American President, Donald Trump
By Our Reporter
No fewer than three United States military aircraft landed in Nigeria between Thursday and Friday, findings by Sunday PUNCH have revealed.
The aircraft, it was gathered, landed at military bases in Borno and other northeastern states.
Senior officers at the Defence Headquarters disclosed that the aircraft carried ammunition sent to Nigeria by the American government.⁰
The officers, in separate interviews with our correspondents, said the development was part of US interventions to support Nigeria in the fight against insecurity.
‘Following Nigeria-US bilateral talks on security, the American government will not only deploy soldiers but also provide necessary logistics, including ammunition, to fight the insurgents’, one of the officers who spoke on condition of anonymity said.
Another high ranking officer explained that the delivery was part of operational logistics, noting that the military often requires replenishment of ammunition after operations.
‘I know that recently US aircraft came to supply ammunition for our platforms, and that wasn’t the first time. So, what you are saying may be true, though I have not been officially briefed.
‘We go for operations and use different calibres of ammunition, which need to be replaced.
‘The US and the Nigerian government, under the coordination of the NSA, are working together to end insecurity in the country. So, we should expect more deployments of aircraft and troops’, he added.
The New York Times on Saturday reported that US military aircraft landed in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, on Thursday night.
By Friday evening, the paper reported that three planes could be seen at the base, with equipment being offloaded from one.
‘These initial flights are the vanguard of what will be a stream of C-17 transport flights into three main locations across Nigeria’, a US Department of Defense official told the newspaper.
An X account @mobilisingniger, operated by a user who claimed to be a counter-terrorism expert, also disclosed on Friday that a US Air Force military transport aircraft C30J landed at the Kaduna International Airport after departing from Ghana.
It suggested that the Kaduna Depot might serve as a potential training hub for US personnel deployed to train the Nigerian military.
‘A US Air Force military transport aircraft C30J has landed at Kaduna International Airport after departing from Ghana earlier this (Friday) evening. The movement is fuelling speculation that US personnel may utilise the Kaduna Depot as a potential training hub in collaboration with the Nigerian military. This signals a potential deepening of US–Nigeria security engagement amid ongoing regional security challenges’, the post read.
Another user, Brant Philip, who claimed to be a tracker on X, said there had been a ‘massive delivery of equipment’ to the Maiduguri Airbase, Borno State.
‘The US Air Force C-130J-30 cargo aircraft flew to northeast Nigeria today (Friday) from Accra, Ghana, following the same route as the two previous C-17A, a mass delivery of equipment seems to be ongoing’, he wrote.
The Director of Defence Media Operations, Michael Onoja, had yet to respond to an inquiry on the matter as of the time of filing this report.
It would be recalled that the United States President, Donald Trump, had in 2025 declared that he would send military forces to Nigeria if the government failed to stop what he described as genocide against Christians.
Following his threat and the declaration of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern, the US carried out an airstrike on Islamic State fighters in Sokoto State on Christmas Day.
Both the US and Nigeria have since deepened engagements on enhancing security in the country.
Earlier, it was reported that 200 US officers would be deployed in Nigeria.
The New York Times reported that the first wave of personnel had arrived in the country.
It stated that the development marked the beginning of a deployment of the 200 American intelligence analysts, advisers and trainers to assist the country’s armed forces in targeted counterterrorism operations, partly aimed at protecting Nigerian Christians.
The New York Times further disclosed that several additional aircraft carrying troops and equipment were expected to land over the weekend, with the flow continuing in the coming weeks.

