Tangle - The Christmas Day strikes in Nigeria.

Episode Date: December 30, 2025

On Thursday, December 25, President Donald Trump announced that the United States Africa Command conducted strikes on Islamic State (IS, or ISIS) targets in the state of Sokoto in northweste...rn Nigeria. According to a military official, a U.S. Navy ship in the Gulf of Guinea fired over a dozen Tomahawk cruise missiles, hitting insurgents in two IS camps. The strikes were conducted with the consent of the Nigerian government, and no civilian casualties have been reported.Ad-free podcasts are here!To listen to this podcast ad-free, and to enjoy our subscriber only premium content, go to ReadTangle.com to sign up!You can read today's podcast⁠ ⁠⁠here⁠⁠⁠, our “Under the Radar” story ⁠here and today’s “Have a nice day” story ⁠here⁠.You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here. Take the survey: What do you think of the strikes in Nigeria? Let us know.Our Executive Editor and Founder is Isaac Saul. Our Executive Producer is Jon Lall.This podcast was written by: Will Kaback and edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75.Our newsletter is edited by Managing Editor Ari Weitzman, Senior Editor Will Kaback, Lindsey Knuth, Bailey Saul, and Audrey Moorehead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 From executive producer Isaac Saul, this is Tangle. Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening. And welcome to the Tangle podcast, a place where you get views from across the political spectrum, some independent thinking, and a little bit of our time. take. I'm your host today, senior editor Will Kayback. Today we're going to be covering the U.S. military's strikes on Islamic State terrorists in Nigeria, which took place on Christmas Day and which President Trump said were intended to protect Christians living in Nigeria who have been the subject of terrorist attacks and threats from the Islamic State and other militia groups
Starting point is 00:00:56 that are active in the country. Before we dive in, wanted to fly back. one recent piece of ours that we think would be of particular interest as we close the book on 2025 and look ahead to 26 and even the years beyond that. You might remember it from about a couple weeks ago, Isaac published a piece where he put some predictions down on things he thinks are going to happen in politics and U.S. news generally between now and 2030. If you missed it, we'll put a link to the piece in today's show notes. It was also a podcast episode. So if you scroll back to our most recent Friday edition, you'll find it there. A reminder that it is a premium piece, so if you're not a Tangle member, you'll need to
Starting point is 00:01:35 upgrade to access the full thing. But again, as we look ahead to the new year and we start to think about what the next few years in politics will hold, we think it's a great piece to re-up and engage with if you haven't checked it out already. One other note is that if you are interested in making your own predictions for the coming years, in our last Sunday edition, we highlighted a tool that was actually created by a member of the Tangle community that allows you to make a series of predictions about the big stories that are going to play out over the coming years. We'll also put the link to this in today's show notes, and we definitely recommend you check that out. All right, for now, let's jump in with quick hits, and then we'll get into our main topic for the day.
Starting point is 00:02:22 Number one, in a meeting between President, Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Trump's Mar-Lago residents on Monday, the two leaders praised each other and reaffirmed their alliance. Trump said the U.S. would consider additional strikes on Iran if it attempted to restart its nuclear program, and he blamed Hamas's unwillingness to disarm for challenges in implementing the second phase of the Gaza peace plan. Number two, CNN reported that the Central Intelligence Agency, the CIA, carried out a drone strike at a port facility on the coast of Venezuela earlier this month that the U.S. government believed Trend de Aragua gang members were using to store drugs.
Starting point is 00:03:05 If confirmed, the strike would be the first known U.S. attack within Venezuela. Number three, Russian President Vladimir Putin told President Trump in a phone call that Ukraine conducted a drone attack targeting one of his official residences, and the incident would change Russia's position in peace negotiations. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky denied the accusation, calling it a fabricated story to, quote, justify additional attacks against Ukraine. Number four, the Thai army accused Cambodia of violating a ceasefire deal signed over the weekend, saying that it detected over 250 drones flying from the Cambodian side on Sunday. In a statement, the army said it would, quote, reconsider the planned release of 18 imprisoned Cambodian soldiers as a result of the 11 imprisoned Cambodian soldiers as a result of the 11, alleged incursion. And finally, number five, a federal judge blocked the Trump administration
Starting point is 00:03:59 from ending temporary protected status for South Sudanese nationals living in the United States, while a lawsuit challenging the revoked protections proceeds. President Trump said today that he delayed American military strikes in northwest Nigeria, until Christmas Day, to deliver a message to groups he alleges are targeting Christians in that country. Meanwhile, the Nigerian government praised the attacks and said it provided the U.S. with the necessary intelligence. On Thursday, December 25th, President Donald Trump announced that the United States' Africa Command conducted strikes on Islamic State, also known as IS or ISIS, targets in the state of Sokoto in northwestern Nigeria. According to a military official, a U.S. Navy ship in the Gulf of Guinea fired over a dozen
Starting point is 00:04:57 Tomahawk cruise missiles, hitting insurgents in two IS camps. The strikes were conducted with the consent of the Nigerian government, and no civilian casualties have been reported. Several religious and political extremist groups operate in Nigeria, including al-Qaeda and Islamic state splinter groups, IS West Africa province, and IS Sahel province. The Sahel is a north African region, just south of the Sahara that runs through Nigeria. Boko Haram, a self-proclaimed jihadist militant group active throughout the Sahel and designated a foreign terrorist group by the U.S. in 2013 is also based in Nigeria. Though the country is not officially at war, over 12,000 people were killed by violent groups in Nigeria in 2025. On October 31st, President Trump designated
Starting point is 00:05:46 Nigeria as a country of particular concern following alleged religious violence against Christians in the country. Then, in November, Trump warned jihadist factions in Nigeria to stop attacking the country's Christian population and directed the Department of Defense to prepare to intervene. The Nigerian strikes are the second attack against ISIS targets in the last two weeks, following a series of strikes in Syria in retaliation for the deaths of two U.S. soldiers and a U.S. interpreter in a terrorist attack. President Trump announced the strikes in a Christmas Day post on Truth Social,
Starting point is 00:06:22 writing, quote, the United States launched a powerful and deadly strike against ISIS terrorist scum in northwest Nigeria, who have been targeting and viciously killing primarily innocent Christians. May God bless our military and Merry Christmas to all,
Starting point is 00:06:37 including the dead terrorists, of which there will be many more if their slaughter of Christians continues, end quote. The location of the strikes in Northwestern, Nigeria prompted confusion among local residents. Nigeria's northwest faces banditry kidnappings and attacks by armed groups. However, religious violence is more of a concern in the country's northeast. The day before the Christmas strikes, an apparent suicide bombing during evening prayers at a mosque
Starting point is 00:07:06 in Borno State in northeastern Nigeria, killed five and injured more than 30. The Borno attack does not appear to be related to the U.S. strike. Additionally, some analysts question the Trump administration's characterization of extremist violence in Nigeria as targeted specifically against Christians. Quote, people of all religions and of all tribes are dying, and it is very unfortunate, and we even know that Boko Haram and ISIS are killing more Muslims than more Christians. Masad Bolus, Trump's senior advisor on Arab and African affairs, said, quote so people are suffering from all sorts of backgrounds this is not specifically targeted at one group or the other end quote today we'll get into what the left right and writers in nigeria are saying about the recent bombings then i'll give my take
Starting point is 00:08:10 Here's what the left is saying. The left opposes the strikes, arguing that they're a political ploy. Some suggest Trump favors foreign military engagement only when it suits his domestic priorities. In MS Now, Nicholas Grossman said Trump sending bombs into Nigeria was a Christmas show for his evangelical base. Nigeria has been plagued by sectarian violence, but that violence hasn't primarily targeted Christians, and certainly not at historically unprecedented levels. America's logic here isn't clear,
Starting point is 00:08:51 but the strikes appear driven more by Trump putting on a show for his evangelical base than trying to reduce violence in Nigeria or even advance U.S. national interests, Grossman wrote, It's not clear what prompted the timing of the strikes. The U.S. campaign in Yemen came after the Houthis' fired at shipping in the Red Sea, and the strikes in Syria followed an ISIS-linked attack in the country that killed three Americans. But there hasn't been a recent attack on Americans
Starting point is 00:09:17 or U.S. interests in Nigeria. This professed concern for persecuted Christians looks absurd in the context of the Trump administration's policies. For example, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security recently announced the end of temporary protected status for nearly 4,000 people from Myanmar. many of them persecuted Christians, Grossman said. But bombing on Christmas did give Donald Trump a chance to tell his base that he's standing up for Christianity, even as he and many of his Christian supporters, in direct contrast to Jesus' teachings, openly championed violence, money, and cruelty to strangers. In November, Joshua Keating wrote in Vox about Trump's potential humanitarian intervention, MAGA style.
Starting point is 00:10:03 The Nobel Peace Prize aspirant and advocate of America First Foreign Policy is more than willing to use the threat of military force to accomplish his foreign policy goals and to interfere in the domestic affairs of other countries when doing so aligns with his domestic political priorities, Keating said. The threat against Nigeria is similar to that against Venezuela, although the latter appears far more likely to actfully be carried out. In both cases, the president appears to be contradicting his frequently expressed opposition to military interventionism. But these are interventions linked to the priorities of his
Starting point is 00:10:38 political base. Trump is essentially a globalist, someone who believes the U.S. plays an indispensable role on the world stage and should play a role in solving global crises. But the big difference between Trump and the liberal internationalists or neoconservatives who came before him is the degree to which his foreign interventions are aligned with his domestic political priorities, Keating wrote. In the case of Nigeria, it means reviving the supposedly discredited notion of humanitarian military intervention, but only in a case where it aligns with their priorities of one of Trump's important constituencies. Now here's what the right is saying. The right generally supports the strikes, saying they show America, America's enemies that Trump is true to his word. Some caution that these strikes alone won't change the
Starting point is 00:11:37 situation in Nigeria. National Review's editors wrote, Trump targets the Islamic State in Nigeria. Just last month, Trump had raised alarms about the treatment of Christians in Nigeria. Since 2009, estimates say that as many as 100,000 Christians have been killed and 19,000 churches have been destroyed. Trump warned that if it didn't stop, the U.S., quote, may very well go into that now disgraced country, guns ablazing, the editor said. Trump is right to focus attention on the treatment of Christians in Nigeria, a persistent problem that has gotten insufficient attention. That said, these militant groups thrive in uncovered spaces beset by all sorts of lawlessness.
Starting point is 00:12:19 The strikes were carried out in cooperation with the Nigerian government, but the sort of sustained government campaign on the ground it would likely take to reestablish order is not immediately in the offing, nor presumably, would we have the appetite to participate in such an effort? The editors wrote. The Christmas strikes are yet another sign that rather than being a quasi-isolationist, like some of his most vociferous supporters, Trump is a hyperactive foreign affairs president. He makes a lot of threats, more than he ever carries out, but enemies completely discount them at their peril. The Wall Street Journal editorial board argued, stopping the growth of ISIS in Africa will require more than bombing from afar.
Starting point is 00:12:59 skeptics are taking issue with Mr. Trump's framing of the strike as intended to save Christian lives, and no doubt that framing is aimed at evangelical Christian audiences who support Mr. Trump in the U.S. But it's not as if the terrorists aren't killing others in Nigeria and across much of the Sahel region. The terrorists are a justifiable target, the board said. It's also encouraging that the U.S. and Nigerian governments say they worked together on the strikes. This suggests local cooperation that is essential to stopping the growth of ISIS and al-Qaeda offshoots. The U.S. has carried out similar attacks in Somalia for years, as it also has in Yemen and Pakistan at times in the past 25 years. This is a long-time fight, and periodic bombing raids won't end the threat any more than Bill Clinton's missiles from a distance stopped Osama bin Laden in the 1990s.
Starting point is 00:13:51 The board wrote, dismantling the jihadist threat will take more sustained involvement with regional governments that are themselves threatened by Islamic radicals. That means sharing intelligence and perhaps deploying U.S. special forces on the ground if need be. The U.S. learned the hard way in 2001 that a distant jihadist group can carry out or inspire attacks on the American homeland. And finally, here's what Nigerian writers are saying. Some Nigerian writers say the strike could undermine Trump's efforts to protect Christians. Others argue the U.S. intervention is welcome after years of government in action.
Starting point is 00:14:31 In The Guardian, Onidikachi Madueke suggested the strikes may only fan the flames of insurgent violence. Ironically, it was Trump's redesignation of Nigeria as a country of particular concern in November that deepened Muslim Christian tensions. Many northerners, who are predominantly Muslim, blamed southern Nigerians for championing a narrative that ultimately resulted in the U.S. sanctions and international stigma, Maduika said. The geographic and operational focus of the strikes has complicated the Christian genocide framing. Sokoto is the spiritual heartland of Islam in Nigeria, but armed violence in the area disproportionately affects Muslim communities. By contrast, attacks against Christian farmers are most prevalent in north central states, such as Benueue,
Starting point is 00:15:20 and Plateau. The strikes against IS came at a time of public fatigue with insecurity caused by insurgency, terrorism, banditry, and communal violence. Nigerians were ready to accept almost any intervention that promised relief, Madueke wrote. Despite the support, Nigeria's insecurity will not be resolved through air power alone. Air strikes may yield short-term tactical gains, but they risk generating longer-term strategic setbacks. Framing the intervention as the defense of persecuted Christians may strengthen extremist narratives of foreign, quote, crusader aggression, potentially attracting more external funding and support for jihadist groups. The This Day editorial board wrote about the strike on terror in Nigeria.
Starting point is 00:16:07 The Christmas Day strike on terrorist targets in Sokoto State is a bold undertaking with many positive meanings. The collaboration between Nigeria's armed forces and their United States counterparts is a strategic gain. The identification of ISIS as the target of the strike brings Nigeria's campaign in line with the global thrust of counterterrorism, the board said. This campaign has seen the U.S. collaborate with governments in diverse countries to go against ISIS terrorists. To this extent, the involvement of the U.S. in the Sokota strike is part of the global anti-IS campaign that has been waged in the aftermath of the 9-11 attacks in the U.S.
Starting point is 00:16:45 Whatever may be the shortfalls of this specific strike, it is a fitting but long overdue diplomatic signal to all terror merchants, sponsors, and foot soldiers in Nigeria, that their days are numbered. However, it is crucial to dispel the dangerous strands in narratives surrounding the strike, the board wrote. It was not targeted at any faith, nor was it designated to derogate any section of the country. Instead, it is aimed at eroding and ultimately eliminating the capacity of ISIS and affiliates like Boko Haram to continue destabilizing Nigeria by perpetuating insecurity through terrorism. All right, that is it for what the left, the right, and Nigerian writers are saying.
Starting point is 00:17:37 Now we'll move into my take. As has been apparent for some time, President Trump's promise to, quote, put an end to endless wars has become one of his most hollow campaign statement. While the airstrikes in Nigeria are not the same as full-scale wars like in Afghanistan or Iraq, they are part of a pattern of consistent, intermittent military operations. Simultaneously, the administration's explanation fits an equally distressing pattern of incoherency. After a year of covering the second Trump administration, I find myself viewing the president's actions through what I call an even-if lens.
Starting point is 00:18:16 The administration takes a bold and unusual action. Experts and pundits criticize or question it, and White House officials, or the president, deploy arguments about why this action represents a critical national interest. The justification seems hard to swear, but even if you take the administration's rationale at face value in these cases, the corresponding action still doesn't make sense. The strikes against alleged drugboats near Venezuela are a perfect example.
Starting point is 00:18:46 The administration calls this a national security issue and says it is taking bold action to protect Americans from, quote, narco-terrorists bringing deadly drugs into the country. Set aside the flaws in this justification, like that these boats are primarily trafficking cocaine, which is a significant threat, but much less pressing than synthetic opioids. Let's just take it at face value. Even if the administration wants to stop the flow of cocaine into the country,
Starting point is 00:19:13 it doesn't make sense to prioritize Venezuela, which isn't a major trafficking hub, or to rely on airstrikes over proven Coast Guard interdiction efforts, or even to focus on the Caribbean at all when most drugs from Venezuela are transported through the Pacific. Instead, the strikes against these boats make far more sense under a different reasoning, one that White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles recently said to Vanity Fair
Starting point is 00:19:39 when she said that the boat strikes are really about making Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro, quote, cry uncle. The even-if exercise typically reveals the administration's ulterior motive. You can repeat it for a litany of issues, tariffs, the National Guard deployments, overtures about annexing Greenland, and now the Nigeria strikes. Trump said that the strikes were against Islamic State terrorists who have, quote, been targeting and viciously killing primarily innocent Christians at levels not seen for many years,
Starting point is 00:20:09 and even centuries, end quote. And it's true that Christians have regularly been attacked and killed by jihadist terrorists, particularly by Muslim herders competing with Christian farmers over land. But that initial claim is deeply flawed, mostly because Christians are far from the only victims of spiraling regional violence in Somalia and Africa. As the 2025 U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Report on Nigeria stated, quote, those targeted include Christians, Muslims, traditional practitioners, and humanists, end quote. Case in point, just last week, terrorists bombed a crowded mosque in Nigeria's northeastern Borno state, killing five people.
Starting point is 00:20:51 In August, a separate mosque attack killed 50. According to data from armed conflict location and event data, approximately 53,000 civilians in Nigeria have been killed in targeted political violence since 2009. Between 2020 and 2025, Christians were targeted in 385 attacks, resulting in 317 deaths. comparatively, Muslims were targeted in 196 attacks, resulting in 417 deaths. In other words, the Trump administration is taking an extremely narrow view of this situation, a view that's even been explicitly challenged by Trump's own senior advisor on Arab and Middle Eastern affairs. Still, taking Trump's justification at face value,
Starting point is 00:21:35 even if Christians in Nigeria face an outsized threat from terrorist groups, and even if the administration had articulated a clear reason to protect this specific group, these strikes don't seem to help persecuted Christians at all. Airstrikes, even a protracted campaign of airstrikes, are not going to put an end to extremist violence in Nigeria's north. As the Wall Street Journal editorial board wrote, quote, the U.S. has carried out similar attacks in Somalia for years, as it also has in Yemen and Pakistan at times in the past 25 years.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Periodic bombing raids won't end the threat. End quote. Time and time again, in every administration since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the U.S. government has tried to achieve its goals through brute military force. Time and time again, it has failed. There's no reason to believe Nigeria will be any different. Furthermore, almost a week later, whether the Christmas strikes have had any impact is still unclear, while a local official of a town near the bombings in Sokoto said that he would,
Starting point is 00:22:39 believe the strikes killed some terrorists and assessment the U.S. shares, the number of casualties is still unconfirmed. At the same time, residents of villages in Sokoto said they observed bombs landing in empty fields and expressed confusion about who or what
Starting point is 00:22:55 was being targeted. Meanwhile, the U.S. and Nigerian governments are relaying competing stories about the results of the strikes and how they were coordinated. All of this ambiguity underscores the broader problem. The administration communicated no clear goal for this operation and no clear theory of success.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Even the best case outcome, say dozens of terrorists killed and their bases destroyed, changes very little about the reality on the ground. This conflict spans an entire region, of which northern Nigeria is only a part, comprising hundreds of millions of people, complicated histories, and struggling governments and militaries. The strike doesn't resolve the situation, So what is our endgame? Keep up the bombings until the Defense Department determines Nigerian Christians have been sufficiently protected. Expand our military operations throughout the Sahel to try to crush the widely dispersed terrorist groups. For that matter, why is it the purview of the United States to protect Christians abroad?
Starting point is 00:23:56 And how could we possibly do that without ensnaring our military into more forever wars? The only answer to these questions is that the premise, Trump's justification, is wrong. If you put aside Trump's justification, there is a conceivable case for U.S. involvement in Nigeria. The Islamic State affiliates operating in the country are part of a broader regional insurgency that is destabilized large swaths of the Sahel. Left unchecked, these groups can strengthen cross-border networks and further erode already fragile governments. A future in which these groups attempt to project violence beyond the region, including against the U.S., is not difficult to imagine. Addressing this situation might be possible, but only if the U.S. committed to aiding the
Starting point is 00:24:42 Nigerian government in the long term through things like economic assistance, intelligence sharing, and, yes, joint military activity. That isn't happening in Nigeria. Yes, Thursday strikes were carried out in coordination with the government, but the Trump administration hasn't shared any plans for a more substantive engagement. On the contrary, Trump actually threatened to pull aid to the country in November if it continued to allow, quote, the killing of Christians. As I said earlier, when the even-if test fails, it implies an ulterior motive at play. In this case, the strikes are best explained as a political ploy rather than a genuine attempt to defend a persecuted religious group abroad.
Starting point is 00:25:24 In the months leading up to the Christmas strikes, the administration positioned itself as a defender of Christians worldwide, willing to take action where others weren't. Now, this message obviously appeals to the Republican evangelical base, and more broadly, voters who want to see tangible action against Islamic terrorist groups. It's reminiscent of Trump's designation of white South Africans as special refugees that granted them priority admittance to the U.S. In a vacuum, Trump can point to evidence of some persecution to justify the decision, but the rationale falls apart when you consider the situational context. Again, the question here is not about whether. their Christians are being persecuted in Nigeria. They are.
Starting point is 00:26:06 The problem is that the Trump administration has myopically chosen to focus on a small issue that it thinks it can sell to its base, and that its response to that issue is narrow, incoherent, and untethered from any discernible strategy for its actual resolution. If the administration continues down this path, the most likely outcome is not the protection of vulnerable communities, but another open-ended U.S. military engagement justified on tenuous grounds. That is precisely the kind of endless war Trump once promised to end.
Starting point is 00:26:45 We'll be right back after this quick break. All right, that is it for my take. Let's move into today's reader question. Karen from Matuchin, New Jersey. he asks, our Constitution doesn't mandate two parties, right? Why does our current state of affairs work this way, having a formal position for a Senate majority leader, for example? Here's our response. That's correct. The Constitution does not specify anything about having a two-party system. In fact, the country's founders saw political parties, what they called factions, as a corrosive
Starting point is 00:27:26 force that our leaders should work to avoid. As the political historian Richard Hofstadter wrote in the idea of a party system. Quote, the founding fathers were men who had been trained in the political tradition that regarded parties as evil, divisive, and destructive. They believed that parties were incompatible with the public good, and that they endangered the very existence of Republican government, end quote. However, as Hofstadter also wrote, quote, the party system was not created by men who believed in it, but by men who found that they could not govern without it, end quote. Subsequent leaders came to the conclusion that governing was going to be impossible without forming some political parties. So our governance system evolved to incorporate them. The positions of majority and minority leaders evolved
Starting point is 00:28:12 gradually in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. By the 1910s, both parties adopted the practice of electing conference chairs who acted as floor leaders. And within a decade or so, these leaders came to look a lot like they do in our modern day politics. Rules specifying bipartisan leadership are defined in the rules and procedures that Congress has developed over time since the Constitution was first enacted in 1787. Those rules can change, but the simple explanation for their existence is that Congress found they could not govern without a party system and that they should define rules for themselves that acknowledge this reality.
Starting point is 00:28:56 All right, moving right ahead to our Under the Radar story. During President Trump's meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, the president and his top advisors reportedly requested that the Israeli leader change his policies on the West Bank, where settler violence has escalated in recent years, months, and even weeks. Netanyahu's government has allowed Israeli settlers to expand their settlements in the occupied territory, often forcibly displacing Palestinians. While Trump previously lifted Biden-era sanctions on settlers who commit violence, His administration has reportedly grown concerned that rising tensions in the West Bank
Starting point is 00:29:35 could imperil the Gaza peace deal. In a press conference after the meeting, Trump said, quote, I wouldn't say we, meaning him and Netanyahu, agree on the West Bank 100%, but we will come to a conclusion on the West Bank. Axios has this story, and we'll put the link to it in today's show notes. Now here are some numbers about today's main topic on Nigeria. The approximate population of Nigeria is 240 million people. As of 2020, the approximate percentage of Nigeria's population that is Muslim is 56%,
Starting point is 00:30:12 and the approximate percentage that is Christian is 43%, according to estimates by the Pew Research Center. The percent change in Nigeria's Muslim population, from 2010 to 2020 was plus 32%. And the percent change in its Christian population over the same time span was plus 25%. According to the Nigerian government, two Islamic state-linked camps were hit in last Thursday strikes in northwestern Nigeria.
Starting point is 00:30:41 The number of GPS-guided munitions deployed by the U.S. military in this attack was 16. The approximate number of attacks on civilians from 2020 to 2025 in Nigeria was 12,000 attacks, according to data from ACLED and Independent Conflict Monitoring Group. The approximate number of people who died as a result of those attacks was 20,000 people. And finally, the percentage of those attacks classified as expressly, religiously motivated was 5%. And last but not least, here is our Have a Nice Day story.
Starting point is 00:31:18 Commercial driver's licenses can cost up to 7,000 5%. $500, money that Maryland resident Carmen DeBerry didn't have. But DeBerry was able to get her CDL and a job as a delivery driver with a scholarship from an unlikely source. Metal band Metallicas all within my hands charity. The charity has donated more than $10 million to workforce education, primarily through trade school and community college grants. DeBerry got a chance to meet the band before a concert in Landover, Maryland, where she told them how much the scholarship meant. to her. And here's what the band's lead singer James Hetfield had to say. Quote, we get to go make some people smile out there. Deliver the goods by playing songs that saved
Starting point is 00:32:01 us in our lives. To get a one-on-one hard-to-heart with somebody whose life you've changed, it changes mine. CBS News has the story and a great video to accompany it, and we'll put the link to both in today's show notes. All right, that is it for today's episode. As a quick reminder, like we flagged yesterday. This is our last normal edition of the week. The team is going to be partially off for Wednesday through Friday to have a little bit of a New Year's break
Starting point is 00:32:30 before we come back full force to start 2026. With that said, keep an eye out for a few great releases coming up over these next few days. First off, we're going to be releasing several podcast exclusive interviews with some interesting people
Starting point is 00:32:44 that we've had a chance to speak to over the past few weeks about a variety of issues. Additionally, we're going to going to be releasing some additional special editions both in the newsletter and the podcast that will explain more and be releasing day by day over the rest of the week. As always, thanks for listening. We hope you guys have a great New Year's.
Starting point is 00:33:02 You get a chance to celebrate, do a little reflecting on the year that just passed, and hopefully set some good resolutions and goals for the year to come. I know I'm certainly planning on it. Until we talk again, have a great rest of the week. And peace. Our executive editor and founder is me, Isaac Saul, and our executive producer is John Wohl. Today's episode was editives and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Our editorial staff is led by managing editor Ari Weitzman with senior editor Will Kayback
Starting point is 00:33:31 and associate editors Audrey Moorhead, Lindsay Canuth, and Bailey Saul. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75. To run more about Tangle and to sign up for a membership, please visit our website at readtangle.com. I'm going to be able to be.

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