List of wars: 1945–1989

(Redirected from List of wars 1945-1989)
Graph of global conflict deaths from 1945 to 1989 from various sources.

This is a list of wars that began between 1945 and 1989. Other wars can be found in the historical lists of wars and the list of wars extended by diplomatic irregularity. Major conflicts of this period include the Chinese Civil War in Asia, the Greek Civil War in Europe, the Colombian civil war known as La Violencia in South America, the Vietnam War in Southeast Asia, the Ethiopian Civil War in Africa, and the Guatemalan Civil War in North America.

1945–1949

edit
Started Ended Name of conflict Belligerents
Victorious party (if applicable) Defeated party (if applicable)
1945 1949 1945 Khuzestan revolt[1]  Iran Khuzestan rebels
1945 1950 Crusader insurgency  Yugoslavia Crusaders
1945 1949 Chinese Civil War (second phase) Chinese Communist Party

 People's Republic of China (after 1949)
Supported by:
 Soviet Union

 Republic of China

Supported by:
 United States

1945 1945 August Revolution Việt Minh Empire of Vietnam
 Japan
1945 1949 Indonesian National Revolution  Indonesia
 Japanese volunteers
 Netherlands (from 1946)
 United Kingdom (until 1946)
 Japan (until 1946)
1945 Ongoing Korean conflict
 South Korea

Supported by:
 United States

 North Korea
Supported by:

 China
 Soviet Union

1945 1946 War in Vietnam (1945–46)  United Kingdom
 France
 Japan
Việt Minh
1945 1946 1945 Hazara Rebellion Hazara rebels  Afghanistan
1945 1946 Iran crisis of 1946  Iran
Supported by:
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Mahabad
Azerbaijan People's Government
Supported by:
 Soviet Union
1946 1949 Greek Civil War (third phase)  Kingdom of Greece
Supported by:
 United States (from 1946)

 United Kingdom (until 1947)

Provisional Democratic Government

National Liberation Front

Supported by:
 Yugoslavia
 Bulgaria
 Albania

 Soviet Union (until 1947)

1946 1954 Hukbalahap Rebellion (post-WWII) Philippines
Supported by:
 United States
Hukbalahap
1946 1946 Autumn Uprising of 1946 United States Army Military Government in Korea Peasant rebels
1946 1946 Corfu Channel incident  Albania  United Kingdom
1946 1946 Punnapra-Vayalar uprising  Travancore Laborers in Punnapra and Vayalar
Communist Party of India
1946 1954
First Indochina War
Việt Minh
Pathet Lao
Khmer Issarak
United Issarak Front
Japan Japanese holdouts
Supported by:
 Soviet Union
 China
 East Germany
 Poland
French Union
 United Kingdom
Supported by:

 United States

1947 1947 Paraguayan Civil War (1947) Paraguayan Government
Colorado Party
Liberal Party
PRF
PCP
1947 1949 Malagasy Uprising  France Malagasy rebels
1947 1947 1947 Poonch rebellion

Part of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948

Poonch and Mirpur rebels
Muslim Conference

Supported by:
 Pakistan

 Jammu and Kashmir
1947 1947 Annexation of Junagadh  India Junagadh
1947 1962 Romanian anti-communist resistance movement  Romania
Supported by:
 Soviet Union
Romania Anti-communist rebels
Supported by:
 United States
 United Kingdom
1947 1949 Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948

Part of the Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts

 India  Pakistan
1947 1948 1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine
Part of the 1948 Palestine war
Israel Jews of Palestine All-Palestine Protectorate Arabs of Palestine
1948[2] or 1947[3] 1949 Safi Rebellion[2][3]  Afghanistan Safi rebels
1948 1948 Al-Wathbah uprising Kingdom of Iraq Iraqi Police Student Cooperation Committee (communists)
1948 1948 Costa Rican civil war National Liberation Army Costa Rican government
1948 Ongoing Internal conflict in Myanmar
Burmese government
Governments

DKBA (1994–2010)

Anti-government groups

Supported by:
 ROC (1948–1980s)
 Thailand
 United States (until 2021)
 PRC

1948 1949 Jeju uprising United States Army Military Government in Korea (before August 1948)

 South Korea (after August 1948)

WPSK
1948 1958 La Violencia Colombia Government of Colombia
Conservative Party
Liberal Party
1948 1949 1948 Arab–Israeli War
Part of the Arab–Israeli conflict
 Israel  Egypt
 Iraq
 Transjordan
Syria
HWA
Arab Liberation Army
 Lebanon
 Saudi Arabia
 Kingdom of Yemen
Foreign volunteers:
Muslim Brotherhood
 Pakistan
Sudan
1948 1960 Malayan Emergency  United Kingdom
Federation of Malaya
 Southern Rhodesia (until 1953)
 Rhodesia and Nyasaland (from 1953)
 Fiji
 Australia
 New Zealand
Supported by:
 Thailand
CPM
MNLA
Supported by:
 Soviet Union
 China
 Indonesia
North Vietnam Viet Minh (1948-1954)
 North Vietnam (from 1954)
1948 1948 Annexation of Hyderabad  India  Hyderabad
1948 1948 Madiun Affair
Part of the Indonesian National Revolution
 Indonesia People's Democratic Front
1948 1948 Yeosu–Suncheon rebellion  South Korea Workers' Party of South Korea
1948 1950 Pre-Korean War insurgency[4]  South Korea Anti-government insurgents
North Korea Pro-North Korean rebels
1949 1949 1949 Hazara Rebellion  Kingdom of Afghanistan Hazara rebels
1949 1956 Palestinian Fedayeen insurgency
Part of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
 Israel All-Palestine Protectorate Palestinian Fedayeen
Supported by:
 Kingdom of Egypt (until 1953)
Republic of Egypt (from 1953)
 Jordan
 Syria
1949 1949 Palace Rebellion  Thailand Supporters of Pridi Phanomyong
1949 1953 Campaign to Suppress Bandits in Central and Southern China

Part of the Chinese Civil War

 China National Revolutionary Army
1949 1962 Darul Islam rebellion
Part of the Indonesian National Revolution
 Indonesia
 Netherlands
Darul Islam
1949 1950 Afghanistan–Pakistan border skirmishes  Pakistan

Supported by:
 China

 Afghanistan

Supported by:
 India

1950–1959

edit
Started Ended Name of conflict Belligerents
Victorious party (if applicable) Defeated party (if applicable)
1950 1958 Kuomintang Islamic insurgency  China Ma clique supported by the ROC government in Taiwan
1950 1950 APRA coup d'état
Part of the Indonesian National Revolution
 Indonesia
 Netherlands
Legion of the Just Ruler
1950 1950 Makassar Uprising
Part of the Indonesian National Revolution
 Indonesia East Indonesia
1950 1950 La Revolución del 50  Peru Rebels
1950 1953[5] Korean War
Part of the Korean conflict
Medical support:
1950 1950 Battle of Chamdo  China  Tibet
1950 1954 Puerto Rican Nationalist Party revolts of the 1950s  United States Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
1951 1966 Reprisal operations (Israel)

Part of the Arab–Israeli conflict

 Israel Palestinian Fedayeen
 Jordan
 Egypt
 Syria
1951 1951 Manhattan Rebellion  Thailand Rebel naval units
1952 1955 Buraimi dispute Trucial Oman Scouts

Supported by:
British Empire
Sultanate of Muscat and Oman

Saudi Arabia

Supported by:

  • Al Bu Shamis tribe
  • Na'im tribe
1952 1952 1952 Hazara Rebellion[8] Afghanistan Rebels
1952 1952 Egyptian revolution of 1952 Free Officers Movement

Supported by:

Soviet Union

Egypt

Supported by:

United Kingdom

1952 1960 Mau Mau rebellion  United Kingdom Mau Mau
1953 1953 Air battle over Merklín  Czechoslovakia  United States
1953 1953 1953 Plzeň uprising  Czechoslovakia Plzeň workers
1953 1953 East German uprising of 1953  Soviet Union
 East Germany
East German demonstrators
1953 1959 Cuban Revolution 26th of July Movement Cuba
1953 1953 1953 Iranian coup d'état House of Pahlavi
 United States[a]
 United Kingdom[a]
Government of Iran
1954 1954 1954 Paraguayan coup d'état Paraguayan Army Government of Paraguay
1954 1954 Kengir uprising Soviet Union Soviet Union Kengir resistance
1954 1954 Annexation of Dadra and Nagar Haveli India India Portugal Portugal
1954 1955 First Taiwan Strait Crisis  China  Taiwan
 United States
1954 1959 Jebel Akhdar War Sultanate of Muscat and Oman
  • Ibriyin tribe
Imamate of Oman
1954 1962 Algerian War FLN
MNA
PCA
 France
OAS
FAF
1954 Ongoing Insurgency in Northeast India  India NSCN
PREPAK
ULFA
ATTF
1955 1955 Afghan tribal revolt of 1955 Afghanistan Rebels
1955 1955 Calderonista invasion of Costa Rica  Costa Rica Calderonistas
Supported by:

 Nicaragua
 Venezuela

1955 1964 Bamileke War  France Union of the Peoples of Cameroon
1955 1957 Upper Yafa uprisings[9]  United Kingdom Rebels
1955 1972 First Sudanese Civil War SSLM
AZL
Anyanya
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
Republic of the Sudan
Democratic Republic of the Sudan
1955 1975 Vietnam War North Vietnam
FNL
Khmer Rouge
Khmer Issarak
Pathet Lao
 China
 North Korea
 Soviet Union
Medical Support:
 South Vietnam
 United States
 South Korea
 Thailand
 Australia
 New Zealand
 Laos
 Khmer Republic
 Philippines
1955 1959 Cyprus Emergency EOKA  United Kingdom
1956 1956 Hungarian Revolution of 1956  Soviet Union
State Protection Authority
Hungarian revolutionaries
1956 1956 1956 Poznań protests Poland Strike Committee
1956 1956 Suez Crisis

Part of the Arab–Israeli conflict

 Israel[10]
 United Kingdom
France
Egypt[11]
1956 1956 Quỳnh Lưu uprising

Part of the Vietnam War

North Vietnam Anti-communist rebels
1957 1958 Ifni War  Morocco  Spain
 France
1957 1961 PRRI and Permesta rebellion  Indonesia Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia
Permesta
Late 1950s Late 1950s Anti-taxation uprising in Afghanistan[12] Afghanistan Hazara rebels
1958 1958 14 July Revolution Iraq Free Officers Arab Federation Arab Federation
1958 1958 1958 Lebanon crisis  Lebanon
 United States
INM
LCP
PSP
1958 1958 Second Taiwan Strait Crisis  China  Taiwan
 United States
1958 Ongoing Ethnic conflict in Nagaland

Part of the Insurgency in Northeast India

India India

Myanmar Burma

Rebels Forces
1958 1959 North Vietnamese invasion of Laos
Part of the Vietnam War and the Laotian Civil War
 North Vietnam  Laos
1958 1959 Mexico–Guatemala conflict  Guatemala  Mexico
1959 1959 Spirit Soldier rebellion (1959)  China Regiment of Spirit Soldiers
1959 1959 1959 Tibetan uprising  China  Tibet

Chushi Gangdruk

1959 1959 1959 Mosul uprising Iraq Iraq United Arab Republic Arab nationalist rebels
1959 1975 Laotian Civil War

Part of the Vietnam War

Pathet Lao
 North Vietnam
Supported by:
 Laos
 United States
 Thailand
 South Vietnam
Supported by:
1959 1965 Escambray rebellion  Cuba Anti-communist guerrillas
1959 1959 Pashtun Revolt in Kandahar[13] Afghanistan Pashtun rebels
1959 1959 Upper Yafa disturbances[14]  United Kingdom Rebels

Supported by:
 Yemen

1959 1959 Cuban invasion of Panama[15]  Panama  Cuba
1959 1959 1959 Viqueque rebellion  Portugal Timorese rebels
1959 1959 Cuban invasion of the Dominican Republic[16]  Dominican Republic  Cuba
1959 2011 Basque conflict  Spain
GAL
AAA
BVE
 France
ETA
Basque National Liberation Movement
ETA (pm)
Iparretarrak

1960–1969

edit
Started Ended Name of conflict Belligerents
Victorious party (if applicable) Defeated party (if applicable)
1960 1965 Congo Crisis 1960–63:

Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo

Supported by:
 Soviet Union (1960)

1964–65:
Democratic Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo Supported by:
 United States
 Belgium

1960–63:

 Katanga
 South Kasai

Supported by:
 Belgium
 France
 Union of South Africa
 Rhodesia
1960–62:
Democratic Republic of the Congo Stanleyville government
1964–65:
Simba and Kwilu rebels

Supported by:
1960 1961 Bajaur Campaign  Pakistan  Afghanistan
1960 1996 Guatemalan Civil War Guatemala URNG
1960 1961 1960–61 campaign at the China–Burma border  China
 Burma
National Revolutionary Army
1960 1960 1960 Ethiopian coup d'état attempt  Ethiopia Kebur Zabangna
1961 1974 Angolan War of Independence
Part of the Portuguese Colonial War
FNLA
UNITA
MPLA
FLEC
 Portugal
 South Africa
1961 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion  Cuba  United States
Brigade 2506
1961 1962 French military rebellion in Algeria[17][18]
Part of the Algerian War
 France OAS
1961 1990 Nicaraguan Revolution FSLN Contras
Nicaragua
1961 1961 Bizerte crisis  France  Tunisia
1961 1991 Eritrean War of Independence EPLF
ELF
Ethiopia
 Cuba
 Soviet Union
 South Yemen
1961 1970 First Iraqi–Kurdish War

Part of the Iraqi–Kurdish conflict

KDP Iraq
Syria
1961 1961 Rebellion of the Pilots National Civic Union [es]
14 June Movement
Dominican Air Force
1961 1961 1961 revolt in Somalia Somalia Somalia Rebels
1961 1961 Annexation of Goa  India  Portugal
1961 1962 Operation Trikora  Netherlands  Indonesia
1962 1964 Tuareg rebellion (1962–1964)  Mali Tuareg guerrillas
1962 1962 El Carupanazo  Venezuela Military rebels
1962 1962 El Porteñazo  Venezuela Military rebels
1962 1963 1963 Argentine Navy revolt Argentina Azules faction (most of the Army and the Air Force) Argentina Colorados faction (mainly the Navy)
1962 1970 North Yemen Civil War  Yemen Arab Republic
 Egypt (until 1967)
Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen
Supported by:
 Saudi Arabia
 Jordan
 United Kingdom
1962 Ongoing Papua conflict  Indonesia Free Papua Movement
1962 1962 Sino-Indian War  China  India
1962 1990 Communist insurgency in Sarawak  United Kingdom
 Malaysia
Sarawak
Indonesia
North Kalimantan Communist Party
1962 1962 Brunei revolt  United Kingdom

 Brunei
 Malaya

North Borneo Federation

 Indonesia

1963 Ongoing Katanga insurgency  Democratic Republic of the Congo

United Nations ONUC
United Nations MONUSCO
 Benin
 Egypt
Self-defence groups

Mai-Mai Kata Katanga (2011–2016)

Mai Mai Gédéon
CORAK
CPK


FDLR
Mai Mai Yakutumba

1963 1963 1963 Cuban invasion of Venezuela[19]  Venezuela  Cuba
1963 1966 Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation  Malaysia
 United Kingdom
 Australia
 New Zealand
 Indonesia
1963 1970 Bale revolt  Ethiopia Oromo Peasants
Somali Peasants
1963 1974 Guinea-Bissau War of Independence
Part of the Portuguese Colonial War
PAIGC  Portugal
1963 1963 Ramadan Revolution Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party Iraq Iraq
Iraqi Communist Party
1963 1963 1963 Syrian coup d'état Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Syria Region Syria Syria
1963 1976 Dhofar Rebellion  Oman
Iran
 United Kingdom
 Jordan
DLF (1962–1968)
PFLOAG (1968–1974)
NDFLOAG (1969–1971)
PFLO (1974–1976)
1963 1963 Ar-Rashid revolt Iraq Iraqi Government Iraqi Communist Party
Iraq Iraqi Army
1963 1963 Sand War  Algeria  Morocco
1963 1967 Aden Emergency NLF
FLOSY
 United Kingdom
Federation of South Arabia Federation of South Arabia
1963 1967 Shifta War  Kenya Northern Frontier District Liberation Movement
 Somalia
1963 1963 November 1963 Iraqi coup d'état Iraq Nasserist rebels Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party
1963 1965 Simba rebellion
Part of the Congo Crisis
Democratic Republic of the Congo Congo-Léopoldville
 Belgium
 United States
Simba Rebels
1964 1964 Zanzibar Revolution Afro-Shirazi Party
Umma Party
 Zanzibar
1964 1964 1964 Ethiopian–Somali Border War  Ethiopia Somalia Somalia
1964 1964 1964 Brazilian coup d'état Brazilian Armed Forces:

Supported by:
United States

Brazilian Government
1964 Ongoing Colombian conflict  Colombia FARC
ELN
EPL
IRAFP
M-19
MOEC
MAQL
ERC
GRA
PRT
1964 1979 Rhodesian Bush War ZANU
FRELIMO
ZAPU
MK
 Rhodesia
 Zimbabwe Rhodesia
1964 1992 FULRO insurgency

Part of the Vietnam War

 North Vietnam (1964–1976)
Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam Viet Cong
 South Vietnam
 Vietnam (after 1976)
United Front for the Liberation of Oppressed Races
1964 1974 Mozambican War of Independence
Part of the Portuguese Colonial War
FRELIMO  Portugal
1964 1982 Mexican Dirty War  Mexico
 United States
Party of the Poor
Liga Comunista 23 de Septiembre
1965 1965 Dominican Civil War (CEFA) Dominican Armed Forces Training Center
(SIM) Dominican Military Intelligence Service
 United States
(IAPF) Inter-American Peace Force
Dominican Armed Forces Constitutionalists
PRD partisans
1965 1966 American occupation of the Dominican Republic (1965–66)  United States
Inter-American Peace Force:
Brazil
 Honduras
 Paraguay
 Nicaragua
 Costa Rica
 El Salvador
 Dominican Republic
1965 1965 Indo-Pakistani War of 1965

Part of the Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts

 India  Pakistan
1965 1965 30 September Movement  Indonesia Communist Party of Indonesia
1965 1983 Communist insurgency in Thailand  Thailand Communist party of Thailand
1965 1979 Chadian Civil War (1965–1979) FROLINAT
Chad GUNT
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Libya
 Chad
 France
1966 1967 Guerrilha do Caparaó [pt] Brazil Rebels
1966 1977 Crisis in French Somaliland[20] Djiboutian nationalists  France
1966 1967 Stanleyville mutinies
Part of the Congo Crisis
Democratic Republic of the Congo Katangan Mercenaries
1966 1990 South African Border War  Angola
 Cuba
SWAPO
 Zambia
Umkhonto we Sizwe
 South Africa
UNITA
1966 1969 Korean DMZ Conflict
Part of the Korean conflict
South Korea
 United States
 North Korea
1966 1967 Ñancahuazú Guerrilla War  Bolivia
 United States
National Liberation Army of Bolivia
1967 1968 1967 Kurdish revolt in Iran

Part of the Kurdish separatism in Iran

Iran Iran Kurdish tribesmen
1967 1975 Araguaia Guerrilla War Brazil Brazilian military government Communist Party of Brazil
1967 1975 Cambodian Civil War

Part of the Vietnam War

National United Front of Kampuchea
Khmer Rouge
 North Vietnam
Viet Cong
 Khmer Republic
 United States
 South Vietnam
1967 1967 Machurucuto raid  Venezuela  Cuba
1967 Ongoing Naxalite–Maoist insurgency  India Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Naxalbari

Communist Party of United States of India
Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) New Democracy
Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) (Mahadev Mukherjee)
Centre of Indian Communists (until 1977)
People's Liberation Army of Manipur
Tamil Nadu Liberation Army
Purbo Banglar Communist Party

1967 1967 Six-Day War

Part of the Arab–Israeli conflict

 Israel  Egypt
 Syria
 Jordan
Arab Expeditionary Forces:
Iraq
 Saudi Arabia
 Morocco
 Algeria
 Libya
 Kuwait
 Tunisia
Sudan
 PLO
1967 1970 War of Attrition

Part of the Arab–Israeli conflict

 Israel  Egypt
 Soviet Union
 Cuba
PLO
 Jordan
 Syria
1967 1970 Nigerian Civil War  Nigeria  Biafra
1967 1967 Nathu La and Cho La clashes  India  China
1967 1974 PGRS/Paraku Rebellion[21]  Indonesia PGRS/Paraku
1968 2019 Moro conflict
Part of the Civil conflict in the Philippines
 Philippines

Supported by:
 United States (advisers)
 Australia
 Malaysia (From 2001)
 Indonesia

IMT:[22]
Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) (until 2014)
MRLO
Ampatuan militias[23]
Former Support:

Supported by::
al-Qaeda[33]
14K Triad (to ASG)[34]
 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant[35]

1968 1989 Communist insurgency in Malaysia (1968–1989)  Malaysia
 Thailand
Malayan Communist Party
1968 1968 Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia  Soviet Union
Bulgaria
 East Germany
Hungary
Poland
Czechoslovakia
1968 1998 The Troubles Provisional IRA  United Kingdom
1968 1988 Years of Lead (Italy)  Italy Far-left terrorists

Far-right terrorists

1968 1971 1968-1971 East Pakistan communist insurgency  Pakistan PBSA
1969 1969 Rupununi Uprising Guyana (1966–1970) Guyana Rupununi separatists
1969 1969 Sino-Soviet border conflict  China  Soviet Union
1969 Ongoing Communist rebellion in the Philippines
Part of the Civil conflict in the Philippines
Philippines Philippines
 United States[38]
Anti-communist militia
CPP
* NPA
MLPP-RHB[39]
APP[39]
RPA[39]
ABB[39]
CPLA[39]


Support:
 People's Republic of China (1969–1976)
 Libya (1980s–2011)
 North Korea (Alleged)
 Vietnam (1980s)

1969 1969 Football War  El Salvador  Honduras
1969 1969 Al-Wadiah War  Saudi Arabia  South Yemen

1970–1979

edit
Started Ended Name of conflict Belligerents
Victorious party (if applicable) Defeated party (if applicable)
1970 1971 Reggio revolt  Italy Christian Democracy
Italian Social Movement
Italian Social Democratic Party
National Italian Workers' Union
'Ndrangheta
1970 1971 Black September  Jordan  PLO
 Syria
1970 1970 Corrective Movement (Syria) Assad loyalists Syrian Government
Syrian Ba'ath Party
1970 1970 Teoponte Guerrilla  Bolivia Student guerrilla
1971 1971 1971 Ugandan coup d'état Ugandan putschists

Supported by:

Israel
United Kingdom
United States

Ugandan government
  • Loyal state institutions
1971 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War

Part of the Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts

Bangladesh
 India
 Pakistan
1971 1971 1971 JVP insurrection  Ceylon JVP
1971 1971 Seizure of Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs Iran Iran  Sharjah
1972 1974 First Eritrean Civil War

Part of the Ethiopian Civil War and the Eritrean War of Independence

EPLF ELF
1972 1975 1972–1975 Bangladesh insurgency  Bangladesh Gonobahini

Purba Banglar Sarbahara Party

1972 Ongoing Maoist insurgency in Turkey  Turkey TKP/ML-TİKKO

MKP-HKO-PHG


MLKP


Maoist Party Centre


THKP-C
(Dissolved)
THKO
(Dissolved)
1972 1972 1972 invasion of Uganda[40]  Uganda Uganda FRONASA
1973 1973 1973 Samita border skirmish Iraq Kuwait
1973 1978 1970s operation in Balochistan
Part of the Insurgency in Balochistan
 Pakistan

Supported by:

 Iran

Baloch separatists
Pashtun Zalmay

Supported by:

1973 1973 1973 Chilean coup d'état Chilean Armed Forces Chilean Government

Revolutionary Left Movement

1973 1988 Armed resistance in Chile (1973–1990)  Chile Revolutionary Left Movement
Manuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front
Lautaro Youth Movement
1973 1973 Yom Kippur War

Part of the Arab–Israeli conflict

 Israel  Egypt
 Syria
Combat support:
1973 Ongoing Oromo conflict Ethiopian Empire (1973–1975)
Derg (1975–1987)
PDR Ethiopia (1987–1991)
Ethiopia Transitional Government of Ethiopia (1991–1995)
 Ethiopia (1995–present)
OLF
IFLO
OIM
COPLF
OYRM
1974 1974 Battle of the Paracel Islands

Part of the Vietnam War

 China  South Vietnam
1974 1974 Arube uprising  Uganda Putschists
1974 1975 Second Iraqi–Kurdish War

Part of the Iraqi–Kurdish conflict

Iraq KDP
1974 1975 1974–75 Shatt al-Arab conflict Iran Iraq
1974 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus  Turkey  Cyprus
 Greece
1974 1991 Ethiopian Civil War EPRP
TPLF
MEISON
ANDM
EDUP
OLF
ONLF
WSLF
ALF
Ethiopia

Supported by:
 Cuba
 East Germany
 Soviet Union
 North Korea
 Libya

1974 1983 Dirty War  Argentina Montoneros
ERP
1975 1975 Islamist uprising in the Panjshir Valley  Republic of Afghanistan Forces loyal to Ahmad Shah Massoud
1975 1975 1975 China-India border skirmish China India
1975 Ongoing Cabinda War  Angola
 Cuba
 East Germany(1975–1990)
 Soviet Union (1975–1991)
FLEC
1975 2002 Angolan Civil War MPLA
Supported by:
 Cuba
 Brazil
 Mexico
 Soviet Union
 East Germany
SWAPO
MK
 Vietnam
 Portugal
FNLA
UNITA
FLEC
Supported by:
 South Africa
 Zaire
United States
 China
1975 1979 PUK insurgency

Part of the Iraqi–Kurdish conflict

 Iraq PUK
KDP
1975 1990 Lebanese Civil War LF
 Syria (until 1976)
Tigers Militia
ALZ
 Israel (1982)
SLA
 United States
 France
 Italy
 Syria
PLA
ADF
LNM (until 1982)
LNRF (from 1982)
Amal
LCP
SSNP
 PLO (1978–1983)
Hezbollah
1975 1991 Western Sahara War
Part of the Western Sahara conflict
 Morocco
 Mauritania (1975–1979)
 France (1977–1978)
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
 Algeria (1976)
1975 2021 Insurgency in Laos

Part of the Third Indochina War

 Laos
 Vietnam
Hmong insurgents
 United States
1975 1975 Indonesian invasion of East Timor  Indonesia Fretilin / Falintil
1976 Early 1980s Rebellion of the Lost [pt] Brazil Brazil Rebels
1976 1982 Islamist uprising in Syria  Syria Muslim Brotherhood of Syria
1976 2005 Insurgency in Aceh  Indonesia Free Aceh Movement
1976 1980 Political violence in Turkey (1976–1980) Right-wing groups:


Grey Wolves (MHP)

Left-wing groups:
TKP/ML (TİKKO)
THKO
Devrimci Yol
1977 1977 1977 Shia uprising in Iraq[45] Iraq Rebels
1977 1992 Mozambican Civil War FRELIMO RENAMO
1977 1977 Shaba I  Zaire
 Morocco
 Egypt
 France
State of Katanga FNLC
1977 1978 Ogaden War Ethiopia
 Cuba
South Yemen
 Soviet Union
 Somalia
1977 1977 Egyptian–Libyan War  Egypt  Libya
1977 1997 Chittagong Hill Tracts conflict  Bangladesh Shanti Bahini
1978 1979 Iranian Revolution Revolution Council
Interim Government of Iran
Imperial State of Iran
1978 1987 Chadian–Libyan War CAF
 France
FAN
FANT
 Libya
FROLINAT
GUNT
1978 1978 1978 South Lebanon conflict

Part of the Israeli–Lebanese conflict

 Israel
SLA
 PLO
1978 1978 Saur Revolution

Part of the Afghanistan conflict (1978–present)

People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan  Republic of Afghanistan
1978 1978 Shaba II  Zaire
 France
 Belgium
 United States
State of Katanga FNLC
1978 1979 Uganda–Tanzania War  Tanzania
UNLA
 Mozambique
 Uganda
 Libya
 PLO
1978 Ongoing Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present)

Part of the Kurdish–Turkish conflict

 Turkey
KDP
PUK
PKK
KCK
PJAK
KDP/North
1978 1989 Cambodian–Vietnamese War

Part of the Third Indochina War

 Vietnam
People's Republic of Kampuchea

Supported by:  Sweden

Democratic Kampuchea
 Thailand
United States
 China
 United Kingdom
 Malaysia
 North Korea
1978 1982 NDF Rebellion  North Yemen NDF
1979 1979 1979 Khuzestan insurgency

Part of the Arab separatism in Khuzestan

Iran APCO

DRFLA
PFLA
AFLA

1979 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War

Part of the Third Indochina War

 China  Vietnam
1979 1991 Sino-Vietnamese conflicts (1979–1991)

Part of the Third Indochina War

 China  Vietnam
1979 1979 Yemenite War of 1979  North Yemen  South Yemen
NDF
1979 1983 1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran

Part of the Kurdish separatism in Iran

 Iran KDP-I
1979 1979 1979 Herat uprising

Part of the Afghanistan conflict (1978–present)

Afghanistan Army mutineers
1979 1988 Al-Ansar insurgency  Iraq Iraqi Communist Party
1979 1980 1979–1980 Shia uprising in Iraq  Iraq Shiite rebels
1979 1979 Grand Mosque seizure  Saudi Arabia al-Ikhwan
1979 1992 Salvadoran Civil War El Salvador FMLN
RN
1979 1989 Soviet–Afghan War

Part of the Afghanistan conflict (1978–present)

Peshawar Seven
Tehran Eight
AMFFF

Supported by:
 United States
 Pakistan

 Soviet Union
Afghanistan

1980–1989

edit
Started Ended Name of conflict Belligerents
Victorious party (if applicable) Defeated party (if applicable)
1980 1980 1980 Gafsa Uprising  Tunisia
Supported by:
 United States
Nationalist rebels
Supported by:
 Libya
 Algeria
1980 1981 Second Eritrean Civil War

Part of the Ethiopian Civil War and the Eritrean War of Independence

Eritrean People's Liberation Front Eritrean Liberation Front
1980 2000 Internal conflict in Peru  Peru
Rondas Campesinas
Shining Path
Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement
1980 1980 Gwangju Uprising  South Korea Gwangju Settlement Committees
1980 1980 Nojeh coup plot  Iran Royalist Officers
1980 1980 Coconut War  Vanuatu
 Papua New Guinea
Nagriamel rebels
1980 1988 Iran–Iraq War  Iran[46]  Iraq
MEK
DRFLA
1980 1986 Ugandan Bush War National Resistance Army Uganda National Liberation Army
1981 1981 Paquisha War  Peru  Ecuador
1981 1981 1981 Entumbane uprising  Zimbabwe ZIPRA
1981 1981 1981 Gambian coup d'état attempt  The Gambia
 Senegal
National Revolutionary Council
1982 2014 Casamance conflict  Senegal
 The Gambia
 Guinea-Bissau
Casamance Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance
1982 1982 1982 Amol uprising  Iran Union of Iranian Communists
1982 1982 Falklands War  United Kingdom  Argentina
1982 1982 Ndogboyosoi War  Sierra Leone SLPP
1982 1985 1982 Lebanon War

Part of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict

 Israel
Lebanon SLA
Lebanon Lebanese Front
PLO
Syria Syria
Hezbollah
Lebanon Jammoul
Amal
Al-Mourabitoun
Islamic Amal
ASALA
Al-Tawhid
PKK
1982 1982 1982 Ethiopian–Somali Border War  Somalia  Ethiopia
Somali Salvation Democratic Front
1983 1983 Chadian–Nigerian War  Nigeria  Chad
1983 2005 Second Sudanese Civil War SPLA
SPLA-Nasir
SSLM
Anyanya II
Eastern Coalition
Sudan
SSDF
Janjaweed
LRA
1983 2009 Sri Lankan Civil War  Sri Lanka
India (1987–1990)
Tamil Tigers
1983 1987 Eelam War I

Part of the Sri Lankan Civil War

 Sri Lanka Tamil Tigers
1983 1986 1983–1986 Kurdish rebellions in Iraq
Part of the Iran–Iraq War and the Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
Iraq Kurdistan Democratic Party KDP
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan PUK
1983 1983 United States invasion of Grenada  United States
 Antigua and Barbuda
 Barbados
 Dominica
 Jamaica
 Saint Lucia
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
 Grenada
 Cuba
1984 2003 Siachen conflict  India[47][48][49]  Pakistan
1985 2000 South Lebanon conflict (1985–2000)

Part of the Israeli–Lebanese conflict

Hezbollah
Lebanon Jammoul
Amal
 Israel
Lebanon SLA
Lebanon Lebanese Front
1985 1985 Agacher Strip War  Mali  Burkina Faso
1986 1986 South Yemen Civil War South Yemen Abdul Fattah Ismail's faction South Yemen Ali Nasir Muhammad's faction
1986 1986 1986 United States bombing of Libya  United States  Libya
1986 1992 Surinamese Interior War  Suriname Jungle Commando

Tucayana Amazonas

1986 1987 Ciskei-Transkei conflict  Ciskei  Transkei
1986 1987 Sumdorong Chu standoff India China
1987 1989 1987–1989 JVP insurrection

Part of the Sri Lankan Civil War

 Sri Lanka JVP
1987 1989 War of the Tribes Tajammu al-Arabi
Sudan
Supported by:
 Libya
Fur tribes
Supported by:
 Chad
1987 1991 Singing Revolution Citizens of the Baltic States:
 Lithuania
 Latvia
 Estonia
 Soviet Union
1987 1993 First Intifada

Part of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict

 Israel Unified National Leadership of the Uprising
Hamas
Palestinian Islamic Jihad
1987 Ongoing Lord's Resistance Army insurgency  Uganda
 South Sudan
 Democratic Republic of the Congo
United Nations MONUC
 Central African Republic
Lord's Resistance Army
1988 1994 First Nagorno-Karabakh War

Part of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

 Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
 Armenia
 Azerbaijan
1988 1988 1988 Maldives coup d'état attempt India
Maldives Maldives
People's Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam
Maldives Maldivian rebels
1988 1998 Bougainville conflict Autonomous Region of Bougainville Bougainville Revolutionary Army  Papua New Guinea
1989 1989 1989 Paraguayan coup d'état 1st Army Corps

Supported by:

United States

Government of Paraguay
1989 1992 Afghan Civil War (1989–1992)
Part of the Afghanistan conflict (1978–present)
Afghan Interim Government
Supported by:
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
Supported by:
1989 1991 Mauritania–Senegal Border War  Mauritania  Senegal
1989 1996 KDPI insurgency (1989–1996)

Part of the Kurdish separatism in Iran

Iran Iran KDP-I
1989 Ongoing Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir
Part of the Kashmir conflict
 India Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami
Lashkar-e-Taiba

Jaish-e-Mohammed
Hizbul Mujahideen
Harkat-ul-Mujahideen
Al-Badr
Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front

1989 1989 1989 Philippine coup d'état attempt Philippines
United States
Pro-Aquino protesters
Archdiocese of Manila
RAF Movement
Soldiers of the Filipino People
Pro-Marcos protesters
Iglesia ni Cristo
1989 1989 Romanian Revolution Anti-Ceaușescu protestors
Romanian Army
Dissident members of the Communist Party
Romania
1989 1990 United States invasion of Panama  United States
Panama Panamanian opposition
 Panama
1989 1997 First Liberian Civil War National Patriotic Front of Liberia
Supported by:
 Libya
Liberia
ULIMO
 United Nations
Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Iran: the " liberation " of Arabistan". articles.abolkhaseb.net. Retrieved 9 April 2019. New revolts occurred in 1943 and 1945 and were quelled in blood.
  2. ^ a b Khan, Hafeez R. (1960). "Afghanistan and Pakistan". Pakistan Horizon. 13 (1): 55. ISSN 0030-980X. JSTOR 41392239. 1933: Siege of Matun, the capital of the Afghan province of Khost, by the Mohmands. 1937: Uprising of the Mohmands, the Shinwaris and the Sulayman Khel section of the Ghilzais. 1938: Abortive tribal movement under the Shami Pir to oust King Zahir Shah. 1948-49: Rebellion of the Safi tribes. 1955: Abortive tribal movement on Kabul
  3. ^ a b Robinson, Francis (4 November 2010). The New Cambridge History of Islam: Volume 5, The Islamic World in the Age of Western Dominance. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-17578-1. In addition, tension between the government and the Bānki Millī group and the Ṣāfī Pashtūn tribal revolt (1947– 9) in Nangarhār Province brought Muḥammad Dāʾūd, who brutally suppressed it, to national attention.
  4. ^ Frank, R.B.; Clark, W.K. (2007). MacArthur: A Biography. St. Martin's Press. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-230-61076-7. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
  5. ^ US State Department statement regarding "Korea: Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission" and the Armistice Agreement "which ended the Korean War."
  6. ^ "Českoslovenští lékaři stáli v korejské válce na straně KLDR. Jejich mise stále vyvolává otazníky" (in Czech). Czech Radio. 11 April 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  7. ^ "Romania's "Fraternal Support" to North Korea during the Korean War, 1950–1953". Wilson Centre. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  8. ^ Giustozzi, Antonio (November 2008). "Afghanistan: transition without end" (PDF). Crisis States Working Papers. p. 13. S2CID 54592886. The 'peasant' revolt of Harazajat in 1952 has also been attributed to the abuses of the state administration (Davydov 1967: 162). In this case, the revolt was immediate because the population was still well armed following the civil war, but my hypothesis is that elsewhere the 'imperial' system of oppression and exclusion and the patrimonial system of administration were slowly preparing the ground for future explosions, should the opportunity arise.
  9. ^ Waldemar Gruschke, Markenländer-Lexikon, vol. 3 N–Sh, 2006, p. 83, ISBN 3-8334-4936-5
  10. ^ "Israel Routs Egypt"
  11. ^ "Nasser lost the war in military terms"
  12. ^ Jalālzaʾī, Mūsá Ḵẖān (2002). Afghanistan's internal security threats: the dynamics of ethnic and sectarian violence. Dua Publications. p. 114. In the late 1950s Hazaras again organized an armed insurrection in opposition to the imposition of heavy taxes. The state pacified the resistance by repealing taxes levied on the Hazaras and imprisoned the leaders of the rebellion, including Mohammad Ebrahim Beg, known as Bacha-e- Gaw Sawar, Khawja Naeem and Sayed Mohammad Esmail Balkhi. Ebrahim, who compromised his principles, was later released from jail, while Balkhi remained there until 1964.
  13. ^ Innocent, Malou (2011). "Should America Liberate Afghanistan's Women?" (PDF). pp. 35, 36. Yet past efforts to reform, reshape or otherwise revamp Afghan society have only served to unite insular tribal, ethnic and regional-based communities against the imposition of centralised control. Instances of this include the Safi Rebellion (1945–46); the Pashtun revolt in Kandahar against provincial taxes and schools for girls (1959); an Islamist uprising in the Panjshir Valley (1975); and resistance to land reform, education policies and family law in Nuristan and Herat (1978). These rebellions were triggered when Kabul-based modernists attempted to control the social environment of the more conservative rural hinterland.
  14. ^ "Upper Yafa (Disturbances): 7 Jul 1959: House of Commons debates". TheyWorkForYou. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  15. ^ "Rubén Miró y la invasión de cubanos a Panamá" (in Spanish). Panama City: La Estrella de Panamá. 22 April 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  16. ^ Lora, J. Armando. "Invasión" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 4 March 2008. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  17. ^ Algiers putsch of 1961
  18. ^ Battle of Bab El Oued
  19. ^ Flores, Victor (28 September 2013). "Los cubanos son los artífices del fraude electoral en Venezuela". El País (in Spanish). Madrid: Ediciones El País. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  20. ^ "17. French Somaliland (1956-1977)". uca.edu. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  21. ^ Davidson, Jamie Seth (2009). From Rebellion to Riots Collective Violence on Indonesian Borneo. Singapore: NUS Press. p. 64-83. ISBN 978-9971-69-427-2.
  22. ^ "Does Supply-Induced Scarcity Drive Violent Conflicts in the African Sahel? The Case of the Tuareg Rebellion in Northern Mali" (Nov. 2008) Journal of Peace Research Vol. 45, No. 6
  23. ^ Manlupig, Karlos (29 January 2015). "Mamasapano: Sleepy town roused by SAF-MILF clash". Rappler. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  24. ^ Anak Agung Banyu Perwita (2007). Indonesia and the Muslim World: Islam and Secularism in the Foreign Policy of Soeharto and Beyond. NIAS Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-87-91114-92-2.
  25. ^ "Khadafy admits aiding Muslim seccesionists". Philippine Daily Inquirer. 5 August 1986. p. 2.
  26. ^ Smith, Paul J. (21 September 2004). Terrorism and Violence in Southeast Asia: Transnational Challenges to States and Regional Stability. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 194–. ISBN 978-0-7656-3626-3.
  27. ^ Larousse, William (1 January 2001). A Local Church Living for Dialogue: Muslim-Christian Relations in Mindanao-Sulu, Philippines: 1965-2000. Gregorian Biblical BookShop. pp. 151 & 162. ISBN 978-88-7652-879-8.
  28. ^ Michelle Ann Miller (2012). Autonomy and Armed Separatism in South and Southeast Asia. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 291–. ISBN 978-981-4379-97-7.
  29. ^ Tan, Andrew T/H. (2009). A Handbook of Terrorism and Insurgency in Southeast Asia. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 230, 238. ISBN 978-1-84720-718-0.
  30. ^ Svensson, Isak (27 November 2014). International Mediation Bias and Peacemaking: Taking Sides in Civil Wars. Routledge. pp. 69–. ISBN 978-1-135-10544-0.
  31. ^ Kristine Angeli Sabillo (9 August 2013). "New al-Qaeda-inspired group eyed in Mindanao blasts—terror expert". Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  32. ^ "MILF says MNLF joins fray on side of BIFM". InterAksyon.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  33. ^ "Abu Sayyaf Group (Philippines, Islamist separatists)". Council on Foreign Relations. Archived from the original on 22 July 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  34. ^ Miani 2011, p. 74.
  35. ^ Peter Bergen (8 March 2015). "ISIS goes global". CNN. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  36. ^ "Senior Abu Sayyaf leader swears oath to ISIS". Rappler. 4 August 2014. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
  37. ^ "ISIS Now Has Military Allies in 11 Countries – NYMag". Daily Intelligencer. 23 November 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  38. ^ "New People's Army". Stanford University. 22 August 2012. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
  39. ^ a b c d e "Philippines-CPP/NPA (1969 – first combat deaths)". August 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  40. ^ Ruzindana, Augustine. "Remembering the Aborted 1972 Invasion by Ugandan Exiles." Daily Monitor. September 14, 2014. Accessed December 31, 2015.
  41. ^ Shazly, p. 278.
  42. ^ Perez, Louis A. (2014). Cuba Between Reform And Revolution (Paperback ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 300. ISBN 978-0-19-930144-7. Cuba also dispatched combat troops to Syria in 1973 during the Yom Kipur War
  43. ^ Gott, Cuba, A New History, p. 280.
  44. ^ Tobji, Mahjoub (2006). Les officiers de Sa Majesté: Les dérives des généraux marocains 1956–2006. Fayard. p. 107. ISBN 978-2-213-63015-1.
  45. ^ Tripp, Charles (25 February 2013). The Power and the People: Paths of Resistance in the Middle East. Cambridge University Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-139-85124-4.
  46. ^ "Iran 'won' the war with Iraq but at a heavy price". Atlantic Council. 22 September 2021. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  47. ^ Kapur, S. Paul (2007). Dangerous Deterrent: Nuclear Weapons Proliferation and Conflict in South Asia. Stanford University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-8047-5550-4.
  48. ^ "The Himalayas War at the Top Of the World". Time. 31 July 1989. Archived from the original on 12 March 2007.
  49. ^ Musharraf, Pervez (2006). In the Line of Fire: A Memoir. Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-8344-9.(pp. 68–69)

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Covertly