Nigeria says joint strikes with US kill 175 IS fighters
Nigeriaโs military on Tuesday said that joint airstrikes with the United States had killed 175 Islamic State (IS) fighters in the countryโs northeast, including the militant groupโs global second-in-command. The remote region has been gripped by an extremist insurgency since 2009, first by Boko Haram, then its offshoot and rival, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP). According to the United Nations, more than 40,000 people have been killed and two million others displaced. US and Nigerian forces killed Abu Bilal al-Minuki, an IS leader described as the โmost active terroristโ in the world, at a remote village in the northeast last weekend. The Nigerian military said on Tuesday that 175 IS militants had so far been โeliminated from the battlefieldโ. โThe joint strikes have resulted in the destruction of ISIS checkpoints, weapons caches, logistical hubs, military equipment and financial networks used to sustain terrorist operations,โ it added. As director of global operations for IS, al-Minuki provided strategic guidance on media and financial operations and โthe development and manufacturing of weapons, explosives and dronesโ, according to the Nigerian military and the US Africa Command (Africom). After the announcement of al-Minukiโs death, Nigeriaโs President Bola Ahmed Tinubu thanked his US counterpart, Donald Trump, for his โleadership and unwavering supportโ. He said he looked forward to โmore decisive strikes against all terrorist enclaves across the nationโ. Senior figures According to Tuesdayโs military statement, the operations in the last few days have killed other key IS figures. They include Abdal Wahhab, said to be a โsenior leaderโ of ISWAP, โresponsible for coordinating attacks and distributing propagandaโ. Abu Musa al-Mangawi was said to be a high-ranking ISWAP member, while Abu al-Muthanna al-Muhajir was a โsenior media production team manager and close confidant to al-Minukiโ. Boko Haram and ISWAP have recently stepped up their attacks on villages, police stations and workers such as loggers and fishermen, as well as military bases, causing the deaths of several civilians and senior army officers. The upsurge in attacks prompted Tinubu to declare a nationwide state of emergency in 2025 and the US president to threaten Nigeria with military intervention. Trump has claimed that Christians in Nigeria were being โpersecutedโ and victims of a โgenocideโ carried out by โterroristsโ. The government in Abuja and most experts reject the claim and point out that the violence generally affects Christians and Muslims without distinction. The US military, in coordination with the Nigerian authorities, carried out airstrikes on December 25 last year in the northwestern state of Sokoto, targeting what Washington called jihadists. Northern Nigeria has been grappling with violence from criminal gangs known locally as bandits, who frequently carry out attacks on villages and mass kidnappings for ransom. Africom has also taken action against IS and al-Shabaab militants in Somalia, intensifying airstrikes since the beginning of the year.