Monday, January 26, 2026 - The US will increase materiel deliveries and intelligence sharing with Nigeria, a military official said Monday, as part of a wider bid to pursue IS group-linked militants on the continent. The Pentagon is also maintaining lines of communication with militaries in the West African countries of Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali, the official said.
Nigerian and US officials attend the inauguration of the
Nigeria US Joint Working Joint Working Group to boost counterterrorism
cooperation in Abuja, Nigeria on January 22, 2026. © Marvellous Durowaiye,
Reuters
The US military is
increasing materiel deliveries and intelligence sharing with Nigeria, Africom's deputy commander said, as part of a
broader American push to work with African militaries to go
after Islamic State group-linked militants.
The Pentagon has also kept open lines of communication with
militaries in the junta-led Sahel countries of Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali,
Lieutenant
General John Brennan said.
The increased cooperation with Abuja follows Washington's
diplomatic pressure on Nigeria over jihadist violence in the country, but also
as the US military is becoming "more aggressive" in pursuing IS
group-linked targets on the continent.
Under the Trump administration, "we've gotten a lot
more aggressive and (are) working with partners to target, kinetically, the
threats, mainly ISIS," Brennan said in an interview on the sidelines of a
US-Nigeria security meeting in the Nigerian capital last week.
"From Somalia to Nigeria, the problem set is
connected. So we're trying to take it apart and then provide partners with the
information they need," he added.
"It's been about more enabling partners and then
providing them equipment and capabilities with less restrictions so that they
can be more successful."
Last week's inaugural US-Nigeria Joint Working Group meeting
came roughly a month after the US announced surprise Christmas Day strikes
on IS group-linked targets in northwest Nigeria.
Though both militaries seem keen on increased cooperation
after the joint strikes, hanging over it all is diplomatic pressure by
Washington over what Trump claims is the mass killing of Christians
in Nigeria.
Abuja and independent analysts reject that framing of
Nigeria's myriad, overlapping conflicts, which has long been used by the US
religious right.
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Charged politics were on display at the Joint Working Group
meeting in Abuja, where Allison Hooker, the number three at the State
Department, pushed the Nigerian government "to protect Christians" in
a speech that did not mention Muslim victims of armed groups.
Africa's most populous country is roughly evenly split
between a mostly Muslim north and mostly Christian south. Though millions live
peacefully side by side, religious and ethnic identity remains a sensitive
topic in a country that has seen sectarian violence throughout its history.
Brennan said that US intelligence would not be limited to
protecting Christians.
He also said that following the US strikes in northwestern
Sokoto state, American support going forward would focus on intelligence
sharing to aid Nigerian air strikes there, as well as the northeast, where a
jihadist insurgency by Boko Haram and rival breakaway ISWAP has raged
since 2009.
Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) is "our most concerning
group", he said.
Analysts have been tracking US intelligence flights over the
country in recent months, though some have questioned whether air support alone
can push back armed groups that thrive amid widespread poverty and state
collapse in rural areas.
US-Nigerian cooperation going forward will involve "the
whole gamut of intel sharing, sharing... tactics, techniques, and procedures,
as well as enabling them to procure more equipment," Brennan said.
The initial strikes targeted militants linked to the Islamic
State Sahel Province group, typically active in neighbouring Niger, Brennan
said.
Analysts have voiced concerns about ISSP's spread from the
Sahel into coastal west African countries like Nigeria.
The impact of those strikes so far has been unclear,
however, with local and international journalists unable to confirm militant
casualties.
Asked about their effectiveness, Nigerian information
minister Mohammed Idris said last week it was "still a work in
progress".
In the Sahel more widely, Brennan said "we still
collaborate" with the junta-led governments in Burkina Faso, Mali and
Niger, which have broken away from their west African neighbours and largely
shunned the West.
Security cooperation has been curtailed since coups toppled
civilian governments across the three countries from 2020 to 2023.
"We have actually shared information with some of them
to attack key terrorist targets," he said. "We still talk to our
military partners across the Sahelian states, even though it's not
official."
Brennan also said the US is not seeking to replace its bases
in Niger after its troops were pushed out by the ruling junta.
"We're not in the market to create a drone base
anywhere," he said, referencing the shuttered US drone operations in
Agadez.
"We are much more focused on getting capability to the
right place at the right time and then leaving. We don't seek long-term basing
in any of the western African countries."

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