As U.S. troops arrive in a bold counter-terrorism mission in Nigeria, it's important to know that for more than a decade, Africa's most populous nation has stood on the front lines of a brutal and evolving terror campaign.
From the mass kidnappings of schoolchildren to the destruction of churches, mosques, and farming villages, extremist violence has destabilized vast regions of Nigeria and sent shockwaves across West Africa.
Groups such as Boko Haram and its offshoot, Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), have demonstrated both ideological fanaticism and operational adaptability.
But this is not merely Nigeria's fight.
It's a test of whether sovereign nations, working together, can defeat transnational terror networks that exploit poverty, porous borders, and weak governance.
And increasingly, collaboration between Nigeria and the United States offers a model for how such partnerships can succeed — if pursued with seriousness, accountability, and strategic clarity.
Nigeria’s security challenges are multifaceted.
In the northeast, remnants of Boko Haram and ISWAP continue asymmetric attacks despite sustained military pressure.
In the northwest, armed banditry and kidnapping-for-ransom have metastasized into quasi-insurgent movements; cottage industries all their own.
And in the Middle Belt, farmer-herder violence intersects with extremist infiltration.
The result is ultimately a complex security landscape that requires more than brute force.
The United States has long recognized Nigeria as a strategic anchor in West Africa.
With over 200 million citizens and the continent's largest economy, Nigeria’s stability is vital to regional trade, energy production, and democratic governance.
American security assistance — ranging from intelligence-sharing and counter-IED training to logistical support and equipment sales — has gradually expanded in scope.
Under both Republican and Democratic administrations, Washington has designated Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and maintained security cooperation programs with Abuja.
These initiatives have included military training through U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM), support for intelligence fusion centers, and efforts to improve Nigeria's air capabilities, including the acquisition of A-29 Super Tucano aircraft.
But hardware alone does not defeat insurgency.
The most promising dimension of Nigerian-American collaboration lies in professionalization and institutional reform. Effective counterterrorism depends on disciplined forces that respect civilian populations.
It requires transparent procurement systems that ensure security funds reach frontline units. It demands judicial mechanisms capable of prosecuting captured militants while safeguarding due process.
American assistance, when properly structured, reinforces these objectives. And we're seeing it in action today.
Training programs emphasize human rights compliance, community engagement, and rule-of-law frameworks — essential components for undercutting extremist recruitment narratives.
Joint exercises build interoperability and strengthen command-and-control capacity. Intelligence cooperation enhances Nigeria's ability to track financing networks and disrupt cross-border arms flows.
Equally important is addressing the economic and environmental conditions that extremists exploit. Northern Nigeria faces chronic poverty, youth unemployment, and land-use conflicts aggravated by desertification.
While climate alarmism often oversimplifies these dynamics, local resource competition is undeniably a catalyst for instability.
Targeted development initiatives — agricultural modernization, small business financing, infrastructure repair — complement security operations by shrinking the pool of vulnerable recruits.
The United States can support these efforts through carefully monitored development partnerships and private-sector investment.
American companies bring expertise in energy infrastructure, digital connectivity, and agricultural technology.
When paired with anti-corruption safeguards and local accountability, such investments strengthen the social fabric extremists seek to tear apart.
Diplomatically, consistent high-level engagement matters.
Nigeria's leaders must know that Washington views their success against terror not as a peripheral concern, but as a shared strategic imperative.
At the same time, American policymakers must insist on measurable outcomes.
Security assistance should be performance-based, with clear benchmarks for territorial control, civilian protection, and prosecution of terror financiers.
Critics sometimes question whether Nigeria's internal divisions — ethnic, religious, and political — undermine long-term counterterrorism prospects.
Yet Nigeria has repeatedly demonstrated resilience.
Peaceful transfers of power, an active civil society, and a vibrant media landscape offer foundations for national renewal.
International partnership should reinforce these strengths, not supplant them.
The stakes are high.
If Nigeria falters, extremist networks could expand deeper into coastal West Africa, threatening global shipping lanes in the Gulf of Guinea and destabilizing key U.S. partners.
But if Nigeria succeeds, it will send a powerful signal that democratic nations can defeat jihadist insurgencies without sacrificing their sovereignty or liberty.
For American policymakers, the lesson is clear: strategic patience, principled partnership, and accountability must guide engagement.
For Nigeria's leaders, sustained reform and unity of purpose are indispensable.
Terror thrives in vacuums of governance and hope.
Nigerian-American collaboration, grounded in mutual interest and shared responsibility, offers a pathway toward filling those vacuums — and toward securing a more stable future for West Africa and beyond.
(A related article may be found here.)
Duggan Flanakin is a senior policy analyst at the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow who writes on a wide variety of public policy issues. Read more Duggan Flanakin Insider articles — Click Here Now.