Dec 26, 2025
The REAL STORY Behind Trump's Attack On Nigeria
President Trump ordered an attack on Nigeria on Christmas day, citing a genocide against Christians.
- 18 minutes
I'm not going to start a war.
I'm going to stop wars.
No more wars, no more disruptions.
We will have prosperity
and we will have peace.
Under Trump, we will have no more wars,
no more disruptions, and we will
have prosperity and peace for all.
I am the candidate of peace, I am peace.
[00:00:17]
We are learning new details
about the deadly strike operation
that President Trump says he ordered on
on Islamic State terrorists in Nigeria.
Listen to this.
Yeah, we'll get into all of the claims
that they've made.
[00:00:35]
But Donald Trump, the peace president,
has once again delivered peace,
or at least pieces of people
and buildings blown apart by our weapons
and yet another country around the world,
because the peace president
seemingly can't go more than 2 or 3 weeks
without starting another foreign conflict.
[00:00:51]
In this particular case, as you saw,
it is in Nigeria
over what he is calling a genocide
against Christians in that country,
which we're going to dive into the facts,
see if we can figure out
what's really going on.
- But let's start with your $0.02.
- Yeah.
So wait till you see
what's actually happening in Nigeria.
[00:01:09]
This idea of Muslim versus Christian
is kind of hilarious.
There's some of that going on,
but there's such a wide variety.
I can't wait to tell you about it.
Now that I know all about Nigerian
politics and tribalism and bandits
and the different kinds of attacks
that are happening there.
[00:01:25]
So that's part of the story.
I think that, unfortunately,
Israel is another part of this story.
Even though it's Nigeria,
it's always Israel.
And I'll explain how,
and, and of course, the hypocrisy
of Trump on anti-war is enormous.
[00:01:42]
We have a poll about it, in a minute for
you and John's third or fourth cent here
is that he knows why this happened.
- And I'm very curious about that as well.
- Yeah.
Well, I'm glad that you have read up a lot
and become an expert on this topic.
I've read a little bit,
but I'm not an expert.
[00:01:58]
I thought that it would be elitist of me
to know more about this country.
We're going to war with
than the president does.
So I know next to nothing.
So I feel like I'm
on Trump's level with this.
But anyway, he posted this.
This is Christmas Day.
He launched this conflict. That's great.
[00:02:14]
Tonight, at my direction as commander
in Chief, we launched a powerful and
deadly strike against ISIS terrorist scum.
Saying that they are viciously killing
primarily innocent Christians
at levels not seen for many years
and even capital C centuries.
[00:02:31]
Blah blah blah.
He previously warned the terrorists,
the Department of War, as he calls it,
that's its preferred pronouns.
Pronouns, executed numerous perfect
strikes as only the United States
is capable of doing.
They're not going to let
radical Islamic terrorism prosper.
[00:02:47]
May God bless our military
and Merry Christmas to all,
including the dead terrorists.
That's.
I think he gets the holiday spirit.
I do think that he gets that.
So, look, we're going to dive into
the the facts about the supposed genocide.
[00:03:03]
Also, bear in mind we're going
to talk about the facts
about this being ISIS terrorists,
because that's not necessarily as cut
and dried as he would have you believe.
Either.
A lot of this feels pretty dishonest, but
let's see if we can rewind a little bit,
figure out how we got to the point
that the United States is launching.
What were it to happen to us?
We would label it, obviously as a war.
[00:03:22]
For some reason, when the United
States bombs a country, it's just
like a cool thing you do on Christmas Day.
It's not war mongering or anything.
But anyway, it seems like a Fox
News segment about a month and a half,
two months ago
was what kind of kicked this thing off.
And in this segment, we're going to show
you a bit, John Roberts had on Ryan Brown,
[00:03:40]
the CEO of Open Doors, us an organization
supporting persecuted Christians.
And, take a look at this.
You know, Open Doors keeps track
of Christians who are killed
around the world in religious violence.
Here's your Statistics for 2025,
4476 Christians murdered so far worldwide,
[00:04:00]
3100 of them in Nigeria.
Nigeria is a country
that the United States
is a fairly close relationship with.
Does this president need to step
up and do more, or does the United States
a large need to do more?
[00:04:16]
What could the U.S.
Do to try to stem the killings?
I love the distinction he makes
between the president doing more
and the United States doing more.
Like Donald Trump's
going to fly over there and deal with it
single handedly or something.
But anyway, they're obviously they're
hoping to get the United States
[00:04:31]
military involved more conflicts.
Good for Fox News, good for the defense
industry and all of that.
And almost immediately after that segment
aired, which Donald Trump was obviously
watching because he's never not watching
TV, he posted this on to Truth Social,
[00:04:46]
saying that if the Nigerian government
continues to allow the killing of
Christians, apparently the Christians are
the only ones that need to be protected.
The other people dying there,
it doesn't matter.
The USA will immediately stop
all aid and assistance in Nigeria and may.
This is going to be a literal verbatim
quote in case you're listening,
[00:05:03]
and may very well go into that now
disgraced country guns a blazin.
The president of the United States
says to completely wipe out
the Islamic terrorists who are committing
these horrible atrocities.
He's saying basically
there's cherished Christians warning
the Nigerian government better move fast.
[00:05:19]
So, he waited about six weeks.
I guess that's something.
And, they did these strikes,
killing at least five people,
leaving over 30 seriously wounded.
And I think at this point, Jake, we should
probably get into the conversation around
this, because the reason that he seems
to be interested in this is the reason
[00:05:35]
that Fox News was interested in it,
is that they can spin a very selective
interpretation of the conflict
to make it seem as if this is
people hunting down Christians.
And of course, the right is always
looking for opportunities to feel
that they are an aggrieved minority.
[00:05:51]
That's why they are saying this
about Nigeria.
It's why they have pretended
there's this genocide
against white farmers in South Africa.
On the damage report this morning,
I pointed out that I also think
it's convenient to them
to have these narratives at a time
when they've probably begun to feel,
[00:06:07]
after a couple of years
of what's going on with Gaza,
kind of feel like maybe they're
on the wrong side of this whole thing,
these people sticking up for Palestinian
kids who are being killed certainly
look like the good guys in this story.
Wouldn't it be good
if they had a conflict?
They could pretend puts them
on the right side of calling out genocide.
[00:06:25]
So what do you know?
What is a fairly complicated
civil conflict in Nigeria
gets reinterpreted as a genocide against
Christians, which is more palatable
for their domestic audience.
But what do you think?
Yeah.
So we're going to play a series of
macabre, fun, games here about this, okay.
[00:06:46]
Because all of this is disastrous,
but, we're gonna,
Nevertheless do a poll about it.
And I'm going to poll John.
And he doesn't know the geography
of Nigeria apparently, as well as I do.
So that'll be fun
and you can play along as well.
The first poll is on Titcombe,
and we're asking when Trump said
[00:07:05]
he was anti-war, what did he mean?
A I'm going to bomb Iran.
B I'm going to bomb Nigeria,
c I'm going to bomb Venezuela.
D I'm going to bomb every country
I can think of and see if I can still
get people to believe I'm anti-war.
[00:07:23]
Okay.
So okay. That's a tough one.
A lot of bombings
for the anti-war president.
So take your time
with that one on Titcombe.
All right.
Now, we move to, the interesting little,
thing that John alluded to there,
which was, well, they said on Fox News,
there's news there,
[00:07:42]
3100 Christians killed in Nigeria.
Now, they didn't say who killed him.
Oh, that's interesting.
So we're going to come back to that in the
midst of this, quiz and give you a sense
of what's happening in Nigeria.
First of all,
quick fun facts about Nigeria.
[00:07:59]
Split nearly evenly
between Christians and Muslims,
about 53% Muslim, 45% Christians.
Anytime there's a split like that,
you're going to have trouble.
No matter what the religions are
or the backgrounds or ethnicities are.
And there has been some trouble
among those clans.
[00:08:14]
But that is not the only thing
dividing Nigeria.
In fact, Nigeria is a gigantic country,
largest in Africa, 230 million people,
300 different languages spoken.
Now that's going to play a big role
in what we're going to describe here.
All right.
So, John, there are several
different areas of Nigeria.
[00:08:33]
There's the northeast
where there's Boko Haram, very dangerous
Muslim fundamentalist terrorist group.
Okay.
So their big problem in northeastern
Nigeria often attacking the Nigerian
government, the Nigerian government
has Muslims and Christians in it,
[00:08:49]
but it's again a majority Muslim country.
Nevertheless, Boko Haram is attacking
within that country
as Muslim fundamentalists tend to do right
when they go into jihad violent direction.
Okay, so then we've got in the southeast,
a massive separatist war that occurred
[00:09:06]
that killed nearly a million people.
And so a lot of Christians died there.
Now it's Christian separatists
that have done that war.
So take that for what it might be.
Now we go to the northwest
and the northwest.
There's bandits.
[00:09:22]
And so the bandits are of
different varieties tribes, clans, etc.,
and they mainly they do
a lot of different kind of crime.
It originally started as a vigilante
group, but then developed into, basically
a mob mentality, which is usually
what happens once you go towards violence.
[00:09:38]
So they started doing different crimes,
including kidnapings, and there
they have kidnaped 52 Christians,
out of a Catholic school recently.
So that's your anti-Muslim now.
Turns out they also kidnaped
25 Muslim students from a muslim school
[00:09:57]
because they're banditos.
They're bandits. Okay.
So then you go to central Nigeria,
and in central Nigeria, we have a war
between the farmers and the herders.
I mean, you want to talk about
old school herders versus farmers,
like the oldest battle there is?
[00:10:12]
It happened in Central Asia.
It happened in Scotland.
And so they're doing that battle
and they're hacking away at each other.
Now, the problem is
that the farmers are largely Christian.
The herders are largely Muslim.
So that gets into some tribal
and religious issues.
But what people noticed is actually the
people grabbing the land the most are just
[00:10:31]
wealthy folks from Nigeria who are using
the farming and the herding
and the Christianity and the Muslim
and all that stuff as an excuse
to do more land acquisition.
Okay, so America now, John, out of all
those different problematic places
[00:10:46]
in Nigeria, where do you think we bombed
the northeast, the northwest,
the southeast or central Nigeria?
Now, a lot of Christians dying
in a lot of those areas.
So and a lot of Muslims dying
in a lot of those areas.
- So where do you think we bombed?
- Well, I'm going to be honest.
[00:11:03]
I was not expecting to be quizzed
and now I'm really second guessing myself.
But I was fairly certain up until
about 90s ago that it was the northwest.
Yeah.
You are correct.
We bombed the bandits in northwest.
[00:11:18]
Nice job.
So the bandits have no religious,
you know, affiliation necessarily.
Like I said, they kidnaped Christian
and Muslim students for ransom.
They're mainly just criminals.
Boko Haram in the northeast.
We didn't bomb them.
[00:11:34]
The people that killed a million people
in the southeast are mainly Christians.
So we didn't bomb them.
So we and the landowners that are stealing
everything in the middle of Nigeria.
We certainly didn't bomb them.
Obviously not.
Right?
Well, first of all, Jake, can we just
point out and if you're MAGA or whatever,
[00:11:51]
feel free to disagree in the comments.
Do you believe that Donald Trump
could have extemporaneously
given a cogent breakdown of the conflicts
across Nigeria like Jake just did?
He wasn't reading that off of a script.
Do you think Donald Trump
could have done that?
[00:12:06]
And if he had done it, do you think
he could have done it without referencing
winning Pennsylvania three times in a row
or something like that?
Come on.
Anyway, so, you know, look,
forget saying it extemporaneously.
Does Donald Trump know 10% of that? Yeah.
No. And so apparently, he saw reported
on Fox News a little while back
[00:12:26]
that said that they were
killing Christians in Nigeria.
He's like, so let's bomb it.
So that's part of the answer.
I think Israel is part of the answer.
But, John,
you said you had part of the answer.
Is it is it the distraction you
mentioned earlier or is it something else?
No. I mean, I'm only about 30% serious.
[00:12:42]
But six weeks ago, he says, you know,
if you keep killing Christians
or whatever, we're going to do this.
That's quite a while ago.
What's closer Nicki Minaj appearing
at the Turning Point USA thing
and talking once again about genocide
against Christians in Nigeria.
[00:12:59]
Now she paid a price for it.
She supposedly lost something like
10 million followers on Instagram and has
in fact fled Instagram following that.
But perhaps she got her ultimate goal,
which is she called Donald Trump
hot on stage, fluffed his ego a little bit
and her number one political issue.
[00:13:15]
All of a sudden,
the American government snaps into action,
starts doing strikes within like six days
of her appearance on stage.
Yeah.
- So I'm just.
- Yeah.
So your theory dovetails with mine
to some degree.
So, under the rubric of everything
is Israel.
[00:13:33]
So here, I think the number one group
pushing this, in America is Israel first.
And why do I say that?
Number one,
my evidence, among other things.
And it's just circumstantial,
as you'll see here.
I'm certainly not claiming
I have definitive proof and.
[00:13:50]
ET cetera.
Right.
But, number one, social media reaction.
So before the bombings,
there was a lot of talk of.
Oh, yeah, for genocide.
Why aren't we doing anything
about the genocide in, in, place x, y z.
Right.
They've been saying that for a long time.
[00:14:05]
And recently,
the momentum picked up for Nigeria.
Oh, forget the genocide in Gaza.
Real genocide is by banditos
in northwestern Nigeria.
No, it's the the bandits, the Nigerians.
They're the real terrorists.
And so and and and it's not to say
there isn't terrorism in Nigeria.
[00:14:23]
There is. Right.
And and there could be there was, I think
8000 people killed overall last year.
I think more Muslims than Christians
in Nigeria, if I remember that.
Right. But just don't quote me on that.
You can look it up yourself.
- We can show the.
- Data going back to 2020.
[00:14:40]
If we bring up graphic eight,
as you discuss it, does the breakdown
of the last five years basically.
Okay, great.
So let's show that so you can see
the real facts and the exact facts.
Right.
And so you're seeing
that there on the screen.
Meanwhile obviously in Gaza
there's 70,000 dead at a bare minimum.
[00:14:55]
But the idea here is distract.
And and the Israelis believe that things
have gotten religious, partly because they
pushed the religion angle here nonstop.
If you blame Israel,
you're blaming the Jews.
You're blaming the Jews, right?
I make everything about religion.
It's a dirty Muslims.
[00:15:11]
The real problem is the Muslims.
And I told you three months ago
there was a propaganda campaign started
and all of Israel did it first,
did it at the same time.
The real issue isn't Israel.
The real issue is Muslim terrorists.
And Israel is at the forefront
of protecting you
against the dirty, savage Muslims.
[00:15:27]
And the bigotry towards Muslims
went into hyperdrive, hyperdrive
with no brakes in the car at all.
And now this is another wave of no.
The real terrorists are the Muslims
in Nigeria and if you care about religion,
you should care about protecting the
Christians in Nigeria from the Muslims.
[00:15:44]
Remember, don't think about Israel.
Don't think about our slaughter of the
Muslims, only care about hating Muslims.
And we've got a good opportunity here in
Nigeria where we can get you to hate them
and pretend that it's only violence
against Christians and that
[00:16:00]
that's the real problem in America.
And of course, John, among the hundred
things wrong with that logic is yes, but
we're not funding any of that in Nigeria.
We're not whatever atrocious attacks are
happening by Muslims or Christians or
bandits or farmers or herders in Nigeria.
[00:16:15]
We didn't pay for any of that, whereas we
paid for all of Israel's genocide and all
of their war crimes and all of their wars.
Yeah, it is ironic to be told by people
who have some sort of biological
opposition to ever exercising empathy,
that those of us using it actively
should be using even more of it
[00:16:32]
in more circumstances.
First of all, lead by example and not
just opportunistically like in this.
And you're totally right.
It's not like, first of all, we should
acknowledge conflicts in other areas.
But as you point out,
it's not exactly the same thing.
We are much more directly implicated
in one of these attacks than the others.
[00:16:50]
Also, it's the sheer amount of death
over a very small period of time.
There are a lot of substantive differences
between these conflicts.
But let me also say, in closing,
like the fact that if you actually care
about the Christians that have died, it is
a tragedy that these people have died.
[00:17:05]
It's just an equal tragedy
to the tragedy of the more Muslims
who have died in that conflict.
It's terrible that all
of these people are dying.
And it would be one thing
if Donald Trump was saying, you know, I've
been really paying attention to Nigeria.
There's a lot of chaos.
I feel terrible for that country.
So we're going to get involved
and we're going to try
[00:17:22]
to do the right thing and take down some
of these bandits or whatever.
But that's not what he's doing.
He's not being honest.
And does anyone actually believe
that he that he even gives a damn
about the Christians of Nigeria?
You think Donald Trump
would spend five minutes
talking to a group of Nigerian Christians.
Do you think he actually gives it
any more than he cares about
[00:17:39]
white farmers from South Africa?
He doesn't even care about that.
It's a convenient thing that he knows
some of the conspiratorial people
in his base love to talk about on Twitter,
so it's easy.
He can say, Pete Hegseth,
go bomb him or whatever, I don't care.
I don't want to hear anything about it.
It's the dishonesty and how obviously
they're using people's lives or deaths
[00:17:58]
just to distract or to earn some points.
It's just gross.
And to then hear people like,
get like getting pissed off at us
because we care about what's happening in
Gaza when this is clearly so artificial,
so like just self-serving.
[00:18:14]
The way that they approach this,
being told that we're not exercising
empathy in the right way is disgusting.
Apologies. I know that we're over.
Any final thoughts
before we go to the break?
Nope.
Other than don't go to war with Nigeria,
every time you ring the bell below,
an angel gets its wings.
[00:18:30]
Totally not true, but it does
keep you updated on our live shows.
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