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Benin's One-Day Coup And Nigeria's New Role As West Africa's Enforcer
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
1. A lightning coup attempt in Benin collapsed only after Nigerian fighter jets and regional troops crossed the border to save the government.
2. President Bola Tinubu now acts as West Africa's security anchor, even as his own country struggles with jihadist violence and an old US drug-forfeiture case.
3. Behind the drama lies a quiet battle over trade corridors, ports and who really sets the rules in francophone West Africa.
For a few tense hours on the morning of 7 December 2025, it looked as if Benin was about to join the string of military takeovers that has swept West and Central Africa.
Before dawn, soldiers stormed the national broadcaster in Cotonou, went on air and announced that President Patrice Talon had been removed.
The mutineers, led by Lieutenant Colonel Pascal Tigri, presented themselves as a“Military Committee for Refoundation”.
They accused the government of neglecting security in the north, favouring loyalists inside the armed forces and failing the families of soldiers killed in action.
Borders were officially closed. Institutions were declared dissolved. Residents woke to roadblocks around key ministries, bursts of gunfire near military sites and helicopters sweeping low over the coast.
By late morning, the picture had already begun to shift. Benin's interior minister appeared to declare the coup“thwarted”.
Fourteen soldiers were arrested in and around Cotonou. Tigri and a small inner circle slipped away.
Benin's One-Day Coup And Nigeria's New Role As West Africa's Enforcer
That evening, Talon himself went on television, praising loyal units and insisting that“constitutional order” had held. On paper, Benin's democratic façade remained intact.
The missing piece in that story is what happened in the skies. At Cotonou's request, Nigeria scrambled fighter jets and special forces.
Nigerian aircraft crossed into Benin, striking positions where mutineers had regrouped, including the Togbin camp west of the capital.
Ground units from Nigeria and other ECOWAS members helped Beninese troops retake the broadcaster and secure the main barracks.
The African Union and ECOWAS both condemned the coup and ordered a standby force into Benin, signalling that any repeat would be met with the same steel.
For Western capitals, the outcome was reassuring. A friendly coastal state on the Gulf of Guinea had been held, and fast.
Benin's port is a vital outlet for landlocked neighbours and a potential gateway for the new Alliance of Sahel States – Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger – which have broken with ECOWAS and drifted toward Moscow.
From Paris, Brussels and Washington, the prospect of another government in that corridor flipping away from their orbit was simply too risky.
Tinubu's Own History Adds Another Layer
For many in the region, the picture is very different. Under President Bola Tinubu, Nigeria now acts as West Africa's enforcer, sending jets across borders to rescue allied governments.
At home, though, it still struggles to protect villages from Boko Haram, Islamic State's local branch and al-Qaeda-linked fighters pushing south from the Sahel.
Rural communities in northern Nigeria have watched convoys arrive late, or not at all, when militias and jihadists strike. They can be forgiven for asking why a coup in Cotonou triggered such rapid action.
Tinubu's own history adds another layer. In the early 1990s, US prosecutors in Chicago pursued a civil case that linked funds in his accounts to a heroin-trafficking network.
He eventually forfeited around $460,000 while avoiding criminal conviction, and the core investigative files remain partially sealed.
Supporters see a seasoned operator who can cut deals with powerful partners. Critics see a man whose past makes it hard to claim moral high ground as regional policeman.
In Cotonou, daily life is returning to normal under heavier patrols. But for expats, investors and neighbours watching from afar, the message is clear.
In today's West Africa, it is not just ballots that decide a country's fate. It is also runways, ports and the phone calls that determine whose jets take off, and on whose behalf.
1. A lightning coup attempt in Benin collapsed only after Nigerian fighter jets and regional troops crossed the border to save the government.
2. President Bola Tinubu now acts as West Africa's security anchor, even as his own country struggles with jihadist violence and an old US drug-forfeiture case.
3. Behind the drama lies a quiet battle over trade corridors, ports and who really sets the rules in francophone West Africa.
For a few tense hours on the morning of 7 December 2025, it looked as if Benin was about to join the string of military takeovers that has swept West and Central Africa.
Before dawn, soldiers stormed the national broadcaster in Cotonou, went on air and announced that President Patrice Talon had been removed.
The mutineers, led by Lieutenant Colonel Pascal Tigri, presented themselves as a“Military Committee for Refoundation”.
They accused the government of neglecting security in the north, favouring loyalists inside the armed forces and failing the families of soldiers killed in action.
Borders were officially closed. Institutions were declared dissolved. Residents woke to roadblocks around key ministries, bursts of gunfire near military sites and helicopters sweeping low over the coast.
By late morning, the picture had already begun to shift. Benin's interior minister appeared to declare the coup“thwarted”.
Fourteen soldiers were arrested in and around Cotonou. Tigri and a small inner circle slipped away.
Benin's One-Day Coup And Nigeria's New Role As West Africa's Enforcer
That evening, Talon himself went on television, praising loyal units and insisting that“constitutional order” had held. On paper, Benin's democratic façade remained intact.
The missing piece in that story is what happened in the skies. At Cotonou's request, Nigeria scrambled fighter jets and special forces.
Nigerian aircraft crossed into Benin, striking positions where mutineers had regrouped, including the Togbin camp west of the capital.
Ground units from Nigeria and other ECOWAS members helped Beninese troops retake the broadcaster and secure the main barracks.
The African Union and ECOWAS both condemned the coup and ordered a standby force into Benin, signalling that any repeat would be met with the same steel.
For Western capitals, the outcome was reassuring. A friendly coastal state on the Gulf of Guinea had been held, and fast.
Benin's port is a vital outlet for landlocked neighbours and a potential gateway for the new Alliance of Sahel States – Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger – which have broken with ECOWAS and drifted toward Moscow.
From Paris, Brussels and Washington, the prospect of another government in that corridor flipping away from their orbit was simply too risky.
Tinubu's Own History Adds Another Layer
For many in the region, the picture is very different. Under President Bola Tinubu, Nigeria now acts as West Africa's enforcer, sending jets across borders to rescue allied governments.
At home, though, it still struggles to protect villages from Boko Haram, Islamic State's local branch and al-Qaeda-linked fighters pushing south from the Sahel.
Rural communities in northern Nigeria have watched convoys arrive late, or not at all, when militias and jihadists strike. They can be forgiven for asking why a coup in Cotonou triggered such rapid action.
Tinubu's own history adds another layer. In the early 1990s, US prosecutors in Chicago pursued a civil case that linked funds in his accounts to a heroin-trafficking network.
He eventually forfeited around $460,000 while avoiding criminal conviction, and the core investigative files remain partially sealed.
Supporters see a seasoned operator who can cut deals with powerful partners. Critics see a man whose past makes it hard to claim moral high ground as regional policeman.
In Cotonou, daily life is returning to normal under heavier patrols. But for expats, investors and neighbours watching from afar, the message is clear.
In today's West Africa, it is not just ballots that decide a country's fate. It is also runways, ports and the phone calls that determine whose jets take off, and on whose behalf.
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