As Washington celebrates tactical wins against Islamic State affiliates in Nigeria, Americans should demand policymakers pause. What began as advisory support, intelligence sharing, and targeted strikes now risks expanding across the Lake Chad Basin. Americans should watch closely for the familiar signs of mission creep: initial “capacity building” evolving into direct involvement, with vague goals, shifting objectives, and no clear exit. The Lake Chad region—spanning Nigeria, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon—has long been a theater of instability. At its core is the insurgency linked to Boko...
















