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The Caliphate’s Playbook For Conquering Nigeria

by Alien Media
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By Mike Arnold

Want to understand the reasons for tribal division in Nigeria? Study Muhammad’s Medina strategy. Hint: your diversity is being used against you. In the year 622, Muhammad arrived in the city of Medina. Three rival clans dominated it — wealthy, organized, embedded in the city’s commerce.

They were not united with each other. They lived in separate quarters. They guarded their own interests. They distrusted each other more than they distrusted the new arrival.

Muhammad understood what he was looking at. He signed a treaty with all three at once. It bound them in mutual defense. It made them part of his political community.

It was called the Constitution of Medina, and it sounded like unity. It was the instrument of their destruction. Five years later, all three clans were gone. Picked off one at a time. Each one was accused of violating the treaty. Each one besieged separately. Each one watched the previous one fall and calculated they would be spared if they stayed quiet.

By the time the last clan understood what was happening, there were no allies left in the city to stand with them. They surrendered. The men were beheaded in the marketplace. The women and children were sold. This is in the Sirah — the recorded life of Muhammad. Every imam knows it. Every emir knows it. Every Sultan of Sokoto has studied it for two centuries. It is the founding political lesson of Islamic conquest.

The pattern

Read it slowly, because every Nigerian needs to recognize it on sight. Bind your rivals with a treaty (or constitution). Make it sound like mutual protection. Make it sound like unity. Make it the instrument by which they are bound to defend each other — and bound, when the time comes, to help you destroy each one of them in turn.

Provoke them separately

Find a pretext to come for one at a time. Never all at once. The pretext is the treaty itself — they violated it, they betrayed the community, they threatened the city. Split the target before you destroy it. Find the seams inside the clan you mean to eliminate. Detach the minorities. Carve the territory. Reduce the target before the attack so it cannot stand on its own.

Recruit the survivors to help. This is the move most people miss. When you come for the first clan, get the other two to stand with you against them. Make them think the first clan is the threat to the order they all signed onto. They help you destroy your neighbour. They believe they are defending the community. They are defending you.

Use the silence of the rest as cover. When the first clan falls, the surviving clans calculate that compliance bought them safety. They negotiate separately. They distrust each other more than they distrust you. The silence holds while you prepare for the next one.

Sequence is everything. Pick the richest, most visible, most threatening clan first. Eliminate them. Then turn on the clan that helped you destroy them. Then turn on the next. Each elimination uses the previous one as the precedent. By the time the last clan understands what is happening, every potential ally has already been destroyed or expelled. The last clan dies alone because the first ones stayed quiet.

Now look at Nigeria

In 1960, the British handed independence to a Nigerian federation built on the same mechanism. A constitution that bound dozens of people together in what was called mutual protection. A federation that was sold as unity. A treaty that, in the right hands, would function as the instrument of conquest. The right hands were waiting for it.

The Sokoto Caliphate had been studying Muhammad’s playbook for one hundred and fifty-six years by then. Every Sultan since 1804 had memorized the Sirah. The Fulani political class understood, in a way no Nigerian Christian leader did, what a federation could be made to do.

They got to work.

The Igbo went first

Christian. Wealthy. Educated. Commercially dominant. The fastest-growing economic region on earth in the early 1960s. The visible threat to the Caliphate’s claim on the country.

In 1966, the killing began. Thirty thousand Igbo Christians were slaughtered across the North in a single month. Survivors fled back to the southeast. When they tried to leave the federation, the federal army came after them. The blockade closed like a noose. Three million starved to death in thirty months. Most of them children.

Before the war even began, the federal government made the first division. Three days before Biafra declared, the regime in Lagos carved the Eastern Region into three new states. The Igbo heartland was isolated as one state. The Niger Delta minorities — Ijaw, Ogoni, Ibibio, Efik, Annang — were peeled off into states of their own. The Caliphate was running Muhammad’s playbook from the first move. Split the target before you destroy it. And here is the next move that makes the parallel exact.

Every other major Nigerian people — Hausa, Yoruba, Middle Belt Christians — were recruited to help. They were told they were fighting for unity. They were told the Igbo were a threat to the federation. They were told that Biafra was a rebellion against the country.

But that was a lie. They were not fighting for unity. They were fighting for the estate of dan Fodio. The Yoruba political class signed off on the starvation policy. The Middle Belt provided most of the federal army’s frontline soldiers — the very Christians whose grandchildren would be slaughtered fifty years later by the same machine they served. The Niger Delta peoples, freshly cut off from the Igbo by the state-creation decree, were divided among themselves — some fought for Biafra anyway, others were used as a wedge against it. All of them would be looted after the war was over.

The Yoruba and the Middle Belt helped destroy the first clan. They believed they were defending the community. They were advancing the Caliphate. Then the Caliphate turned on the rest. Once the Igbo were broken, the Caliphate came for the others. In sequence. Exactly the way Muhammad came for the survivors in Medina.

The Yoruba won the freest election in Nigerian history in 1993. The Northern military annulled it. Their president-elect died in detention. The Yoruba political class learned the lesson. The presidency would be available to them, but only on the Caliphate’s terms. Obasanjo took those terms in 1999 and was punished when he tried to break them in his second term. Tinubu took those terms in 2023 and is delivering on them — a Northern Muslim Vice President, a Fulani National Security Adviser, the 2024 Islamization of the national curriculum, the 2025 push of Sharia south. The face is Lagos. The agenda is Sokoto.

The Middle Belt Christians who had bled for the federation against Biafra are now being slaughtered in their own villages — Plateau, Benue, Southern Kaduna, Taraba — by the Fulani militia networks the Caliphate has unleashed. Tens of thousands killed. Millions displaced. The killing continues as you read this.

The Niger Delta — used as the wedge against Biafra and then discarded — has been looted of its oil for fifty years. Its lands are poisoned. Its leaders hanged. Each one was eliminated alone, because the others had stayed quiet. Each one had calculated that helping the Caliphate destroy its previous target, or staying out of its way, would buy them safety. Each calculation was wrong.

The lie at the center

The word the Caliphate used to bind the federation together in 1960 was the same word Muhammad used to bind the clans of Medina in 622.

“Unity.”

Every Nigerian leader who sold the Biafra war to his people called it a war for unity. Every Nigerian textbook still calls it that. Every federal soldier who marched east in 1967 believed he was preserving the country. He was not preserving the country. He was promoting the Caliphate. There is a difference.

Nigeria — the federation, the flag, the anthem, the green-white-green — was the cover story. The estate of Dan Fodio was, and is, the project. The unity he was told to die for was the unity of the platform the Caliphate had spent 163 years building to usher in the prophesied Mahdi, Islam’s anticipated jihad messiah.

This is Muhammad’s technique at its purest. The treaty is sold as unity. It functions as a conquest. The target is split internally before the attack. The rivals are recruited to help destroy the rest. The last clan dies alone.

And now they are back to finish the first clan

After subverting and absorbing the Yoruba politically, bleeding the Middle Belt, and looting the Delta, the Caliphate has returned to the Igbo. Because, despite everything they threw at them, the Igbo did not submit; they did not break.

Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the imprisoned leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, was illegally abducted from Kenya in 2021. He is held in Sokoto, the Caliphate’s base, by the heirs of the men who starved his people fifty-five years ago. The United Nations has ordered his release. The Nigerian government is pushing to hang him.

The same family. The same throne. The same 1400-year-old playbook. Fifty-six years later, finishing what 1970 left unfinished.

The hint

Your diversity is being used against you. Not because diversity is weakness. Because the Caliphate has been studying for fourteen hundred years how to turn it into one. They know what makes you distrust your neighbor. They know how to whisper to you that your neighbor is the threat — that staying quiet, or helping, will buy you safety. They have been telling you the same lie since 1960. Notice online, the voices calling for “unity” today are seemingly all northern Muslims. Now you know why.

 

And it is the same lie Muhammad told the last Jewish clan of Medina when he sent them a message that they would be safe if they laid down their arms. They laid down their arms. They went to the marketplace. They were beheaded.

The only way out

Coalition. The thing the Caliphate has spent two hundred and twenty-two years preventing.

Every Nigerian people that has been picked off was picked off alone because the others stayed quiet, helped, or were divided too soon to resist. Every Nigerian people group still standing is being told the same lie that bought the silence of the others. Whoever you are, whatever community you belong to, whatever calculation you are making about how to survive in Tinubu’s Nigeria — it is some version of the calculation the Yoruba made on Biafra, the Middle Belt made on Biafra, the Delta peoples made when their land was carved up.

Every one of those calculations was wrong.

The lesson of Muhammad’s Medina, and the lesson of Nigeria’s last sixty-six years, is the same lesson. The last clan is beheaded and enslaved in the marketplace because the first ones stayed quiet. Your diversity is not your problem. Your division is. And it is being used against you on purpose, by men who learned the technique fourteen hundred years ago and have been running it on you for sixty-six.

Look around. See who is being eliminated this week. See who is staying quiet. See who is helping. Then decide whether you want to be the last clan in the marketplace — or finally wake up, stand together, and tear down this evil tyranny together.

  • #EarthShaker

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