About 100 U.S. soldiers have arrived in Nigeria to train local forces amid rising violence targeting Christian communities. The deployment came after the government requested assistance from the United States for training, technical support, and intelligence-sharing. According to Nigerian Defense Headquarters spokesman Samaila Uba, the American troops will not participate in combat operations, and Nigerian authorities will retain full command. The move follows earlier tensions sparked when U.S. President Donald Trump accused the country of failing to protect Christians from what he described as an alleged genocide.

Despite consistent denials from Nigerian officials regarding systemic persecution, data suggests a troubling pattern. Christian relief group Barnabas Aid estimates that at least 45,000 Christians have been killed by Islamist militants across northern regions and the Middle Belt since 2009. Recent attacks in Benue State left more than 30 people dead after three days of violence against predominantly Christian communities.
Church leaders say the bloodshed represents only the latest episode in what they increasingly describe as a sustained campaign amounting to a “genocide” of Christian
