(Socio Technologies Limited – SocioAfrica) Hails USAFRICOM Powerful U.S. Strikes Against ISIS Terrorists in Nigeria

Urges Critics to Stop Mourning and Start Building – Focus on Missiles, Rockets & Future Technologies

On December 25, 2025, the United States, in coordination with Nigerian authorities, conducted a powerful and deadly military strike against Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist targets in northwest Nigeria. The operation, directed by U.S. President Donald Trump and executed by U.S. Africa Command, focused on dismantling ISIS infrastructure in Sokoto State, reportedly neutralizing multiple extremists responsible for civilian terror. Al Jazeera+1

This decisive action demonstrates that targeted force, backed by international cooperation, remains a crucial tool in defeating violent extremism that threatens the peace and security of Nigerians and innocent communities across the Sahel and West Africa.

Why This Strike Matters

The U.S. strike marked a historic escalation in the fight against militant networks operating in Nigeria. According to official statements:

  • The operation targeted ISIS militants responsible for violence against civilians. Al Jazeera
  • Nigerian authorities confirmed that security cooperation with international partners, including the U.S., led to precision airstrikes against terrorist sites. Anadolu Ajansı
  • The strike was carried out with Nigeria’s consent, intelligence sharing, and coordination, ensuring respect for national sovereignty and international norms. Anadolu Ajansı

This alignment of international resolve and Nigerian strategic planning sends a powerful message: terrorism will not find a safe haven in Nigeria.

Socio Technologies Limited & SocioAfrica: Leadership in a Time of Crisis

Socio Technologies Limited, through its flagship initiative SocioAfrica, wholeheartedly commends this decisive action. Our vision has always been rooted in strengthening African resilience, whether through digital empowerment, educational access, or technological innovation. Today’s strike is a stark reminder that security and innovation must go hand-in-hand.

Instead of merely criticizing or lamenting at crises, we must harness our creativity and intellect to construct the future we desire. This means:

  • Investing in advanced defense technologies
  • Building indigenous missile and space capabilities
  • Accelerating African aerospace, cybersecurity, and technological sovereignty

The era of passive observation is over. Africa must build, not beg. Innovate, not insult. SocioAfrica calls on young Africans, innovators, and even vocal critics like Sowore — whose arguments often focus on rhetoric over results — to shift focus.

To Sowore & Other Critics: Stop Sobbing — Start Building

Nigeria and its youth are brimming with potential. Yet, too often, critics dwell on what is broken instead of creating what’s next.

To those who complain without offering solutions:

Build missiles, rockets, satellites, drones, AI systems, and advanced defense technologies.
Prove your patriotism with your innovations — not your protests.

If Nigeria is to defend its people and interests, it must foster a new generation of engineers, scientists, and strategic thinkers. Hard political critique has its place, but it cannot replace tangible technological advancement.

Conclusion: A Call to Action

Today’s milestone military action against ISIS in Nigeria should not be a moment of mere commentary — it should be a call to action for every Nigerian and African aspiring toward progress.

Let this historic event spark:

National commitment to security and technological self-reliance
Mass mobilization of STEM talent across the continent
A shift from passive lamentation to proactive innovation

Africa’s future will not be won on social media alone — it will be built in labs, factories, aerospace parks, and research hubs.

Let this be our collective manifesto.

#BuildDontBemoan #TechForAfrica #SocioAfricaRevolution