US President Barack Obama said the team comprised personnel from military,
law enforcement and other agencies.
He said he hoped the kidnapping might galvanise the international community
to take action against Boko Haram.
Earlier, it emerged that eight more girls had been abducted in north-eastern
Nigeria by suspected militants.
The latest kidnapping happened on Sunday night in the village of Warabe in
Borno state. The girls taken were aged between 12 and 15.
On Monday, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau threatened
to "sell" more than 230 girls seized from their school, also in Borno, on 14
April.
Growing international outrage led the US to offer the Nigerian government
help and, on Tuesday, Mr Obama confirmed that the offer had been accepted.
"We have already sent in a team to Nigeria... a combination of military, law
enforcement, and other agencies who are going in, trying to identify where in
fact these girls might be," he said.
Mr Obama described the abduction as "heartbreaking" and "outrageous" and
denounced Boko Haram as "one of the worst regional... terrorist
organisations".
But he added: "This may be the event that helps to mobilise the entire
international community to finally do something against this horrendous
organisation that's perpetrated such a terrible crime."
Mr Obama denounced Boko Haram as "one of the worst regional...
terrorist organisations"
'Devasting'
Boko Haram - whose name means "Western education is forbidden" - is seeking
to overthrow the government and create an Islamic state in the north of
Nigeria.
A grinning Abubakar Shekau
issued a a video message threatening to sell the girls
Its insurgency has left thousands dead since 2009.
US officials have said the first group of abducted girls, aged between 16 and
18, may have already been smuggled over Nigeria's porous borders into countries
such as Chad and Cameroon.
However, officials in Chad and Cameroon say they do not believe the girls are
in their countries.
US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday that Washington will set up
a co-ordination cell at its embassy in Abuja with US military personnel, law
enforcement officials and experts in hostage situations.
"[Nigerian] President Goodluck Jonathan was very happy to receive this offer
and ready to move on it immediately," he told reporters, after talks with EU
foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.
Baroness Ashton said the girls' kidnapping was "devastating for all of
us".
"These are the future of the country," she said.
"They are teachers, dancers, politicians. They are scientists, they are
mothers, they are women in the making who have a right to play their full part
in their society."
Criticism
President Jonathan, speaking in Abuja, said his country's security agencies
"would appreciate" the deployment of US counter-insurgency expertise.
The Nigerian government has been criticised at home and abroad for what some
say is a slow response to the abductions.
President Jonathan has said they are doing everything they can.
In the latest kidnapping, gunmen arrived in two trucks and also seized
animals and food from the village of Warabe.
Residents of a nearby town said they feared Boko Haram would target them
next.
Warabe is also close to the Sambisa forest, where the first group of
schoolgirls is thought to have been taken.
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