U.S. Deploys 100 More Troops to Northern Nigeria
Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters said 100 US military personnel arrived in Bauchi to provide training, technical support, and intelligence sharing. The deployment comes amid rising number of attacks by armed groups.
February 17, 2026Clash Report
Samaila Uba, spokesman for Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters, said 100 US military personnel reached the northeastern state of Bauchi on Monday. Their mission, he stated, centers on “technical support” and “intelligence sharing.”
Uba emphasized that the American troops will not assume a direct combat role and will operate under the full command authority of Nigerian forces.
The armed forces of Nigeria remain fully committed to degrading and defeating terrorist organisations that threaten the country’s sovereignty, national security, and the safety of its citizens.
Training Mission, Not Combat
The deployment aligns with earlier Nigerian military statements, which said 200 US troops would arrive “in coming weeks” for training duties rather than frontline operations.
The advisory presence follows US kinetic activity in the region, including December air strikes targeting ISIS-affiliated fighters in Nigeria’s northwest.
Last month, after consultations in Abuja, the head of US Africa Command confirmed that a small US military team was already in Nigeria focusing on intelligence support.
Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff Lieutenant General Waidi Shaibu, had also urged deeper strategic cooperation between the Nigerian and United States Army to address the country’s evolving security challenges. He made the remarks during a meeting in Abuja with US Defence Attaché Lieutenant Colonel Semira Moore in Jan. 14/2026.
Escalating Violence Across the North
The security environment remains volatile. Just days ago, gunmen on motorcycles attacked three northern communities near Kainji forest, killing at least 46 people and abducting others.
Nigeria continues to confront overlapping threats from Boko Haram, its breakaway factions and criminal bandit networks engaged in kidnapping for ransom, illegal mining, and extortion. According to United Nations data cited by Nigerian authorities, several thousand people have been killed in recent years.
Bandit Networks and Rural Insecurity
Bandit violence has intensified between 2023 and 2025, with 6,107 deaths recorded across more than two daily attacks, with abductions remaining widespread. Armed groups exploit forests and mountainous terrain to stage raids, target rural settlements, and disrupt transport corridors.
Demographic and Political Context
Nigeria’s 240 million people are broadly divided between Christians, concentrated mainly in the south, and Muslims, primarily in the north where most attacks occur.
While US President Donald Trump accused Nigeria late last year of failing to halt killings against Christians, Nigerian authorities rejected the claim, and analysts note that victims span religious lines.
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