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List of ongoing armed conflicts. Map of ongoing armed conflicts (number of combat-related deaths in current or previous year): Major wars (10,000 or more) Wars (1,000–9,999) Minor conflicts (100–999) Skirmishes and clashes (1–99) The following is a list of ongoing armed conflicts that are taking place around the world.
The US military claimed it had no knowledge of civilian casualties. [ 19 ] On 19 March 2011, a multi-state NATO -led coalition began a military intervention in Libya to implement United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973 (UNSCR 1973), in response to events during the First Libyan Civil War.
The Libyan crisis[1][2] is the current humanitarian crisis [3][4] and political-military instability [5] occurring in Libya, beginning with the Arab Spring protests of 2011, which led to two civil wars, foreign military intervention, and the ousting and death of Muammar Gaddafi. The first civil war 's aftermath and proliferation of armed groups ...
Iceland (2003–unknown) Iraq Supported by: Iran Iraqi Kurdistan. Invasion phase (2003) Iraq Post-invasion (2003–11) Ba'ath loyalists. Supreme Command for Jihad and Liberation. Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order. Sunni insurgents. Al-Qaeda in Iraq (2004–06) Islamic State of Iraq (from 2006) Islamic Army of Iraq.
Battle of Saada. 2011 Sabha clashes. Saudi-led intervention in Bahrain. Second Ivorian Civil War. Silvan ambush. Battle of Sirte (2011) Ethnic violence in South Sudan. South Yemen insurgency. Sudanese nomadic conflicts.
Iraqi Kurdish uprising (1982–1988) – 50,000–198,000 killed. 1991 Uprising in As Sulaymaniyah – 700–2,000 killed. Iraqi Kurdish Civil War (1994–1997) – 3,000 [82] –5,000 killed. 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq – several hundred killed (≈300) on the Kurdish front, at least 24 Peshmerga soldiers killed.
v. t. e. The Syrian civil war is an ongoing multi-sided conflict in Syria involving various state-sponsored and non-state actors. In March 2011, popular discontent with the rule of Bashar al-Assad triggered large-scale protests and pro-democracy rallies across Syria, as part of the wider Arab Spring protests in the region.
Names. This twenty-year armed conflict (2001–2021) is referred to as the War in Afghanistan[93]in order to distinguish it from the country's various other wars,[94]notably the ongoing Afghan conflictof which it was a part,[95]and the Soviet–Afghan War.