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President Donald Trump’s recent joint counterterrorism operation with Nigeria that killed ISIS global deputy Abu-Bilal al-Minuki was a meaningful military victory. Yet Nigeria’s deeper crisis runs far beyond one battlefield success.

Christians across central and northern Nigeria have endured years of brutal attacks from Islamist militants, including Boko Haram, ISIS affiliates, and armed Fulani extremists. Reports of massacres, burned churches, displaced families, and communities forced into self-defense have become tragically familiar. Tactical victories against known terror leaders can disrupt operations, but they rarely uproot entrenched ideological hatred, tribal conflict, weak governance, and longstanding religious persecution.

My ministry partner, Pastor William Agbeti, who has firsthand experience with Fulani tensions in neighboring Ghana, believes recent events reveal an alarming pattern. He writes:

“The Nigerian panorama of widespread massacres of Christians by mostly Fulani herdsmen has come to a head in recent days. Worthy of note is that the increased spates of massacres strongly suggest a fallout from the recent joint US-Nigeria assassination of a top ISIS commander.”

He adds concern that compromised Islamic elements within state structures may create vulnerabilities, whether through leaks, tolerance, or inaction. Christian villages are left exposed. Families bury loved ones. Churches become targets. Rural believers increasingly face the question no citizen should face: who will protect us when the attackers come?

Pastor Agbeti argues that serious intervention is required. His recommendations include formally declaring violent Islamist organizations as terrorist groups, launching an “arms for cash” disarmament program, granting blanket amnesty to surrendered participants, and temporarily supporting Christian communities’ right to self-defense. These proposals invite debate, yet they emerge from practical observation, not academic theory.

Nigeria’s government has long struggled with corruption, uneven enforcement, and limited control in vulnerable regions. America can assist through intelligence, diplomacy, and military cooperation, but lasting peace depends on Nigeria’s willingness to protect all citizens equally.

For Christians, this crisis is both geopolitical and deeply personal. These are not abstract numbers in distant headlines. They are pastors, farmers, mothers, children, and worshippers gathering under threat because of their faith in Christ.

America should continue confronting terrorism wherever it grows, but strategy must include clear-eyed recognition that ideological hatred survives leadership decapitations. Evil adapts quickly. Justice requires persistence, courage, and moral clarity. The Church has always faced persecution, yet believers are called to endure with faith.

Joshua 1:9 reminds us: “Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.”

In places like Nigeria, that promise is not poetic sentiment. For many believers, it is daily survival. Pray for the persecuted church.

Sources:

Christian Post
https://www.christianpost.com/news/christians-fend-off-fulanis-as-attacks-increase-in-nigeria.html

Fox News
https://www.foxnews.com/world/trump-says-abu-bilal-al-minuki-second-command-isis-globally-killed-us-nigerian-operation

Reuters
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/trump-says-isis-second-command-abu-bilal-al-minuki-eliminated-2026-05-16/

 

The post Terror, Retaliation, and Nigeria’s Christian Crisis :: By Bill Wilson appeared first on Rapture Ready.