Monday, December 1, 2025 - The Serving Overseer of the Citadel Global Community Church, Pastor Tunde Bakare, has claimed that the motive behind President Donald Trump’s recent designation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” and his allegations of Christian genocide is the US president’s interest in Nigeria’s oil wealth.
According to Bakare, who spoke during a State of the Nation
Address at the Citadel Global Community Church on Sunday, the Trump
administration considers Nigeria’s oil wealth, other mineral resources and
critical sectors such as real estate as central to its agenda.
He added that Trump was also keen on Nigeria’s role in the
value chain of emerging technologies, which he described as major pillars of
the American leader’s foreign and economic policy.
The address marked Bakare’s first public reaction since
Trump’s October 31 redesignation of Nigeria as a CPC and his subsequent
“guns-a-blazing, fast, vicious and sweet attack on terrorists in Nigeria”
comments, which triggered swift responses from the President Bola Tinubu
administration.
Bakare recalled that shortly after Trump won the 2024 US
election, he received a vision in which the American leader arrived in Sabo,
Yaba, Lagos, aboard Air Force One, “dressed in Arabian thobe and ghutra” and
declaring, “We are here now.”
He said the revelation signalled a “particular interest”
Trump would take in Nigeria linked to Middle East politics, oil and gas, real
estate, and the country’s expanding technology sector.
Bakare said, “It was clear to us that President Donald Trump
was going to have a particular interest in Nigeria.
“Nigeria’s oil wealth and other mineral resources will be
critical to the Trump presidency, as will our role in the value chain of
emerging technologies.”
He added that the symbolic attire in the vision pointed to
“religious implications” that could spark tensions if not properly managed.
“Trump’s Muslim attire was a clear indication that his
interest in Nigeria could have serious religious implications, such that could
cause religiously motivated social unrest,” he said.
Bakare labelled Trump’s leadership style transactional and
urged the Federal Government to respond with a structured economic plan.
“President Donald Trump has proven to be a transactional
leader whose threats are usually invitations to the negotiating table,” he
said.
“The Nigerian government should present the United States
with a mutually beneficial business proposal, one that will facilitate US
business interests while guaranteeing Nigeria’s security, educational
development, industrialisation and access to cutting-edge technologies.”
He urged the Federal Government to negotiate a strategic
business deal with Washington rather than wait to be pressured, stressing that
Nigeria must not miss the window of opportunity.
While he did not disclose details of his proposed plan, he
insisted that Nigeria’s long-term development depended on striking agreements
anchored on national interest.
President Tinubu, last week, appointed National Security
Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, to head Nigeria’s delegation on the US-Nigeria joint
working group to deepen collaboration between the two countries on security.
The former Vice-Presidential candidate also warned that the
country’s worsening insecurity had exposed deep structural wounds long ignored
by successive governments.
He said the Middle Belt, North-West and South-East had
become flashpoints of unresolved grievances, banditry, terror networks and
communal mistrust.
“To deny that Christians have been targeted in many Middle
Belt communities is to turn the truth on its head,” he said.
According to him, the continued killings across Benue,
Plateau, Southern Kaduna and other Middle Belt states were a “shame on the
Nigerian state.”
He criticised the National Assembly for remaining silent on
the insecurity crisis until the US Congress debated the issue, accusing
lawmakers of prioritising 2027 politicking and defections over national
security.
In the same vein, he faulted the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
for being reactive and failing to galvanise diplomatic goodwill to support
Nigeria’s war against terror.
He said, “It is a shame on the Nigerian government that
these communities would resort to calling on the American government to help
because their own government has failed them woefully.
“It is a shame on our National Assembly that it took the
United States Congress — not the representatives elected by Nigerians — to
convene a hearing on the lived experiences of citizens suffering under
insecurity, while those in Abuja were busy with politicking, posturing for
political relevance, defecting from one political party to another in their
desperate manoeuvres to secure their seats ahead of the 2027 elections.
“It is indeed a shame that Nigeria’s foreign affairs
architecture failed all the while to mobilise Nigeria’s dwindling diplomatic
goodwill to secure international support for the war on terror, only to respond
with excuses when that goodwill reached its lowest ebb.”
Bakare added that tensions in the South-East, exacerbated by
the detention and trial of separatist leader Nnamdi Kanu, showed that Nigeria
had not healed from the 1967-1970 Civil War.
Bakare said President Bola Tinubu stood at a decisive
junction where he must choose between political calculations ahead of 2027 and
the tougher path of structural reforms.
Although he acknowledged the President’s efforts to recruit
more security personnel and declare limited security emergencies, he insisted
that only bold action could stabilise the country.
His proposed measures included a national apology, a Victims
and Survivors Register, increased boots on the ground using veterans and
paramilitary forces, technology-enabled surveillance, “tech-to-industry
diplomacy” to attract American military AI systems and the establishment of
state, zonal and community policing systems under federal coordination.
“This would entail the President owning the failure of
government over the decades to protect the victims and survivors of banditry,
terrorism and other forms of insecurity.
“It would entail opening a Victims and Survivors Register.
Then, at the end of three months, in a solemn address to the nation, the
President would tender an apology on behalf of the Nigerian state to victimised
communities across the nation, calling each community by name, and, possibly,
some of the families most gruesomely hit in the attacks.
“Such an acknowledgement would expectably be followed by
compensation in the mid-term phase,” Bakare said.
He also urged Tinubu to set up a Presidential Commission for
National Reconciliation, Reintegration and Restructuring, insisting that
Nigeria’s real challenge was what he called “the Nigeria Question” — identity,
dignity, equity, coexistence and governance.
According to him, solving these issues was the foundation
for ending decades of instability.
“No nation can be built on denial,” Bakare said. “If we are
to sit at the table of brotherhood, we must acknowledge the truth and confront
it.”
He warned that Nigeria must move beyond piecemeal responses
and embrace long-delayed structural reforms, arguing that the best of the North
and South must unite to negotiate a new national settlement.
As part of long-term solutions, Bakare called for the
empowerment of zonal, state and local policing systems to ensure faster
response times, local accountability and community trust.
He also called for the recalibration of the national
security architecture through a “technical non-political Directorate of
National Intelligence,” which would free the National Security Adviser to focus
on his role as the President’s political appointee.
He emphasised the need for “the establishment of a Zonal
Security Council in each of the six geopolitical zones, chaired by governors
from the respective zone on a rotating basis, incorporating state and local
policing systems into the framework of each Zonal Council.”
He said, “The representation of the Zonal Security Councils
in the National Security Council through their serving chairpersons at each
point in time.
“The transformation of the federal police force into a
national investigative body focused on intelligence gathering, complex
investigations and inter-jurisdictional crimes, serving as Nigeria’s premier
investigative body.”
In addition, he called for the replacement of the one-year
National Youth Service Corps with a two-year scheme, “the first year of which
would be deployed towards military training and deployment.”
Bakare further advocated a dual foreign policy architecture
– the Trans-Saharan and Trans-Atlantic – with the former engaging the Middle
East and Arabian Peninsula for the “progressive acculturation of northern
Nigeria and the stabilisation of the Sahel,” and the latter driving cooperation
with the West.

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