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In this The Gateway Pundit article, Antonio Graceffo argues that Nigeria’s various Islamist militant movements may differ in theology, structure, and tactics, but they share a broad goal of removing Christian communities from contested territory.
- The article says Nigeria’s roughly 240 million people are nearly evenly divided between Muslims and Christians, while noting that no official religious census has been conducted since 1963.
- Graceffo distinguishes between Boko Haram, ISWAP, Fulani militias, and the Iranian-linked Shia Islamic Movement of Nigeria, arguing that they are not identical groups but often produce the same anti-Christian outcome.
- ISWAP is presented as the clearest caliphate-driven force, with sharia courts, taxation, village control, and Islamic State-style governance in the Lake Chad Basin.
- Boko Haram and ISWAP are described as having explicit forced-conversion and caliphate mandates, even though they have fought each other over tactics and doctrine.
- The article says Fulani militias are more often driven by land seizure, territorial control, and demographic replacement than by a formally declared caliphate ideology, though forced conversion is allegedly used as one tool.
- Graceffo connects today’s violence to the historical memory of the Sokoto Caliphate, founded after Usman dan Fodio’s jihad in the early 1800s, arguing that the ideological ambition of Islamizing Nigeria never fully disappeared.
- The piece cites claims that Fulani attacks have killed far more Christians in recent years than Boko Haram and ISWAP combined, challenging the media-friendly explanation that the violence is merely a farmer-herder resource dispute.
- The article points to allegations of Christian villages being emptied, renamed or absorbed into Fulani emirates, and converted into grazing territory, framing this as demographic conquest rather than random rural violence.
- Graceffo argues that land seizure is the most provable objective, Islamization is strongly indicated, and forced conversion is real but often secondary to displacement and territorial replacement.
- The overall warning is that Western policymakers and media are missing the larger pattern when they treat Nigeria’s violence as disconnected ethnic conflict instead of a coordinated or overlapping campaign against Christian communities.
Read the full story: https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/05/competing-jihadists-shared-goal-remaking-nigeria-through-islamization/


