US confirms troops on ground in Nigeria in renewed push against militants
Officials from both countries said the troops are not deployed alongside frontline Nigerian units, while the drones are conducting surveillance and not air strikes.

The US military has multiple MQ-9 drones operating in Nigeria alongside 200 troops to provide training and intelligence support to the military, which is fighting militants across the north, US and Nigerian officials told Reuters.
The troops are not integrated within Nigerian units on the frontline and the drones are collecting intelligence and not carrying out air strikes, officials from the two countries said.
However, the US deployment, which follows US air strikes targeting militants in northwest Nigeria in late 2025, shows the US getting back involved in tackling Daesh and al Qaeda-linked insurgencies that are spreading across West Africa.
The US military previously had a $100 million drone base in neighbouring Niger with about 1,000 troops monitoring militants across the Sahel region, but that was closed in 2024 after the Niger junta requested their departure, part of a broader rejection of western military support by countries in the Sahel region.
An assault by suicide bombers on a northeastern Nigerian garrison town this week showed how a 17-year insurgency there can still strike urban centres.
Meanwhile, militants have stepped up their attacks in the northwest, near the border with Benin and Niger, where a long-running banditry crisis risks mutating into another operating zone for militants.
A US defence official said the drones had been deployed alongside troops at the request of the Nigerians to collect intelligence. “We see this as a shared security threat,” the official said.
Major General Samaila Uba, director of defence information at Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters, confirmed that the US was operating assets from Bauchi airfield in the northeast.
“This support builds on the newly established US-Nigeria intelligence fusion cell, which continues to deliver actionable intelligence to our field commanders,” he told Reuters. “Our US partners remain in a strictly non-combat role, enabling operations led by Nigerian authorities.”

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