— But Results Remain Elusive
Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters (DHQ) says a recent visit by the Commander of the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM), Dagvin Anderson, has reaffirmed security cooperation between Abuja and Washington. But with violence continuing to claim lives, displace communities, and deepen humanitarian strain, analysts and rights groups say both governments owe the public clearer evidence of what the partnership has actually achieved.
In a statement attributed to the DHQ’s Director of Defence Information, Samaila Uba, officials said the visit was meant to “deepen collaboration” against terrorist groups threatening Nigeria and the wider region. Gen. Anderson met with Bola Tinubu, the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, the Minister of Defence, Christopher Musa, and the Chief of Defence Staff, Olufemi Oluyede, and visited a joint US–Nigeria intelligence fusion cell.
But concrete outcomes remain vague. Officials did not detail new commitments, metrics for success, or timelines for measuring progress — a pattern critics say has characterised past security dialogues.
Violence Continues Despite Longstanding Cooperation
Despite years of military training, intelligence sharing, and international support (including US-approved arms deals), Nigeria’s insecurity shows little sign of abating:
- Deadly attacks have surged. In early February 2026, at least 162–200 people were killed in coordinated extremist assaults on the villages of Woro and Nuku in Kwara State — among the deadliest attacks in recent months.
- Statewide and national figures point to a broader crisis. Amnesty International reported that between May 2023 and May 2025, armed attacks across multiple states killed at least 10,217 people and forced the displacement of hundreds of towns and villages.
- Longer-term conflict toll. Insurgent violence in northern Nigeria — particularly linked to Boko Haram and splinter groups — has been associated with the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians and the displacement of over 2 million people since the conflict began.
These figures reflect not just battlefield deaths but the chronic security failures that have driven families from their homes, disrupted local economies, and crippled access to basic services.
Intelligence and Cooperation — Impact or Optics?
The DHQ highlighted the role of a joint US–Nigeria intelligence fusion cell in enhancing surveillance and operational response. Yet, there are persistent reports of militants reaching remote communities, executing mass killings, and kidnapping civilians with impunity, suggesting that improved information flow has not always translated into timely or effective protection for vulnerable populations.
Moreover, public statements from both governments rarely clarify how shared intelligence leads to changes in on-the-ground outcomes — such as preventing massacres like the one in Kwara or reducing daily attacks in the northeast and northwest.
Opaque Budgets and Unclear Outcomes
Budget details on US assistance — including equipment transfers, training, and advisory support — are often disclosed in generic terms without comprehensive reporting on results relative to expenditure. For example, in 2025, the United States approved a potential $346 million weapons sale to Nigeria aimed at strengthening military capacity, but there is limited publicly available data on how such resources have measurably reduced violence or improved civilian safety.
Without transparent benchmarks or regular independent assessments, experts warn that security cooperation risks becoming a diplomatic talking point rather than a force for measurable change.
Looking Ahead: What Nigerians Want to See
Analysts and civil society groups increasingly call for:
- Clear public metrics tracking trends in violence, arrests, and successful interventions attributable to joint efforts.
- Independent evaluation of intelligence-sharing mechanisms and their operational impact.
- Human security indicators, such as reductions in displacement and civilian casualties, rather than purely military success markers.
For many Nigerians living amid recurring attacks and displacement, the question is no longer whether Nigeria has partners, but whether those partnerships can be held accountable to the people they are supposed to protect.