Controversy Erupts Over US Sokoto Airstrikes as Gumi Lambasts Supporters, Tinubu's Silence Questioned

Published 1 day ago3 minute read
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Controversy Erupts Over US Sokoto Airstrikes as Gumi Lambasts Supporters, Tinubu's Silence Questioned

Joint security operations involving Nigeria and the United States, specifically targeted airstrikes against terrorist elements in Sokoto State on Christmas Day 2025, have elicited a diverse spectrum of reactions across Nigeria, ranging from official reassurance of economic stability to strong condemnations regarding national sovereignty.

Following the operation, Nigeria's Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, promptly issued a statement reassuring investors, analysts, and multilateral partners that Nigeria remains open for business. He clarified that the country is not at war with itself or any nation, but is decisively confronting terrorism alongside trusted international partners. Edun characterized the Christmas Day operation as precise, intelligence-led, and exclusively focused on terrorist elements threatening national stability and economic activity. He asserted that such actions, far from destabilizing markets, strengthen the foundations of peace, protect productive communities, and reinforce conditions for sustainable growth, emphasizing the inseparable link between security and economic stability.

Edun also highlighted Nigeria's measurable progress in both security and economic reforms under President Bola Tinubu's leadership. He pointed to a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of 3.98 percent in the third quarter of 2025, following a robust 4.23 percent growth in Q2, with expectations for even stronger Q4 performance. The minister noted that inflation had decelerated for the seventh consecutive period, falling below 15 percent, reflecting improving price stability due to coordinated fiscal and monetary actions. He further stressed the resilience of Nigeria's financial markets, stable domestic and international debt markets, and credit rating upgrades from Moody’s, Fitch, and Standard & Poor’s as clear endorsements of the nation's reforms and economic direction. Edun concluded by reaffirming Nigeria's commitment to fiscal discipline, efficiency, macroeconomic stability, and its overarching objective to consolidate gains, strengthen economic resilience, and build a sustainable, inclusive, and growth-oriented economy for 2026, assuring investors of the unwavering resolve of the Tinubu administration.

Offering a different perspective, former Kaduna Central senator Shehu Sani voiced strong support for the US airstrikes against terrorist groups. Reacting to the Christmas Day operations, Sani provocatively suggested that individuals opposing such interventions should be assembled and transported to the hinterlands of Zamfara and Sokoto, or even the Sambisa forest, to engage directly with the terrorists through preaching, talking, or negotiation, thereby implying their opposition was misinformed or impractical.

Meanwhile, political scientist and national security scholar Kunle Fagbemi cautioned against drawing premature conclusions regarding the impact and success of the US intervention. Speaking in an interview, Fagbemi emphasized that questions about the effectiveness of the airstrikes could only be adequately addressed after a formal assessment is completed. He elucidated the complexities of measuring success in precision airstrikes, which involve multiple technical layers such as accurate targeting coordinates and managing debris from munitions. Fagbemi also contextualized the intervention within Nigeria's long-standing engagement in various international counter-terrorism initiatives, including the African Center for Strategic Studies, the African Crisis Initiative (ACOTA), the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS (D-ISIS), and Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnerships, indicating that the intervention was a culmination of a strategic partnership under the purview of these instruments. He urged public officeholders and media actors to manage and contextualize information carefully to avoid public confusion and misinterpretation.

In stark contrast, Amnesty International Nigeria and a coalition of civil society organisations, collectively under the Nigerian Joint Civil Society Action, expressed

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