Tag: United States

  • U.S. confirms troops on ground in Nigeria amid ISIS counterterror push

    U.S. confirms troops on ground in Nigeria amid ISIS counterterror push

    The United States has sent a small team of troops to Nigeria, the general in charge of the U.S. command for Africa, General Dagvin Anderson, said yesterday.

    It was the first acknowledgment of American forces on the ground since Washington struck by air on Christmas Day.

    President Donald Trump ordered airstrikes on what he described as Islamic State (ISIS) targets in Nigeria in December and said there could be more U.S. military action there.

    Reuters earlier reported that the U.S. had been conducting surveillance flights over the country from Ghana since at least late November.

    The top general said the U.S. team was sent after both countries agreed that more needed to be done to combat the terrorist threat in West Africa.

    “That has led to increased collaboration between our nations to include a small U.S. team that brings some unique capabilities from the United States,” General Anderson, head of the U.S. military’s Africa Command AFRICOM, told journalists during a press briefing yesterday.

    Anderson did not provide further details about the size and scope of their mission.

    Defence Minister Christopher Musa confirmed that a team was working in Nigeria but did not provide further details.

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    A former U.S. official said the U.S. team appeared to be heavily involved in intelligence gathering and enabling Nigerian forces to strike terrorist-affiliated groups.

    Nigeria has come under intense pressure by Washington to act after President Trump accused the West African nation of failing to protect Christians from terrorists operating in the northwest.

    The Nigerian government denies any systematic persecution of Christians, saying it is targeting Islamist fighters and other armed groups that attack both Christian and Muslim civilians.

    Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) fighters have intensified attacks on military convoys and civilians, and the northwest remains the epicentre of the 17-year Islamist insurgency.

    The U.S. military’s Africa Command said the strike was carried out in Sokoto State in coordination with Nigerian authorities and killed multiple ISIS terrorists.

    The strike came after Trump, in late October, began warning that Christianity faces an “existential threat” in Nigeria and threatened to militarily intervene in the West African country over what he says is its failure to stop violence targeting Christian communities.

  • Nigeria’s security partnership with the U.S

    Nigeria’s security partnership with the U.S

    Sir: On January 22, Nigeria and the United States held the inaugural session of the U.S.–Nigeria Joint Working Group in Abuja — a diplomatic and strategic engagement born from mounting international concern over insecurity, religious freedom, and civilian protection in Africa’s most populous nation. Led on the Nigerian side by National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu and on the U.S. side by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Allison Hooker, the meeting underscored the complex interplay between national sovereignty, international scrutiny, and the imperatives of cooperation in confronting what both governments described as endemic threats to human security.

    The working group emerged in the aftermath of the United States’ re-designation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) under the International Religious Freedom Act in October 2025 — a move triggered by allegations of systemic violations of religious freedom, particularly against Christian communities. The designation, and the diplomatic tensions that followed, signalled a shift in U.S. policy toward Nigeria’s chronic insecurity, compelling a bilateral conversation that now seeks to translate contention into coordinated action.

    At face value, the establishment of a joint working group reflects shared interests: both governments publicly profess a commitment to reducing violence, safeguarding religious freedom, and ensuring that all Nigerians can practise their faith without fear. Hooker emphasised the need to deter violence against vulnerable groups, investigate attacks, and hold perpetrators accountable; a statement intended to resonate with universal human rights norms.

    Yet beneath the diplomatic language lie deeper questions about narrative framing, national agency, and the practical realities of security governance. Nigeria has long grappled with multifaceted threats — Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast, banditry and kidnappings in the North-central states, and communal conflicts that defy simple categorisation. In many of these theatres, violence affects Christians and Muslims alike, raising important questions about the extent to which religious identity accurately explains the patterns of insecurity.

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    This contextual complexity means that the bilateral dialogue, while necessary, must be grounded in a nuanced understanding of Nigeria’s security architecture and socio-political dynamics. For instance, recent abductions in Kaduna State, one of the catalysts for the high-level engagement underscore how criminal violence and terrorist opportunism often intersect with governance failures that transcend sectarian boundaries. Any credible partnership must therefore avoid the pitfalls of reductionism and instead address root causes such as poverty, state capacity deficits, and fractures in community trust.

    Moreover, the working group’s emphasis on religious freedom ought not to be detached from the broader rule of law and human security framework. Nigeria’s plural society, as NSA Ribadu rightly emphasised, does not allow for selective protection. Violence framed along religious lines must be treated as an attack on the state itself, a declaration that underlines the government’s constitutional commitment to citizens of all faiths. Yet turning such principles into durable policy action demands more than diplomatic proclamations; it requires tangible reforms in policing, intelligence sharing, judicial accountability, and community engagement.

    The U.S. role in this partnership also raises questions about equilibrium and influence. While increased cooperation including intelligence sharing, technology support, and potentially defence assistance can enhance Nigeria’s capacity to confront violent extremism, it must not overshadow the imperative of preserving Nigerian sovereignty or create perceptions of external imposition. Legitimate security cooperation should empower Nigeria to build its own institutional resilience rather than foster dependency or undermine local ownership of solutions.

    Furthermore, the current environment of heightened scrutiny, both domestically and internationally; highlights the importance of data integrity and transparent reporting on incidents of violence. Civil society organisations, government statisticians, and security agencies must collaboratively generate credible evidence that informs policy decisions and counters the proliferation of exaggerated or de-contextualised narratives that risk inflaming tensions or eroding public trust.

    Ultimately, the Joint Working Group is a diplomatic instrument that can yield strategic dividends only if it is matched by political will, accountability, and operational coherence. Its success should be measured not by the frequency of meetings or the rhetoric of communiqués, but by measurable improvements in civilian protection, verifiable decreases in targeted violence, and strengthened institutional mechanisms that uphold religious freedom and human dignity.

    Nigeria’s security challenges are vast and entrenched, but they are not beyond solution. A partnership with the United States offers resources, expertise, and a platform for joint action. Yet for this cooperation to be transformative, it must embrace holistic strategies that integrate security, development, justice, and human rights, and it must be anchored in the lived realities of everyday Nigerians who yearn for peace, stability, and freedom.

    •Felix Oladeji,

    Lagos.

  • U.S. winter storm leaves 1 million without power

    U.S. winter storm leaves 1 million without power

    • Heavy snow forces 10,000 flight cancellations
    • 24 states issue emergency declarations

    More than 1 million customers in the U.S. as far west as New Mexico were without electricity and over 10,000 flights were cancelled  yesterday during a monster winter storm that paralyzed eastern and southern states with heavy snow and ice.

    As snow, sleet, freezing rain and dangerously frigid temperatures swept into the eastern two-thirds of the nation yesterday, the number of power outages continued to rise. As of 2:16 p.m. EST (1916 GMT) yesterday, more than 1 million U.S. customers were without electricity, according to PowerOutage.us, with at least 330,000 in Tennessee and over 100,000 each in Mississippi and Louisiana. Other states affected included Texas, Kentucky, Georgia, West Virginia and Alabama.

    Roughly 245 million people across 40 states — stretching all the way from New Mexico and Texas to parts of New England and the South — are expected to be affected by what could potentially be a historic storm.

    At least 24 states have issued emergency disaster declarations ahead of the winter storm: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. Washington, D.C., has also declared a state of emergency.

    Impacts from the snow and ice are expected to cause power outages, widespread travel shutdowns and school closures. “In the wake of the storm, communities from the southern Plains to the Northeast will contend with bitterly cold temperatures that will hamper cleanup efforts, prolonging infrastructure impacts and hazardous travel into at least early next week,” the National Weather Service said.

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    More than 10,800 U.S. flights scheduled for yesterday were canceled, according to flight tracking website FlightAware. Over 4,000 flights were canceled on Saturday.

    Washington, D.C.’s Ronald Reagan National Airport said airlines had canceled all flights at the airport yesterday. FlightAware data indicated that more than 80% of yesterday flights were canceled for several airports in large metropolitan regions, including New York, Philadelphia and Charlotte, N.C.

    Delta Air Lines (DAL.N), opens new tab yesterday said that it intended to operate on a reduced schedule “subject to real-time frozen precipitation and afternoon storm conditions.”

    The airline had adjusted its schedule on Saturday, with additional cancellations in the morning for Atlanta and along the East Coast, including in Boston and New York City, and said it would move experts from cold-weather hubs to support de-icing and baggage teams at several southern airports.

    The National Weather Service’s latest forecast for yesterday through Monday morning calls for heavy snow from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast, including up to 18 inches in New England. Much of the Southeast and parts of the Mid-Atlantic are expected to get rain and freezing rain.

    Forecasters predicted “bitterly cold temperatures and dangerously cold wind chills” from the southern plains to the Northeast in the wake of the storm, bringing “prolonged hazardous travel and infrastructure impacts.”

    Calling the storms “historic,” President Donald Trump on Saturday approved federal emergency disaster declarations in South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, Maryland, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Indiana, and West Virginia.

    Seventeen states and the District of Columbia declared weather emergencies on Saturday, the Department of Homeland Security said.

    Power lines could be particularly vulnerable because of the potential for ice, officials said.

    “The situation with this storm is pretty unique, just because it’s going to stay cold for a period of time,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on the “Fox News yesterday Briefing” program. “This ice that has fallen will keep those lines heavy, even if they haven’t gone down immediately.”

    The Department of Energy on Saturday issued an emergency order authorizing the Electric Reliability Council of Texas to deploy backup generation resources at data centers and other major facilities, aiming to limit blackouts in the state.

    Yesterday, the DOE issued an emergency order to authorize grid operator PJM Interconnection to run “specified resources” in the mid-Atlantic region, regardless of limits due to state laws or environmental permits.

    U.S. electric grid operators on Saturday stepped up precautions to avoid rotating blackouts.

    Dominion Energy (D.N), opens new tab, whose Virginia operations include the largest collection of data centers in the world, said if its ice forecast held, the winter event could be among the largest to affect the company.

  • US ‘annihilating’ terrorists in Nigeria, says Trump

    US ‘annihilating’ terrorists in Nigeria, says Trump

    United States President Donald Trump on Thursday claimed that American forces were ‘annihilating’ terrorists in Nigeria whom he accused of killing Christians in large numbers.

    “Many good things are happening,” Trump said. “In Nigeria, we are annihilating terrorists who are killing Christians. We’ve hit them very hard. They’ve killed thousands and thousands of Christians.”

    Trump made the remarks at the Board of Peace signing ceremony held on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, as he spoke on what he described as progress in global peace and security efforts.

    Nigerian authorities, however, have consistently rejected such a framing of the country’s security challenges.

    The Federal Government has maintained that terrorism and violent extremism affect all communities, regardless of religion, and that victims of insurgency include Muslims, Christians and others.

    National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu, Defence Minister General Christopher Gwabin Musa, Chief of Defence Staff General Olufemi Oluyede and Inspector General of Police Kayode Egbetokun have all stated in various briefings that Nigeria’s security crisis is driven by a complex mix of terrorism, banditry and organised criminal violence, rather than a singular religious agenda.

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    Speaking at the ceremony, Trump emphasised the significance of the newly unveiled initiative, saying, “What we’re doing is so important. This is something I really wanted to be here and do, and I could think of no better place.”

    Trump also spoke extensively about Gaza, insisting that the territory must be demilitarised and rebuilt.

    “Gaza has to be demilitarised and rebuilt nicely,” he said, warning militant groups to disarm. “If Hamas doesn’t do what they promised, they must lay down arms, or it’ll end them. They grew up with rifles.”

    He linked developments in the Middle East and Nigeria to the work of the Board of Peace, which he said was drawing growing international interest.

    On the composition of the new peace body, the US president said participation was expected to expand.

    “Everybody wants to be on the Board of Peace. These are just the countries here now; loads more will join,” he said.

  • Nigeria’s lobbying deal and the politics of global perception

    Nigeria’s lobbying deal and the politics of global perception

    Sir: In early January, the federal government reportedly signed a $9 million contract with DCI Group, a Washington-based lobbying firm, to help communicate its efforts at protecting religious communities and sustaining U.S. support in the fight against violent extremism. The move, facilitated through a Nigerian intermediary on behalf of the Office of the National Security Adviser, reflects Abuja’s enduring concern with perception and diplomatic positioning in an era of intensifying global scrutiny.

    For decades, Nigeria’s relations with the United States have been shaped by a mix of cooperation and contention. Security partnerships, trade engagements, and diaspora politics have been central pillars of this bilateral relationship. However, events of the past few years, including sustained attacks by insurgent groups, inter-communal violence, and allegations of targeted persecution of religious minorities; have complicated Nigeria’s diplomatic narrative.

    In this context, the federal government’s decision to spend millions on a lobbying contract can be understood as an attempt to manage external perceptions and reassure key global partners that its policies are robust, inclusive, and aligned with international norms. The logic is straightforward: negative portrayals in influential foreign media and policy circles have the potential to jeopardise security assistance, foreign investment, and international goodwill. If left unchecked, such narratives could translate into tangible diplomatic consequences.

    Yet the question that naturally arises is this: should securing international image be so resource-intensive when the nation’s own citizens continue to bear the brunt of insecurity and economic dislocation?

    Critics argue that the contract amount is not merely a matter of fiscal imprudence but a reflection of deeper disconnects between the state and its citizenry. When millions of Nigerians contend daily with inadequate infrastructure, inflationary pressures, and persistent insecurity, the optics of allocating significant public funds to foreign image management appear out of step with citizen expectations and democratic accountability.

    Civil society groups have been particularly vocal. Some describe the effort as a form of misplaced priority; an attempt to outsource credibility instead of strengthening internal communication structures and security institutions. Others point to the irony of denying targeted religious persecution while simultaneously paying to convey the government’s protective efforts abroad.

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    It is important to acknowledge that lobbying in foreign capitals is not inherently illegitimate. States engage in such practices as part of broader diplomatic strategies. However, in the Nigerian case, the reliance on third-party narrative management exposes vulnerabilities in official capacity and raises questions about strategic coherence.

    If Nigeria’s security apparatus, diplomatic missions, and information ministries possess the necessary insights and policy articulation, why is it that these roles must be outsourced at great expense? Why not invest in strengthening institutional communication channels within existing diplomatic frameworks? Such investments, arguably, would yield not just better messaging but stronger institutional capacity.

    Moreover, public diplomacy divorced from substantive action often rings hollow. The international community, particularly democratic partners such as the United States, does not simply respond to polished narratives; it responds to results, accountability metrics, and demonstrable policy outcomes. In this light, lobbying becomes less about persuasion and more about damage control, a reactionary measure that risks obscuring the structural reforms urgently needed within Nigeria’s domestic governance.

    What Nigeria needs, therefore, is not merely a strategic communications contract, but a balanced approach to both internal reform and external engagement. This includes prioritising effective security policies, ensuring transparent governance, and engaging international partners through substantive intergovernmental channels.

    As Nigeria navigates the complexities of global politics and domestic expectations, it would do well to remember that credibility cannot be purchased; it must be earned. The $9 million lobbying contract may momentarily shape perceptions, but it will not substitute for demonstrable progress on security, economic stability, and social cohesion.

    For a nation striving for both global respect and internal stability, the path to vindication lies not in expensive image management, but in results that resonate with citizens and command respect abroad. It is time for public policy to match public rhetoric.

    •Felix Oladeji,

    Lagos.

  • US suspends immigrant visa processing for Nigeria, 74 others

    US suspends immigrant visa processing for Nigeria, 74 others

    The United States Wednesday said it was suspending the processing of immigrant visas from 75 countries, including Nigeria.

    “The State Department is pausing immigrant visa processing for 75 countries,” a State Department spokesperson said.

    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt posted on X that the countries affected would include Somalia — whose people Trump has attacked in heated terms after immigrants were involved in a funding scandal in Minnesota — as well as Russia and Iran.

    Leavitt posted on a Fox News article that said other countries affected would include a number of countries with friendly relations with the United States, including Brazil, Egypt, Ghana and Thailand.

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    Trump has made no secret of his desire to reduce immigration by people who are not of European descent. He has described Somalis as “garbage” who should “go back to where they came from, and instead said he was open to Scandinavians moving to the United States.

    It added that the freeze would remain active until the U.S. could ensure that new immigrants would not extract wealth from the American people.

    The pause applied specifically to immigrant visas and was expected to remain in place indefinitely while U.S. authorities reassessed immigration processing procedures.

    The latest move does not affect tourist or business visas, although the Trump administration has vowed to vet all applicants’ social media histories.

  • U.S delivers new supplies to boost Nigeria’s counterterrorism efforts

    U.S delivers new supplies to boost Nigeria’s counterterrorism efforts

    The United States (U.S) has delivered critical military supplies to Nigeria to support the ongoing security operations.

    This was disclosed by the US Africa Command (AFRICOM) on its official X account on Tuesday.

    AFRICOM said the delivery of the supplies underscored the U.S. security partnership with Nigeria.

    The post read, “U.S. forces delivered critical military supplies to our Nigerian partners in Abuja. This delivery supports Nigeria’s ongoing operations and emphasizes our shared security partnership.”

    The delivery is coming barely about 18 days after the U.S government launched deadly strikes on terrorists in Nigeria.

    The U.S military on December 24, 2025 launched “powerful and deadly” strikes against ISIS affiliated groups in Jabo, Tangaza Local Government Area of Sokoto.

    The ISIS affiliate in Nigeria is known as the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP). It operates primarily in the North-East and the Lake Chad Basin, but is also said to have spread to the North-West.

    AFRICOM in its X account stated that the strike was at “the request of Nigerian authorities.”

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    The spokesperson of Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kimiebi Ebienfa, had said in a statement that the “precision hits” was in keeping with “structured security cooperation with international partners”.

    He said, “Nigerian authorities remain engaged in structured security cooperation with international partners, including the United States of America, in addressing the persistent threat of terrorism and violent extremism,” the statement reads.

    “This has led to precision hits on terrorist targets in Nigeria by air strikes in the North West.

    “In line with established international practice and bilateral understandings, this cooperation includes the exchange of intelligence, strategic coordination, and other forms of support consistent with international law, mutual respect for sovereignty, and shared commitments to regional and global security.

    “Nigeria reiterates that all counter-terrorism efforts are guided by the primacy of protecting civilian lives, safeguarding national unity, and upholding the rights and dignity of all citizens, irrespective of faith or ethnicity.”

  • Nigeria’s strategic exposure in a fragmenting US order

    Nigeria’s strategic exposure in a fragmenting US order

    Lekan Olayiwola

     The global order is hardening in ways that matter for how power is exercised and how external influences intersect with domestic risk. Many of the assumptions that guided middle and regional powers for much of the past two decades are quietly being revised. This shift reveals itself through patterns that appear discrete, even idiosyncratic, but together signal a deeper recalibration in how influence is asserted and defended.

    Recent developments involving the United States’ posture towards Venezuela, renewed assertions around Greenland’s strategic value, diplomatic strain with South Africa, intensified pressure on China and Russia, and a more focused attention on strategically positioned states across Africa are often treated as isolated episodes or personalised to individual leaders. That framing misses the larger point.

    Nigeria at the nexus of strategic recalibration

    What is emerging is a fragmenting US led geopolitical order in which rules remain invoked, but selectively applied; in which multilateralism persists, but increasingly as cover rather than constraint; and in which leverage is exercised more openly across energy, finance, security, and narrative space.

    For Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, a regional anchor, and a state approaching another pivotal electoral cycle, this moment introduces strategic risks that are subtle, cumulative, and easily misunderstood. This is not a story of imminent confrontation or external orchestration. It is a reassessment of exposure.

    From cooperative leadership to transactional power

    For much of the post–Cold War period, US leadership operated through cooperative frameworks, institutional mediation, and a degree of predictability that allowed regional powers to plan around relatively stable assumptions. That posture is giving way to something more transactional. Across recent US foreign-policy decisions, an emerging pattern is a willingness to privilege direct strategic advantage over cooperative leadership, flexibility over restraint, and bilateral leverage over consensus-driven process.

    Moves around Venezuelan oil once heavily sanctioned, now selectively re-engaged demonstrate how quickly principle yields to strategic need. Renewed rhetoric around Greenland reflects a blunt recognition of geography, resources, and Arctic positioning. Diplomatic distancing from South Africa signals lower tolerance for ambiguity among partners perceived as drifting.

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    None of this is anomalous. It reflects a broader recalibration driven by domestic pressures, energy insecurity, industrial competition, and intensifying rivalry with China and Russia. The significance lies less in any single decision than in the normalisation of a precedent that exceptional measures are justified by strategic urgency, and that international restraint is conditional, not assumed.

    Nigeria in a fragmented multipolar order

    Multipolarity, once an approaching condition, is now an operational reality; but in a form far less orderly than the term suggests. What is emerging is not a balanced concert of powers, but a fragmented landscape in which influence is unevenly distributed, rules are enforced asymmetrically, and alignment is increasingly issue-specific.

    China’s economic reach in Nigeria is deep and visible, spanning infrastructure, trade, technology, and finance. Yet domestic unease over debt exposure, labour practices, local value capture, and industrial dependency has grown steadily.

    Russia’s economic footprint remains modest by comparison, but its interest in defence cooperation, security diplomacy, and symbolic alignment persists, particularly as it seeks partners outside Western pressure regimes. Western engagement continues to emphasise stability, counter-terrorism, and reform, but increasingly through narrower channels, reduced aid budgets, and more explicit conditionalities. Nigeria is not being courted because it is weak, but because it is strategically consequential.

    Strategic importance as exposure

    Nigeria’s scale gives it leverage, but it also magnifies scrutiny. Its demography shapes migration calculations. Its energy profile intersects awkwardly with global transition politics. Its geographic position and military weight matter in a region destabilised by Sahelian coups, jihadist expansion, and declining European influence.

    This strategic importance creates expectations. Regional stabilisation roles are assumed. Security cooperation intensifies. Diplomatic silence is interpreted. Policy choices once treated as domestic reforms are read through geopolitical lenses. The result is not pressure applied openly, but exposure that accumulates quietly.

    Security cooperation and the risk of dependency

    Counter-terrorism partnerships, intelligence sharing, and military assistance have delivered tactical benefits. Yet without sustained investment in indigenous surveillance, logistics, command structures, and defence production, such cooperation risks sliding from partnership into dependency.

    When threat perception, intelligence priorities, and operational tempo are shaped externally, strategic autonomy narrows even as immediate risks are managed. Security becomes stabilising in the short term but constraining over time.

    Economic vulnerability in a transactional era

    Economic exposure compounds this vulnerability. Nigeria’s reliance on oil exports, foreign exchange inflows, and external financing leaves it sensitive to shifts in global energy politics, sanctions regimes, and financial signalling.

    As development finance becomes more transactional and debt restructuring increasingly intersects with geopolitical alignment, economic policy space tightens. Choices presented as technocratic including subsidy reform, currency management, and fiscal consolidation now carry strategic meaning beyond Nigeria’s borders.

    Sovereignty today is rarely tested through overt interference. It is tested through incentives. Infrastructure finance, security assistance, trade concessions, and investment pledges respond to real needs, yet they also shape policy horizons. When available options are structured externally, autonomy erodes quietly. Sovereignty is not lost by imposition, but by constrained choice.

    Elections as a strategic pressure point

    As Nigeria approaches the 2027 elections, these dynamics intensify. In a context of economic strain and social pressure, external actors offering capital inflows, security guarantees, or reputational endorsement can shape political narratives without appearing to intervene. Elections in a hardening global climate become pressure points rather than flashpoints. Structural influence works without orchestration. 

    Nigeria does not need dramatic realignment or rhetorical defiance. It needs intentional strategy. Security partnerships must deepen domestic capability rather than substitute for it. Economic diplomacy must prioritise value capture, not just aggregate inflows. Non-alignment must be active, negotiated, and strategic, not passive.

    Nigeria must also recognise that influence will increasingly flow through softer channels like information ecosystems, consultancy networks, diaspora capital, regulatory standards, and digital platforms.

    Strategic clarity in a fragmenting order

    The current geopolitical moment is not uniquely hostile, but it is less forgiving of ambiguity. Great powers are acting more openly in pursuit of interest. Middle powers are being drawn into these dynamics whether they choose to be or not. Nigeria’s challenge is not choosing sides in a renewed great-power struggle. It is avoiding being compressed by struggles defined elsewhere.

    In a fragmenting US-led geopolitical order, sovereignty is preserved not by declarations, but by capacity, foresight, and disciplined choice. That work is quiet, incremental, and often invisible, but it is precisely what determines whether Nigeria remains a rule-taker or secures its place as a consequential actor on its own terms.

    •Olayiwola is a peace & conflict researcher/policy analyst. He can be reached at lekanolayiwola@gmail.com

  • ‘Iran to open deal with U.S. amid crackdown on protesters’

    ‘Iran to open deal with U.S. amid crackdown on protesters’

    •China calls for non-interference in Tehran

    Amid ongoing mass protests across Iran in which hundreds of people have been killed, the country has asked the United States to open new negotiations, U.S. President Donald Trump has said.

    Speaking aboard Air Force One on Sunday, Trump told reporters the Iranian leadership had called him “to negotiate” a day earlier.

    He added that a meeting with Iranian representatives might be arranged, but said the U.S. could need to act beforehand given ongoing protests in the country.

    “I think they’re tired of being beat up by the United States,” he added, apparently referring to Israeli strikes on Iran’s nuclear programme last year, which involved U.S. military support.

    Trump did not specify what topics the talks would cover. Last year, Tehran had held indirect discussions with U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff over its disputed nuclear programme.

    But, China has called for non-interference in Iran’s internal affairs amid ongoing protests in the country.

    China’s Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman, Mao Ning, made the call yesterday in Beijing, stressing that China opposes interference in the internal affairs of other states.

    The call follows recent comments by the Trump, suggesting possible intervention.

    Ning said China also rejects the use or threat of force in international relations.

    She expressed the hope that the Iranian government and its people would overcome the current challenges and maintain national stability, as China was closely monitoring developments in Iran.

    Ning added that there were no reports so far of Chinese citizens being injured or killed in the unrest.

    China and Iran have maintained close economic and strategic relations over the years, particularly in trade and energy cooperation, including the export of Iranian oil to China.

    Earlier on Sunday, U.S. media reported Trump is considering possible military strikes on Iran, but also other options.

    CNN reported, citing two U.S. officials, that Trump had been briefed on various ways of intervening in light of reports that hundreds of protesters have been killed.

    Alongside a range of possible military options, measures that would not involve direct military action were also discussed.

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    According to CNN, some of the approaches presented to Trump focused on targeting Tehran’s security forces deployed to suppress the protests.

    The broadcaster said there were concerns within Trump’s administration that military strikes could backfire and undermine the protests.

    There were fears that attacks could inadvertently lead to greater public support in Iran for the authoritarian leadership, or trigger military retaliation by Tehran.

    The news site Axios also reported, citing US officials, that Trump was considering various options, including military ones, to support the protests in Iran.

    Most of the approaches put to him currently did not involve combat operations, according to Axios.

    Other possibilities reportedly focus on intimidating the Iranian leadership, for example by deploying an aircraft carrier strike group to the region. Axios said cyber-attacks are also under consideration.

    Trump shared his support for the demonstrations in Iran over the weekend, saying the U.S. was “ready to help,” without specifying what form any help might take.

    The Iranian leadership has blocked the internet for the fourth consecutive day due to the protests, however Trump suggested the U.S. might help protesters access satellite internet.

  • US revokes over 100,000 visas in one year

    US revokes over 100,000 visas in one year

    The United States has revoked more than 100,000 visas in the last one year of President Donald Trump’s administration, the Department of State declared. 

    Trump has an anti-migrant policy. The State Department said 8,000 of the revoked visas were for students.

    The Department of Homeland Security last month said that the Trump administration has deported more than 605,000 people and that 2.5 million others left on their own.

    U.S Department of State on its X stated: “The State Department has now revoked over 100,000 visas, including some 8,000 student visas and 2,500 specialized visas for individuals who had encounters with U.S. law enforcement for criminal activity.

    “We will continue to deport these thugs to keep America safe.”

    State Department spokesman, Tommy Pigott further stated: “The Trump administration has no higher priority than protecting American citizens and upholding American sovereignty.” 

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    The figure since Trump’s second inauguration on January 20, 2025, is two and a half times the number revoked in 2024, when Joe Biden was President.

    The State Department said that “thousands” of the visas were revoked over crimes, which can include assault and also drunk driving.

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio highlighted revocation of visas from students who protested against Israel.

    Rubio used a McCarthy-era law that allows the United States to block entry to foreigners seen as going against US foreign policy, although some of his high-profile targets successfully challenged deportation orders in court.