Across the blood-soaked plains of northern Nigeria, the world is witnessing a genocide that few dare to name.
Christian villages are wiped out overnight. Churches are torched to the ground.
Priests are executed for their faith. Families are hacked to death in their sleep.
Over 62,000 Nigerian Christians have been killed since 2000 — an atrocity the mainstream media barely acknowledges.
In Plateau State this year, more than a hundred believers were murdered in a single week. Survivors fled barefoot, their homes in flames, their Bibles scattered in the dirt.
This is not random violence. It’s systematic extermination, carried out in the name of God while Western diplomats look away.
Faith-based networks across America are demanding action.
They see clearly what the establishment refuses to say: this is a war on Christianity, and silence is complicity.
Behind the slaughter in Nigeria lies an ideology — the doctrine of the Brotherhood. Born from the Muslim Brotherhood, it preaches that killing Christians and Jews is not only acceptable but holy.
It’s the root theology behind Boko Haram, ISIS-West Africa, and the radical militias torching villages across the Sahel. This doctrine poisons minds, turning faith into fanaticism and prayer into warfare.
In this twisted worldview, Christians are infidels to be purged, not neighbors to be loved.
Each murdered pastor, each burned church, is part of a deliberate campaign of terror justified by religious extremism. Western bureaucrats call it “ethnic conflict.”
But it’s not about ethnicity — its about erasing Christianity from Africa.
Sudan: The Crucible of a New Evil
Nowhere is this doctrine more dangerous than in Sudan, where General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan has turned his regime into the Brotherhood’s newest fortress — and Iran’s newest ally.
After decades of instability, Sudan stands at a crossroads between democracy and darkness. Yet al-Burhan has chosen darkness.
He has resurrected Islamist militias, purged dissenting officers, and surrounded himself with loyalists who share his Brotherhood ideology.
His defiance has already tested U.S. diplomacy. On Sept. 12, the Quad — the United States, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt — issued a statement declaring that “the Muslim Brotherhood must have no role in Sudan’s future.”
It called for a ceasefire between al-Burhan’s forces and the rival Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and for a transfer of power to a civilian administration.
But al-Burhan’s response was open contempt. Instead of laying down arms, his troops launched new offensives around Omdurman and the eastern corridor, bombarding cities and blocking humanitarian aid.
This was not defiance born of strength but of impunity. For years, al-Burhan has consolidated absolute control — appointing loyal ministers, reshuffling the general staff, reintegrating Islamist militias into the army, and removing every officer who questioned his rule.
This pattern has doomed every reform in Sudan’s modern history: promises of democracy followed by purges, promises of peace followed by new wars.
Every time, the generals simply rebrand their dictatorship in civilian clothing.
Now, with Iran’s return to Sudan, the stakes have multiplied. Tehran is sending drones, weapons, and “military advisers” into Sudanese territory, transforming the country into a bridgehead for extremism on the Red Sea.
This is the same regime that armed Hamas before its Oct. 7, 2023 massacre, that finances Hezbollah in Lebanon, and that equips Houthi rebels in Yemen.
Its goal is unmistakable: to dominate the Red Sea and put American forces in East Africa within striking distance.
Sudan’s coastline is one of the world’s most strategic corridors for trade and energy.
The United States maintains vital bases in Djibouti and across East Africa to protect these routes. If Sudan becomes an Iranian satellite, those bases become targets, and American deterrence could collapse overnight.
President Trump understands how to leverage American power without endless wars.
He would condition all U.S. assistance on measurable progress toward civilian governance and real security reform. Aid should flow only when Sudan’s generals yield authority to a civilian, technocratic transitional government — one tasked with rebuilding institutions and preparing for free elections within a defined period.
At the same time, Washington should demand humanitarian corridors, protected and monitored to ensure food and medicine reach civilians.
This is how the U.S. reclaims moral leadership in an age of cynicism — and how President Trump can once again show that when America leads with conviction, tyranny trembles.
President Trump has never been afraid to name evil for what it is.
He crushed ISIS, took out Qassem Soleimani, and defended Israel when others bowed to pressure. He made faith a foundation of foreign policy and proved that peace through strength is not a slogan — it’s a strategy.
The genocide of Christians in Nigeria, the rise of the Brotherhood, and Iran’s infiltration of Sudan are not separate crises. They are chapters in the same war against Judeo-Christian civilization. Stopping them will require the same resolve that broke the caliphate and the same moral clarity that once again made America great.
President Trump once declared, “America will never turn its back on those who look to us for hope.”
Today, millions of Christians across Africa are looking. They know that the difference between life and death, between tyranny and freedom, may depend on America’s will to act.
The time to act is now. The man to act is Donald J. Trump.
Ahmed Charai is publisher of the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, TV Abraham, and Radio Abraham. He serves on the boards of several prominent institutions, including the Atlantic Council, the Center for the National Interest, and the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He is also an international councilor and a member of the Advisory Board at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Read more of Ahmed Charai’s reports here.
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