In a rare and significant projection of American naval power into West Africa, the USS Paul Ignatius (DDG-117) conducted a precision missile strike against ISIS-affiliated militants in northwestern Nigeria on the evening of Christmas Day. A U.S. defense official confirmed to Reuters that the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer launched approximately a dozen BGM-109 Tomahawk Land Attack Cruise Missiles (TLAM) from the Gulf of Guinea, targeting a remote terrorist encampment that had been deemed inaccessible for conventional Nigerian ground forces.

The operation, carried out with the full authorization and support of the Nigerian government, marks a major escalation in the U.S. counter-terrorism posture in the region. The strikes specifically targeted a cluster of camps in Sokoto State, a region that has become a hotbed for insurgent activity and banditry.
“This was a target that required a level of precision and reach that only the United States Navy could provide at this moment,” the defense official stated. The decision to utilize sea-based cruise missiles rather than manned aircraft or drones underscores the high-value nature of the targets and the desire to minimize risk to U.S. personnel while delivering a “decisive blow” on a symbolic date.
The strikes align with recent directives from the White House prioritizing the protection of vulnerable religious communities in the Sahel. President Trump, writing on Truth Social, framed the Christmas Day operation as a direct response to the “vicious killing of innocent Christians” by ISIS-West Africa Province (ISWAP) and its affiliates. “We hit them hard. Every camp got decimated,” the President noted, characterizing the mission as a “Christmas present” to the victims of terror.
Nigerian authorities have corroborated the success of the mission. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Abuja issued a statement praising the “precision hits” and reaffirming the country’s “structured security cooperation” with Washington. While the Nigerian Air Force has ramped up its own aerial campaigns, the integration of U.S. naval firepower suggests a deepening operational partnership as the two nations confront a metastasizing jihadist threat in the borderlands near Niger.











