The world is watching a slow-motion atrocity unfold in Nigeria and Ethiopia, and too many global institutions refuse to speak the truth about what it is: A Christian genocide. Entire villages in Nigeria’s Middle Belt are wiped out overnight. Ancient Christian communities in Ethiopia’s Tigray and Amhara regions have been systematically targeted, starved, displaced, and massacred. These horrors are not unfortunate byproducts of “local conflict.” They are deliberate campaigns of persecution driven by Islamist extremists and enabled by governments receiving weapons, drones, intelligence, and political cover from China, Russia, Iran, and other foreign actors seeking influence across Africa.
Yet at the very moment Christians are being hunted, burned alive in their churches, kidnapped for ransom, and forced from their ancestral lands, too many leaders who should stand for moral clarity are offering ambiguity instead. (RELATED: Nigeria’s President Declares Security Emergency Amid Slaughter Of Christians)
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s Secretary of State, recently described the violence in Nigeria merely as a “social conflict,” language that effectively erases the systematic targeting of Christians. The euphemisms do not match the graves. When priests are executed at the altar, when nuns disappear on the road, when Christian families flee by the tens of thousands, calling this anything short of genocide is not diplomacy. It is denial.
The slaughter is real enough that the Christian Association of Nigeria itself has now affirmed what many already knew: Christians are facing a genocidal campaign. Their warning stands in sharp contrast to the soft-pedaled assessments offered abroad. And in Ethiopia, independent investigators have presented overwhelming evidence that government forces and aligned militias committed acts that meet the legal standard for genocide. The world cannot pretend this is a misunderstanding, or that both sides bear equal blame. This is targeted extermination.
The stakes extend far beyond humanitarian concern. The Horn of Africa is one of the world’s most strategic corridors. Twelve percent of global trade flows through the Red Sea and the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait. If radical Islamist factions gain territorial control or if hostile foreign powers deepen their military foothold, the United States and its allies will face massive economic, security, and geopolitical consequences. A destabilized Horn of Africa becomes a launchpad for extremism, piracy, arms trafficking, and the rise of a caliphate-style sanctuary that threatens global Christians and regional governments alike.
President Donald J. Trump has been one of the few global leaders willing to call this what it is. He spoke plainly on Truth Social about the atrocities in Nigeria and the cowardice of those who refuse to defend Christians. He has made it clear that Christian persecution anywhere in the world is not just a moral issue but a national security issue. His first administration revived the conversation around religious liberty, and his willingness today to highlight Nigeria and the Countries of Particular Concern regime aligns with a consistent worldview: America cannot remain silent while Christians are exterminated.
Under President Trump’s leadership, the United States is positioned to confront this crisis with clarity and force. The Muslim Brotherhood Executive Order, issued to categorize a major driver of global Islamist extremism, was finally a long-overdue step, but it must go further. The same ideological networks backing extremist militias in the Middle Belt, the same financiers moving money and equipment across borders, and the same propaganda channels radicalizing young men must be identified, sanctioned, and dismantled. These are not isolated local groups. They are nodes in a transnational network of jihadism. President Trump understands this better than any modern leader, which is why strengthening that executive order and expanding its reach is critical for breaking the machinery that fuels genocide.
At home, America’s African Christian diaspora must awaken. Nigerian Americans, Ethiopian Americans, Eritrean Americans, Coptic Christians, Orthodox Christians, evangelicals, and all who still believe in the God-given dignity of human life must raise their voices. Congress listens when diasporas speak with unity and urgency.
Peace and security in the Horn of Africa will not come from silence. It will come from advocacy, pressure, moral clarity, and an insistence that American foreign policy uphold its responsibility to defend religious freedom.
For too long, the world has looked away. For too long, elites have avoided uncomfortable truths. For too long, euphemisms have been used to soften the cries of the dead. The time for soft language is over. This crisis demands the kind of America First leadership President Trump has delivered — peace through strength, strategic engagement on our terms, and unapologetic defense of Christians under attack.
Genocide cannot be managed. It must be confronted. And America, under President Trump’s leadership, will help lead the world in confronting it.
Jorge Martinez serves as National Director of Hispanic Outreach and Director of Special Projects at the America First Policy Institute. He previously served as press secretary for the U.S. Department of Justice.
The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.
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