
United States Navy Seal, Marines have expressed readiness to go after Boko Haram, ISWAP, Militants and bandits in Nigeria.
US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, said President Donald Trump has had enough, “I have had enough, and America has had enough, all military and financial aid to Nigeria is suspended effective immediately”
The United States of America has drawn the battle line to infiltrate the hideouts of the notorious terrorists or bandits or militants terrorizing the lives of the people of Nigeria.
The United States military liberation force is to be led by Navy Seal and the Marines with the intent to infiltrate as undercovers, eliminate, capture alive members of Boko Haram, ISWAP and any other bandits who engage in kidnapping for ransom.
The above plan is based on an intercepted intelligence code and press statement obtained by Naija Standard Correspondent in Washington DC, showed that in a matter of weeks, the heat of the American war force will come down on the hideouts of these terrorists no matter how hard they try.
This latest development was corroborated by Pete Hegseth, Secretary of War recently who in a well-written press statement burrowed into the circumstances and various indices of failures on the leadership of Nigeria to bring the activities of the terrorists to a stop, on several occasions.
He began by slamming the administration of Tinubu for a nonchalant attitude, by saying: “There is no greater failure of leadership than knowing evil exists and choosing to look away. For years, the world has known that Christians in Nigeria are being systematically slaughtered, and the world has done nothing.”
On how he came about the systemic failure and terrorists’ behaviour in Africa’s most populous black nation, he made a reference to his training as a United States soldier who had fought bandits’ wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“I am a soldier. I have fought terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan. I know what Islamic extremism looks like when it targets the innocent. I know the smell of burning villages. I know the silence that follows mass murder. And I know the one truth that separates warriors from bureaucrats, evil only grows when good men fail to act.
“In Nigeria, we are witnessing one of the greatest crimes against humanity in modern history, and it has been deliberately hidden, minimized, and explained away by those who lack the courage to name it.
“Since 2009, 125,000 Christians have been killed for their faith in Nigeria. Let me repeat that, one hundred twenty-five thousand Christians were murdered. In 2025 alone, we are averaging 32 Christian deaths per day. More than 19,000 churches have been destroyed, that’s three churches per day, every day, for sixteen years. Over 1,100 entire Christian communities have been permanently erased from the map.
“This is not a farmer-herder conflict. This is not climate change. This is not a resource competition. This is genocide.”
Revealing the statistics of martyrs killed for only practicing their religion, heaping blames on the government in Nigeria and the mainstream international press for playing down the urgency of the matter, he wrote in the following words: “When militants attack a Catholic church on Pentecost Sunday and slaughter 40 worshippers, that is not a land dispute. When armed jihadists raid Christian villages on Christmas Day, killing 300 people including children, that is not ethnic tension. When terrorists chant “Allahu Akbar” while burning families alive in their homes, that is not complexity, that is evil.
“And yet, if you read The New York Times, CNN, or The Guardian, you will never see the word “Christian.” You will read about “sectarian violence” and “pastoral conflicts” and “climate-driven migration pressures.” When a local Catholic bishop states plainly that “40 of my people were not killed because of global warming, but because they were Christians,” the global media ignores him.
“This deliberate erasure, this refusal to name the victims and identify their murderers, is a form of complicity. The mainstream media has chosen narrative over truth, and in doing so, they have become enablers of genocide.
“The Nigerian government’s complicity is equally clear. On October 14, 2025, a pastor warned the Nigerian Army that Fulani militants were preparing to attack his village. Instead of deploying troops, the army accused the pastor of “spreading misinformation.” Hours later, 13 Christians were murdered, including a six-year-old child. No apology was issued. No arrests were made. No protection was provided.
There will be no negotiations. There will be no warnings. There will be no sanctuary.
“To the Nigerian government: You have enabled this genocide through your inaction, your corruption, and your complicity. All military and financial aid to your government is suspended effectively immediately. If you will not protect your Christian citizens, we will, with or without your permission.
“To the Christians of Nigeria: For sixteen years, you have endured unspeakable suffering while the world looked away. You have buried your children, rebuilt your churches, and maintained your faith in the face of extermination. You are not forgotten. You are not alone. America stands with you, and America’s warriors are coming.
“To the American people: Some will call this intervention. Some will warn of unintended consequences. Some will counsel restraint. These are the same voices that counseled restraint while 125,000 Christians were murdered. These are the same voices that prioritize process over justice, diplomacy over action, and global opinion over American values. I am not interested in their advice.
“I have spent my adult life studying warfare and practicing it. I have led men in combat. I have made life-and-death decisions under fire. I know the difference between necessary force and reckless aggression. What we are preparing to do in Nigeria is not reckless, it is righteous.
“This is America’s calling. Not to be the world’s policeman, but to be the world’s protector of the innocent. Not to engage in endless nation-building, but to eliminate evil wherever it threatens those who cannot defend themselves. Not to apologize for our strength, but to wield it in defense of our deepest values.
“The warrior ethos that drives our military is simple, we protect those who cannot protect themselves, and we destroy those who prey upon the innocent. That ethos built this nation. It defeated the Nazis. It confronted the Soviet tyranny. It hunted down al-Qaeda after 9/11. And it will now be brought to bear against those who believe they can slaughter Christians with impunity.
“The killers should know this… American warriors do not sleep. Our satellites see you. Our drones hunt you. Our operators are trained, ready for you. You cannot hide in your jungles or your deserts or your mountains. When you hear the Reaper overhead, you may fall to your knees and beg for divine intervention. I have news for you… God heard your victims’ prayers first. We are His answer.
“The world is watching to see if America still has the courage of its convictions. They are about to get their answer,” Hegseth concluded.