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Trump Announces Killing of Top ISIS Leader in Nigeria Joint Strike

Friday night brought news that actually matters. President Trump announced that U.S. and Nigerian forces successfully killed Abu Bakr al-Mainuki, the Islamic State group’s second in command globally, in a joint operation that demonstrates what happens when America stops apologizing and starts acting.

This wasn’t some random militant. Al-Mainuki was the money man, the organizer, the guy pulling strings behind the scenes while plotting attacks against American interests. He thought he could disappear into the vast expanse of Africa’s Lake Chad Basin and we’d just forget about him. Wrong.

Trump’s late-night social media post was characteristically direct. “Thought he could hide in Africa, but little did he know we had sources who kept us informed on what he was doing,” the president said. That’s the kind of message that needs sending. You can run, but American intelligence and military reach extends further than any terrorist’s imagination.

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu confirmed the strike hit al-Mainuki’s compound in the Lake Chad Basin, taking out several of his lieutenants alongside him. Born in Nigeria’s Borno province, al-Mainuki had deep roots in the region. He knew the terrain, had local connections, understood the culture. None of it saved him.

Here’s what matters about this operation beyond the immediate tactical win. It shows that serious counterterrorism requires partnership, not the kind of multilateral hand-wringing that passes for foreign policy among the establishment crowd. Nigeria has been fighting Boko Haram and ISIS affiliates for years. They’ve lost soldiers, seen villages burned, watched their people suffer. When America brings intelligence capabilities and precision strike capacity to partners who are already in the fight, that’s when you get results.

The Lake Chad Basin has become a sanctuary for Islamic extremists precisely because it’s remote, difficult to monitor, and spans multiple national boundaries. Terrorists love borders because they create jurisdictional confusion. They exploit the gaps between nations, the bureaucratic delays, the diplomatic niceties that prevent swift action. A joint operation like this cuts through all that noise.

You know what doesn’t get enough attention? The intelligence work that made this possible. Trump mentioned sources keeping us informed. That means human intelligence, signals intercepts, pattern analysis, probably months of patient tracking. The people doing that work don’t get parades or press conferences. They get the satisfaction of knowing a major terrorist organizer won’t be financing any more attacks.

Some will inevitably question whether al-Mainuki was really the number two figure globally or if that’s an overstatement. Fair enough. ISIS has fragmented since losing its territorial caliphate, and command structures aren’t always clear. But here’s the thing: he was important enough that both American and Nigerian forces devoted resources to finding and eliminating him. He was organizing, financing, plotting. That’s plenty of justification.

This operation also sends a signal that the current administration hasn’t forgotten about ISIS despite all the other global challenges demanding attention. The Islamic State lost its physical territory but the ideology persists, the networks remain, and true believers keep trying to reconstitute. Staying on offense matters. Keeping pressure on their leadership matters. Making them wonder when the next strike is coming matters.

Limited government doesn’t mean weak government. It means focused government that does the essential things well. National defense tops that list. Protecting Americans from terrorists who actively plot against us isn’t optional. It’s the fundamental responsibility that justifies federal power in the first place.

The fact that this happened in Nigeria, working with their forces on their soil against a threat they face daily, represents foreign policy done right. We brought capabilities they needed. They brought local knowledge and ground presence. Nobody had to pretend this was about nation building or spreading democracy. It was about eliminating a serious threat. Simple, clear, justified.

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