilience defined Winston Churchill. Once dismissed as a political has-been, mocked for his warnings about Hitler, Churchill rose at the darkest hour of Britain’s history to lead his nation through World War II. His grit, eloquence, and refusal to be intimidated by adversity transformed him from an outcast to one of the most celebrated figures in modern history. Tinubu, too, stands at a similar crossroads, his critics are loud, his challenges are immense, but history reminds us that decisive and unwavering leadership can redeem even the bleakest moment.

Even in modern times, leaders like Angela Merkel have proven that steady hands can calm turbulent waters. Despite criticism over her handling of the Eurozone crisis and the refugee influx, Merkel anchored Germany with stability and pragmatism. She endured years of political strain without losing her focus on what mattered most: protecting her country’s interests and maintaining moral leadership in Europe. Tinubu can learn from Merkel’s consistency, amid political noise and external pressure, what matters is keeping Nigeria on the path of security, unity, and economic revival.

What Nigeria needs now is not a president swayed by taunts or foreign threats, but a commander-in-chief who refuses to blink in the face of adversity. Trump’s rhetoric, no matter how sensational, is secondary. What truly defines Tinubu’s legacy will be how he tackles insecurity, how he rebuilds public confidence in the armed forces, fortifies intelligence networks, supports communities ravaged by violence, and dismantles the shadow economy that sustains terror and crime.

Every administration in history has had its moment of reckoning. This is Tinubu’s. And if he holds firm, if he refuses to yield to intimidation, either from within or abroad, he will not only overcome his critics but also inscribe his name among those who turned the tide when their nations were at risk.

The noise will fade. The mockery will pass. But the results, peace in our cities, safety on our highways, confidence in our country, will speak louder than any foreign threat or domestic cynicism ever could.

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Mr. President, Nigeria’s destiny demands endurance and unflinching resolve. You have weathered storms of doubt before, and this present season of criticism will not be different. Leadership, after all, is not tested in moments of comfort but in the heat of challenge. Every great nation has passed through its own valley of skepticism before emerging stronger and more united.

You have fought your way through skepticism, resistance, and underestimation, proving that determination can outlast even the harshest opposition. This moment, too, will pass, as all storms eventually do.

History has never remembered those who surrendered to pressure; it celebrates those who stood firm when others faltered. Stay the course, Mr. President. When the dust settles, it will not be the noise of critics that defines Nigeria’s future, but the enduring strength, courage, and vision of those who never stopped fighting for it.

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