The attack came at dawn. A suicide bomber, possibly two, breached security at Diori Hamani International Airport in Niamey. The death toll stands at 35. Scores more wounded. This is not just a tragedy. It is a strategic blow.
The airport is a hub for Operation Barkhane. But also for a quieter British mission: training Nigerien forces to hold back the jihadist tide. A tide that is now lapping at the capital's runways. Whitehall sources are in damage control mode. They insist the UK presence is not a 'combat mission.' Tell that to the families of the dead.
The political tremor will be felt in Westminster. Backbenchers on the Tory right are already sharpening their knives. They smell the 'mission creep' they have long warned against. The opposition? Labour will call for a full Commons statement. Expect Sir Keir to find his voice on this.
But the deeper problem is one of credibility. The UK's Sahel strategy rests on a fiction: that training and advise are enough. That we can outsource the fighting to local forces. Every bombing, every massacre, erodes that fiction. The prime minister's phone has been ringing hot. Emmanuel Macron wants reassurance. So does the Pentagon.
The Number 10 response? Calm, but brittle. A statement condemning 'barbaric terrorism.' A promise to review security cooperation. But no hint of drawing down. Because there is nowhere to draw down to. The alternative is admitting defeat. No prime minister will do that in an election year.
Yet the ground truth is brutal. The junta in Niger is fragile. Its army is stretched thin. The UK-led training mission has been touted as a success story. Now its headquarters is a crime scene. Intelligence sharing will be scrutinised. How did the bombers slip through? Who gave the order? These questions have no easy answers.
I am hearing from a well-placed source that a 'significant escalation' is being discussed. Not of troops. Of technology. Drones. Surveillance. Cyber. The new warfare. But that brings its own risks: blowback, collateral damage, another sticky parliamentary vote.
The mood in the Lobby today is grim. This is the kind of event that reshapes a government's foreign policy narrative. The 'Global Britain' project just took a bullet. Literally. The next few days will be dominated by finger-pointing. The MoD, FCDO, and Number 10 will all be working their phones, protecting their patches.
For the families of the 35, none of that matters. They have lost everything. But for those of us who watch the game, this is a turning point. The war in the Sahel is now a domestic political issue. And it is not going away.
Polling data will be interesting. The public is weary of foreign entanglements. But terrorism still polls as a top concern. The opposition will need to tread carefully. Too hawkish, they split their base. Too dovish, they look weak on security. Treasurer Reeves is said to be worried about the electoral impact.
One thing is certain. The Prime Minister's summer holiday will be cut short. The calls are already coming in. The game is afoot.









