AfricaWorld Conflicts

Nigeria-US Joint Strikes Kill 175 ISIS Militants, Borno State

REPORT: SITUATION REPORT
ORIGINATOR: STRATEGY BATTLES
ANALYST: M.V. THORNE

Strategy Battles : Nigeria / ISWAP Counter-Terrorism Campaign

175 ISIS MILITANTS KILLED IN US-NIGERIA JOINT STRIKES, BORNO STATE
Global ISIS No. 2 eliminated 16 May. Follow-on raids 17 and 18 May destroy financing and logistics networks. Nigeria’s air-power record under scrutiny after separate Zamfara market strike kills over 100 civilians.

PUBLISHED: 19 MAY 2026  |  BORNO STATE, NORTHEAST NIGERIA  |  COUNTER-TERRORISM CAMPAIGN

🔴 175 ISIS KILLED
🟡 ISIS GLOBAL NO. 2 DEAD
🔵 AFRICOM CONFIRMED

Threat Level Assessment

LEVEL 4 OF 5, SERIOUS

ROUTINEMONITORDEVELOPINGSERIOUSCRISIS

✓ OSINT Verified Report

Sourced from Nigeria Defence Headquarters statement (19 May), AFRICOM press releases (16, 17, 18 May), Stars and Stripes, CBC News, Al Jazeera, Associated Press, and Asharq Al-Awsat wire. The 175-casualty total is attributed to the Nigerian Defence Headquarters and is not independently verified by external battlefield assessment. Al-Minuki death confirmed by both the US and Nigerian governments; a contested prior claim of his 2024 death is noted and flagged. Tumfa market civilian casualty claim sourced to Amnesty International and corroborated by AP and Red Cross; Nigerian military disputes the figures. Single-source items flagged purple.

Verified By

Marcus V. Thorne

Lead Editor, Strategy Battles

19 May 2026

BLUF

Bottom Line Up Front

US Africa Command and Nigerian forces killed 175 ISIS West Africa Province militants across a series of joint strikes in Borno State’s northeast between 16 and 19 May 2026, according to Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters. The centrepiece of the campaign was the 16 May elimination of Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, described by both governments as ISIS’s global second-in-command and director of global operations, in a precision air-land operation in Metele in Borno State at grid reference 33PUR37789 15051. Follow-on kinetic strikes on 17 and 18 May targeted further ISIS formations in the same area. The operation is the most significant US-Nigerian counter-terrorism action since the Christmas Day 2025 strikes in Sokoto and reflects Africa’s emergence as ISIS’s primary operational theatre, accounting for 86% of the group’s global activity in the first quarter of 2026 per ACLED data.

Key Judgments

01
HIGH CONFIDENCE

Abu-Bilal al-Minuki was killed on 16 May in Metele, Borno State, in a joint US-Nigerian operation. The killing is confirmed by AFRICOM, the Nigerian Army, US President Trump, and Nigerian President Tinubu. Al Jazeera, CBC News, Stars and Stripes, and the Associated Press have all independently reported the Nigerian military’s after-action account. The corroboration level across government and wire-service sources is high; there is no credible counter-evidence of survival.

02
MODERATE CONFIDENCE

The 175-militant total casualty figure across the campaign is credible in its general magnitude but should be treated as an official claim rather than independently verified fact. Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters issued it as a cumulative assessment; AFRICOM’s own press releases from 16, 17, and 18 May confirm the strikes took place and caused casualties but do not publish specific kill counts. The 20-plus figure cited by some outlets for the 17 May raid alone, taken alongside the AFRICOM and Nigerian Army confirmations of the 16 May operation, is directionally consistent with a three-day campaign reaching triple figures.

03
LOW CONFIDENCE

Whether the killing of al-Minuki will produce a durable degradation of ISWAP’s operational capacity. Analysts at the European Council on Foreign Relations and GW Program on Extremism cited by Al Jazeera note that ISWAP has repeatedly absorbed high-value leadership losses and reconstituted within months. Al-Minuki managed global funding and media operations; his deputy Abd al-Wahhab, who reportedly died in subsequent raids, handled attack coordination and propaganda. Both roles are fillable, though the simultaneous removal of two senior figures and wider lieutenants creates more immediate friction than a single decapitation strike.

175

ISIS Killed, 16-19 May

3

Consecutive Strike Days

86%

ISIS Global Activity in Africa, Q1 2026

0

US/Nigerian Casualties

📍 Borno State / Northeast Nigeria : US-Nigeria ISIS Strike Campaign, 16-19 May 2026

Map of northeastern Nigeria showing Metele in Borno State at MGRS 33PUR37789 15051 where US-Nigeria joint strikes killed ISIS global No. 2 Abu-Bilal al-Minuki on 16 May 2026, with follow-on raids 17-18 May, and Tumfa market in Zamfara State at 32PKV28549 10797 where a disputed Nigerian airstrike killed over 100 civilians on 11 May

Datum WGS84, UTM Zones 32P/33P. Strike coordinates approximate per public reporting. Map: Strategy Battles / OSINT. Cross-check reference: Maiduguri city centre, MGRS 33PTP99652 10173.

📍 METELE, BORNO STATE: 16 MAY PRIMARY STRIKE

MGRS: 33PUR37789 15051

13.7000°N   13.5000°E

Approximate point. Lake Chad Basin. Air-land operation 00:01-04:00 local. Al-Minuki compound. No US/Nigerian casualties.

📍 METELE AREA: 17-18 MAY FOLLOW-ON RAIDS

MGRS: 33PUR43263 26080

13.8000°N   13.5500°E

Approximate area. AFRICOM confirmed kinetic strikes targeting ISIS formations near the Nigeria-Niger-Chad border triangle. 20+ killed per Nigeria Defence HQ in 17 May raid alone.

📍 MAIDUGURI, BORNO STATE: CROSS-CHECK REFERENCE

MGRS: 33PTP99652 10173

11.8459°N   13.1609°E

Borno State capital. Theater Command Operation Lafiya Dole headquarters. Metele strike zone lies approximately 210km north-northeast of Maiduguri city centre. MGRS grid orientation reference.

📍 TUMFA MARKET, ZURMI, ZAMFARA STATE

MGRS: 32PKV28549 10797

12.7500°N   6.5000°E

Approximate point. Zurmi district, Zamfara State. 11 May airstrike. Amnesty International: 100+ civilians killed. Nigerian military disputes civilian casualty figures. Red Cross confirms strike and multiple deaths.

SITREP Timeline : US-Nigeria Counter-ISIS Campaign, Dec 2025 to May 2026

25 DEC 2025
US Navy destroyer USS Paul Ignatius fires Tomahawk cruise missiles at Islamic State sites in Sokoto State. Trump orders strike, citing failure to protect Christians. First direct US kinetic action in Nigeria.
3 FEB 2026
Advance team of US troops arrives in Nigeria in a train-and-advise role. US Africa Command states forces will not take a direct military role and will operate under Nigerian command authority.
16 FEB 2026
AFRICOM deploys an additional 100 troops to Nigeria. Total US deployment expected to reach approximately 200 personnel. US presence focused on intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and training.
11 MAY 2026
Nigerian Air Force airstrike hits Tumfa market in Zurmi district, Zamfara State. Amnesty International reports at least 100 civilians killed; Red Cross confirms “multiple” deaths. Nigerian military denies civilian casualty claims. Independent investigation called for.
16 MAY 00:01L
Precision air-land operation in Metele, Borno State, eliminates Abu-Bilal al-Minuki (director of global operations, ISIS) and multiple senior lieutenants including Abd al-Wahhab, Abu Musa al-Mangawi, and Abu al-Muthanna al-Muhajir. Operation runs 00:01 to 04:00 local. No US or Nigerian casualties.
17-18 MAY
AFRICOM and Nigerian forces conduct additional kinetic strikes in the Metele area on both consecutive days. Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters reports over 20 militants killed in the 17 May raid. AFRICOM confirms no US or Nigerian personnel harmed on either day.
19 MAY
Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters publishes cumulative assessment: 175 ISIS militants eliminated across the campaign. Checkpoints, weapons caches, logistics hubs, and financing networks destroyed. AFRICOM states “The removal of these terrorists diminishes the group’s capacity to plan attacks.” Campaign assessed as ongoing.

🔴 The 16 May Strike

A Precision Air-Land Operation in Metele Kills ISIS’s Global Operations Director

At approximately grid reference 33PUR37789 15051 (13.7000°N, 13.5000°E) in the Lake Chad Basin near the town of Metele in Borno State’s far northeast, a joint US-Nigerian precision air-land operation on the night of 16 May eliminated Abu-Bilal al-Minuki alongside several of his senior lieutenants. The Nigerian Army described the raid as beginning at 00:01 local time and concluding around 04:00, an operation scope consistent with a compound assault rather than a standalone airstrike. AFRICOM confirmed the initial assessment the same day: multiple terrorists killed, including al-Minuki as director of global operations for ISIS. No US service members were harmed.

US President Trump announced the operation on Truth Social late Friday, characterising it as a “meticulously planned and very complex mission” and describing al-Minuki as “the most active terrorist in the world.” Nigerian President Bola Tinubu confirmed in a statement posted to X that al-Minuki, also known as Abu-Mainok, was killed along with several lieutenants during a strike on his compound in the Lake Chad Basin. Both governments confirmed the operation was conducted at Trump’s direction and with the explicit authorisation of the Nigerian government.

Al-Minuki was a Nigerian citizen sanctioned by the US Treasury as a specially designated global terrorist in 2023. AFRICOM described him as having provided strategic guidance to the ISIS global network on media operations, financial operations, weapons development, and drone manufacturing. He was also linked to the 2018 kidnapping of more than 100 schoolgirls in Dapchi, Yobe State. A note on the public record: at least one Nigerian outlet has cited a prior claim that al-Minuki was killed by Nigerian troops in 2024. Both governments assert the 16 May operation was the confirmed elimination; Strategy Battles treats this as verified based on the dual-government confirmation, AFRICOM’s formal after-action release, and independent wire-service corroboration, while noting the earlier claim exists and has not been formally retracted.

🟡 The Follow-On Campaign

Three Consecutive Days of Kinetic Strikes Destroy Logistics, Financing, and Personnel Networks

AFRICOM issued separate press releases confirming kinetic strikes on 17 and 18 May 2026, both in the same broad area of northeastern Nigeria at approximately 33PUR43263 26080 (13.8000°N, 13.5500°E). Both statements confirmed intelligence drove target selection and that no US or Nigerian personnel were harmed. Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters, in its consolidated 19 May statement, said the operations over the three-day window destroyed ISIS checkpoints, weapons caches, logistics hubs, and financing networks across the Lake Chad Basin operating area.

The named targets in the follow-on raids included Abd al-Wahhab, identified as an ISWAP commander overseeing attack planning and propaganda; Abu Musa al-Mangawi; and Abu al-Muthanna al-Muhajir, described as a senior media operative and close associate of al-Minuki. The cumulative elimination of the group’s No. 2 global figure and at least three additional named commanders in 72 hours represents the deepest blow to ISWAP’s identifiable command layer since the group’s ascent in the Lake Chad Basin region in the mid-2010s.

AFRICOM Commander Gen. Dagvin R.M. Anderson, testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, credited the Nigerian military with a central intelligence role. He told lawmakers that the Nigerians had identified the target, helped gather intelligence, and provided the support necessary to complete the mission. That framing matters: it places the intelligence pipeline’s primary ownership in Abuja rather than Washington, giving the Nigerian government political agency in the operation and insulating the partnership from domestic criticism of foreign overreach.

Maj.-Gen. Samaila Uba, Nigeria Defence Headquarters Spokesperson, 19 May 2026

“As of 19 May, assessments indicate that 175 ISIS militants have been eliminated from the battlefield.”

🔵 The Africa Pivot

Africa Now Hosts 86% of ISIS Global Activity. Borno State Is the Group’s Most Active Theatre.

The strategic backdrop to the Metele operation is the accelerating geographic consolidation of ISIS in Africa following the collapse of its territorial caliphate across Iraq and Syria. ACLED data published in the first quarter of 2026 puts 86% of ISIS’s global activity on the African continent. The Lake Chad Basin, covering parts of Nigeria, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon, is one of the two primary nodes of that activity alongside the Sahel corridor. ISWAP operates dozens of small, shifting camps across Lake Chad’s islands and the Borno bush; the group’s ability to survive the loss of its commander for three-plus years after the 2018 disappearance of predecessor Mamman Nur underscores the structural resilience analysts warn against underestimating.

Al-Minuki had been under US sanctions since 2023, meaning Washington had tracked him as a designated global terrorist for at least three years before the 16 May strike. His survival for that period, despite the designation, is itself a measure of the operational security challenge in the Lake Chad environment. Analysts at GW Program on Extremism cited by Al Jazeera note that he relied on courier-based communications, no smartphones, and constant movement between camps. Trump’s reference to “sources who kept us informed” points to sustained human intelligence penetration of al-Minuki’s inner network: the most difficult and most decisive form of intelligence to develop against a target with al-Minuki’s operational discipline.

AFRICOM’s Gen. Anderson also told the Senate Armed Services Committee that six of the at least ten foreign terrorist organisations the State Department recognises on the African continent are ISIS affiliates. He requested additional congressional investment in non-traditional ISR and force protection technologies, and noted that China views Africa as a second continent for resource extraction and strategic positioning. The counter-terrorism mission in Nigeria is therefore not solely a function of the ISIS threat; it sits within a broader US posture in West Africa that is also tracking Chinese and Russian influence operations across the Sahel.

⚠ The Civilian Dimension

A Market Strike in Zamfara, 100 Civilian Deaths, and the Question Nigeria’s Military Has Not Answered

Eight days before the Metele operation, on 11 May 2026, a Nigerian Air Force airstrike struck Tumfa market in Zurmi district, Zamfara State, at approximately grid reference 32PKV28549 10797 (12.7500°N, 6.5000°E). Amnesty International reported at least 100 civilians killed; Red Cross official Ibrahim Bello Garba confirmed the strike to the Associated Press and said “multiple civilians” were killed, adding that in one village alone 80 people were buried and there was “no evidence that any of those people killed is a bandit.” The Nigerian military denied the civilian casualty claims. The Nigerian Air Force had not issued a formal statement at the time of this report’s publication.

The Tumfa strike was the second market bombing in Zamfara within a single month; a previous incident at Jilli market had drawn similar calls for investigation. Amnesty International has repeatedly cited an absence of coordination between Nigerian air assets and ground forces as the structural cause of these incidents. The Nigerian military’s standard position is that targets were members of armed groups. In Zamfara, the operating environment is complicated by the fact that both bandits and civilians use the same market infrastructure, a ground truth that the Zurmi community leader confirmed explicitly to press.

These incidents sit in parallel with the Borno campaign and do not diminish the military value of the Metele operation, but they do present the strategic problem in its full complexity. The US is deepening a partnership with a military that is simultaneously conducting some of the most significant joint counter-terrorism operations in the region and facing serious unresolved allegations of civilian harm in its domestic air campaign. How Washington manages that tension will shape both the sustainability of the AFRICOM footprint in Nigeria and the broader legitimacy of the counter-ISIS mission in African public opinion.

Source Reliability Matrix

NATO grading: REL A (reliable) to F (unreliable). CRED 1 (confirmed) to 6 (cannot judge).

AFRICOM press releases, 16-18 May

REL A
CRED 1

US government primary source. Confirmed strikes; does not publish granular kill counts.

Nigeria Defence Headquarters statement, 19 May

REL A
CRED 2

Official Nigerian government source for the 175 casualty total. Internally consistent but not independently verified by external battlefield assessment.

Stars and Stripes / CBC / Al Jazeera / Asharq Al-Awsat

REL A
CRED 1

Multiple independent wire and news service confirmations of the 16 May strike and al-Minuki’s death. Consistent across sources.

Amnesty International / Red Cross (Tumfa market)

REL A
CRED 2

Strike confirmed by Red Cross official to AP. Amnesty figure of 100+ cited by AP and Guardian Nigeria. Nigerian military disputes civilian casualty figures; no independent battlefield verification available.

2024 prior al-Minuki death claim (unretracted)

REL C
CRED 5

A prior claim of al-Minuki’s death in 2024 has not been publicly retracted. Dual-government confirmation on 16 May overrides it, but the existence of the earlier claim is noted for completeness.

Strategy Battles Assessment

The Metele operation is the most significant single US-Nigerian counter-terrorism action against ISIS to date, but structural resilience and the parallel civilian harm crisis mean the strategic verdict will not be written in 72 hours.

✓ What We Know

AFRICOM and Nigerian forces conducted three consecutive days of kinetic strikes in Borno State between 16 and 18 May. Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, ISIS’s global director of operations and the group’s designated No. 2, was killed in Metele on 16 May alongside at least three other named senior figures. Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters puts the cumulative toll at 175 militants eliminated. Africa accounted for 86% of ISIS global activity in Q1 2026 per ACLED. The US currently has approximately 200 troops in a train-and-advise role in Nigeria. A separate Nigerian airstrike on 11 May in Zamfara killed over 100 civilians per Amnesty International and the Red Cross; the Nigerian military denies civilian casualty claims.

? What We Do Not Know

The specific breakdown of US versus Nigerian roles across the three-day operation; AFRICOM has not published granular role attribution. Whether the 175 total can be independently verified outside official Nigerian figures. Who ISWAP will designate as al-Minuki’s successor and on what timeline. Whether the cascade of leadership losses, four named commanders in 72 hours, degrades the group’s operational tempo meaningfully or triggers a consolidation period followed by increased attack activity. The status of any independent investigation into the Tumfa market airstrike.

☉ What To Watch

ISWAP attack frequency in the weeks following the leadership decapitation: a drop would confirm temporary operational disruption, a surge would confirm the resilience dynamic analysts warn about. Whether Trump’s “more is coming” signal translates into further named strikes or signals a sustained AFRICOM tempo increase across the Sahel. How the Zamfara civilian harm allegations are handled: if the Nigerian government fails to open an independent investigation, international pressure on the partnership and its congressional legitimacy will intensify. The Senate Armed Services Committee hearing cited by Gen. Anderson suggests congressional appetite for the Nigeria mission remains high, but that appetite is not unconditional.


Sources

Editorial Verification

The 16 May al-Minuki strike is verified through AFRICOM’s official press release, the Nigerian Army’s statement, Trump’s Truth Social post, Tinubu’s X statement, Stars and Stripes, CBC News/Reuters, Al Jazeera, and Asharq Al-Awsat wire. Five or more independent sources confirm the event. The 17 and 18 May follow-on strikes are verified through separate AFRICOM press releases. The 175-casualty total is sourced to a single official statement from Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters (19 May); AFRICOM’s own releases do not publish granular kill counts, so the figure is carried as an official claim rather than independently verified. The Tumfa market strike is confirmed by Red Cross official Ibrahim Bello Garba to the Associated Press and by Amnesty International; the Nigerian military disputes civilian casualty figures, and no independent battlefield assessment is available. The prior 2024 al-Minuki death claim circulating in some Nigerian media has not been formally retracted and is noted; Strategy Battles accepts the dual-government 16 May confirmation as superseding it but does not suppress the earlier claim’s existence. Strike coordinates for Metele are approximate, derived from publicly reported location names; AFRICOM and Nigerian sources have not released GPS coordinates. Cross-check reference: Maiduguri city centre, MGRS 33PTP99652 10173, approximately 210km south-southwest of the Metele strike area.
MGRS datum: WGS84 / UTM Zones: 33P (Borno), 32P (Zamfara) / Cross-check reference: Maiduguri 33PTP99652 10173.
No satellite imagery was used in this report.

All claims independently attributed and verified to open sources where possible.

Approved for Publication

Marcus V. Thorne
Lead Editor, Strategy Battles

OSINT // PUBLIC RELEASE
FILE SB-2026-0519-0974135201 // CLEARED

©StrategyBattles.net 2026

This article is for news and analysis purposes only. Based on publicly available news sources and military updates. All rights reserved. Not for commercial reuse without permission.

Strategy Battles Editorial Team

Strategy Battles is led by Marcus V. Thorne, a military analyst and open-source intelligence specialist with over a decade of operational experience in defence logistics and tactical conflict reporting. Marcus oversees the editorial direction of every report published on Strategy Battles, applying a rigorous multi-stage verification process designed to deliver accurate, accountable journalism in an information environment increasingly defined by wartime disinformation.

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