President Donald J. Trump Stop posturing and start reading history.

Date:

President Donald J. Trump Stop posturing and start reading history.

By
Sa’adiyyah Adebisi Hassan

Your latest rant threatening to cut off aid and to “go into that now disgraced country, ‘guns-a-blazing’ ” to “wipe out” militants is reckless, ignorant, and dangerous. You’re not saving anyone with bravado. You are insulting 220 million Nigerians, undermining diplomacy, and reminding the world why heavy-handed interventions leave ruin in their wake. Your post is not leadership it’s an invitation to chaos.

Here are the facts you either ignored or willfully twisted:

1. Nigeria is not a monolith of villains it’s a battered state where Christians and Muslims are both victims.
The violence in Nigeria is complex: jihadist groups, armed bandits, communal militias and criminal gangs operate across fault lines of poverty, governance failure and local grievance. Many reports show that Muslims in the north have borne enormous losses as well this is not a simple “Islamists vs Christians” picture you portray. Treating it as such is intellectually lazy and strategically dangerous.

2. “Disgraced country” is an insult and an inaccurate one. Nigeria is messy and its government has grievous failings. But calling a sovereign nation “disgraced” while offering a military grandstanding line without proposing credible, lawful, cooperative measures is the rhetoric of a bully, not a partner. If you want to help, stop humiliating the people you claim to protect.

3. History shows that foreign “liberation” by force often destroys far more than it saves. Look at the long record: the Iraq invasion was premised on false or overstated intelligence about WMDs and left a shattered state and a decade of chaos. NATO’s 2011 intervention in Libya toppled a dictator but helped create a failed state that exported violence across the Sahel. If your instinct is “bomb first, ask later,” study those disasters before you make them Nigeria’s fate.

4. You don’t have a blank check to send U.S. forces into another country at whim. The U.S. Constitution vests the power to declare war in Congress, the War Powers Resolution constrains unilateral presidential military action and requires congressional notification and limits on troop commitments. Threatening invasion as a social-media soundbite doesn’t change this legal reality it only increases the risk of an unconstitutional escalation and global backlash.

5. Help matters but not when it’s packaged as humiliation or theatrical threats. If the United States genuinely wants to reduce killings and protect communities, there are constructive, lawful tools far more effective than bluster: intelligence sharing, targeted sanctions on financiers and corrupt officials, training and logistics support for Nigerian forces, satellite surveillance assistance, and transparent humanitarian aid. Threats of unilateral invasion push Abuja into defensive posturing, erode cooperation, and drive the very partners you need to fight extremists into retreat.

6. Your rhetoric fuels the very extremism you claim to oppose. When an outsider lashes out in terms of “wipe out” and “guns-a-blazing,” local leaders exploit that language to rally recruits: “See foreigners will attack us, come join us.” Heavy-handed threats validate the extremist narrative that the West is at war with Islam. That is not a theoretical risk, it is a proven recruitment tool. Do not pretend you don’t know that. (See Libya/Iraq aftermath )

What you should do instead of tweeting saber-rattling

If you are serious about protecting Christians (and all civilians) in Nigeria, demand and deliver the following and do it publicly:

• Intelligence, not indignation. Offer verified intelligence support to help Nigerian forces target militant leadership and logistics, with strict oversight and shared objectives.

• Targeted risk-based sanctions. Freeze assets of militia financiers, corrupt officials and trafficking networks not blanket cuts that punish civilians.

• Capacity, not conquest. Fund and fast-track airliftable medical teams, de-mining, aerial surveillance and body-worn cameras for troops tools that save lives without destabilising states.

• Rule of law. Condition any assistance on transparent investigations, prosecutions and safeguards that prevent human-rights abuses by security forces.

• Regional solutions. Coordinate with ECOWAS, the AU, and neighbouring states unilateral military action is neither legal nor effective in the long run.

Mr. President you can posture for your base with a few lines of menace. Or you can prevent more graves with measured, expert, accountable action. The two are not the same.And if you actually care about Nigerians Christian, Muslim, or otherwise stop the insults. Stop the performative war talk. Stop treating sovereign states like stage props for your headlines.

If your goal is to help, act like it: bring intelligence, money, and training not humiliation, empty threats, or another half-remembered “humanitarian” intervention that collapses a country and creates decades of suffering.

History keeps score. The Iraqs and Libyas of the world are a warning, not a template. Read it. Learn it. Lead differently.

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