Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
1–19 March | The largest land battle between US forces and Taliban militia ends in an unsuccessful US attempt to dislodge the Taliban from their mountain strongholds | ||
Battle of Takur Ghar | 4-5 March | coalition victory | |
29 March – 3 May | Israeli operation in the West Bank, aimed to halt Palestinian suicide bombings against civilians in Israel during the Second Intifada, which results in extensive damage to terrorist infrastructure and an important decrease of Palestinian attacks: | ||
2 April – 10 May | Israel occupies Bethlehem and tries to capture wanted Palestinian militants who are hiding in the Church of the Nativity. | ||
3–11 April | Israel defeats Palestinian militants in the city of Jenin. | ||
5–8 April | Israel defeats Palestinian militants in the city of Nablus. | ||
2002 Grozny OMON ambush | 18 April | Chechen insurgents attack Russian-backed Chechens. | |
29 June | A naval confrontation between South Korea and North Korea | ||
Battle of Galashki | 23-25 September | Chechen rebels raid a village in Ingushetia, starting a firefight with Russian troops. They then flee back to Chechnya. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Operation Mongoose | 27 January-10 February | American and ISAF forces launch a cave-clearing operation, leading to multiple battles in the Adi Ghar mountains. | |
2003 Lejay firefight | 10 February | Taliban forces ambush American soldiers. | |
20–24 March | One of the first battles of the Iraq War | ||
21–25 March | One of the first battles of the Iraq War | ||
21 March-6 April | British forces manage to secure Basra after a month of some of the fiercest fighting since the outbreak of the war. | ||
23–29 March | American armored and mechanized units force a crossing over the Euphrates River, despite stiff resistance from the Iraqis. | ||
2003 attack on Karbala | 24 March | Americans attempt to destroy the Medina division, but fail. | |
Operation Northern Delay | 26 March | American paratroopers land in northern Iraq. | |
26 March – 3 April | The American 327th Infantry Regiment defeats the Iraqis and takes Najaf, allowing them to protect vital supply lines for Coalition forces. | ||
27 & 28 March | The American 3rd Infantry Division defeats Iraq's elite Republican Guard, resulting in 200 Iraqi casualties. | ||
Operation Viking Hammer | 28-30 March | American and Kurdish forces defeat the Islamic Emirate of Byara. | |
Battle of Samawah | 30 March-4 April | American forces capture Samawah. | |
Battle of Hillah | 31 March-2 April | American forces capture Hillah, and destroy the 2nd Al Medina Armored Division in the process. | |
Battle of Haditha Dam | 1-10 April | American forces capture Haditha Dam, a key electrical hub for Iraq. | |
Battle of the Karbala Gap (2003) | 2-4 April | American forces capture the outskirts of Karbala leading to Baghdad. | |
Battle of Al Kut | 3-4 April | Americans storm Al-Kut, capturing the city. | |
3–12 April | American forces capture Baghdad from Saddam Hussein's forces, causing the downfall of his government. | ||
4 April | Indonesian army raided Free Papua Movement members, causing a battle. The aftermath led to the death of 50 civilians by the Indonesian Army. | ||
6 April | The US forces capture a major crossroad near the village of Debecka in Iraq. | ||
Battle of Baghdad International Airport | 11 April | American forces capture the airport from Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi army. | |
2003–2004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh | 19 May 2003 – 13 May 2004 | Indonesian forces severely defeat the Free Aceh Movement. Combined with the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami which devastated the region, the offensive brought the insurgency in Aceh to an end. | |
Battle of Majar al-Kabir | 24 June | After a misunderstanding regarding patrolling through the town of Majar al-Kabir, British forces use rubber bullets in a crowd control measure, which escalates and are attacked by Iraqi civilians. | |
Siege of Monrovia | 18 July-14 August | LURD rebels shell the city until Charles Taylor resigns. | |
Sétif offensive | September | Algerian forces launch an offensive against the remaining Armed Islamic Group of Algeria militants | |
Battle of Bhalubang | 13 October | Nepalese government forces defeat Maoists. | |
Ramadan Offensive | 26 October-24 November | Beginning of the Iraqi insurgency. | |
Operation All Clear | 15 December 2003 – 3 January 2004 | The Bhutanese army launches an offensive against Assamese separatists from India. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
16–23 March | Part of the Waziristan War, Pakistani army takes over Taliban positions. | ||
Defense of the Karbala City Hall | 3-6 April | Polish and Bulgarian forces defeat Mahdist insurgents attempting to capture the Karbala city hall. | |
4 April – 1 May | Also called Operation Vigilant Resolve; US forces attempt to retake Fallujah from the control of Iraqi insurgency, resulting a ceasefire and American withdrawal. | ||
Siege of Sadr City | 4 April 2004 – 11 May 2008 | American forces blockade the Shi'a district of Baghdad for four years. The end of the siege marked the end of the Iraqi Civil War. | |
Battle of Ramadi | 6-10 April | Around the same time as the battle in Fallujah, Iraqi insurgents attempt to pin down American troops in Ramadi, but fail. | |
2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush | 9 April | Iraqi insurgents attack and execute American soldiers. | |
Battle of Husaybah | 17 April | Iraqi insurgents launch a surprise offensive on American soldiers in Husaybah, but fail to capture the city. | |
Battle of Danny Boy | 14 May | British forces defeat a Mahdist ambush at Checkpoint Danny Boy near al-Amara. | |
18–23 May | Successful Israeli military operation against Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the PCR. | ||
21 – 22 June | Chechen and Ingush separatists capture a lot of weapons. | ||
First Battle of Avtury | 12-13 July | Chechen militants attack a city, and then disperse after some fighting. | |
Battle of Najaf | 5-27 August | American forces retreat from Najaf, much of the city's historic sites are damaged. | |
Battle of the CIMIC House | 5-28 August | Mahdist forces under Muqtada al-Sadr lay siege to a British checkpoint in al-Amarah. | |
2004 raid on Grozny | 21-22 August | Chechen militants fail to attack Russian forces. | |
30 September – 16 October | Israeli offensive launched into the northern Gaza Strip. Israel claims victory after stating its goal of preventing Palestinian militants from firing Qassam rockets into Israeli settlements in Gaza and at the town of Sderot. | ||
Battle of Samarra | 1-3 October | American forces capture Samarra. | |
2004 French–Ivorian clashes | 6-9 November | The Ivorian Army attacks French forces during a peacekeeping mission. In return, France nearly destroys the Ivorian Air Force and massive anti-French uprisings occur. | |
7 November – 23 December | Also known as Operation Phantom Fury and Operation al-Fajr; Coalition forces recapture rebel-held Fallujah in the largest post-invasion clash so far in the war. | ||
Battle of Mosul | 8-16 November | American-Kurdish forces defeat an attempt by Islamist rebels to capture Mosul. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Lake Tharthar raid | 23 March | American and Iraqi forces launch a raid on a Secret Army of Islam base, killing up to a third of the insurgents' forces. | |
Battle of Abu Ghraib | 2 April | Al-Qaeda forces launch an attack on Abu Ghraib prison, capturing it until American forces retook it hours later. | |
Second Battle of Khara | 7-8 April | Royal Nepalese forces severely defeat Maoists. | |
8–19 May | Military offensive conducted by the United States Marine Corps, against insurgent positions in Iraq's northwestern Anbar province, ending with US tactical victory. | ||
2005 Hit convoy ambush | 9 May | Iraqi insurgents ambush American forces. | |
Battle of Qurna | May | Danish, Lithuanian, and British soldiers defeat Iraqi insurgents attempting to seize Al-Qurnah. | |
Battle of Abbas Ghar | 27 June-mid July | Americans defeat Taliban near Asadabad, but the insurgents return a few weeks later. | |
Battle of Haditha | 1-4 August | Ansar Al-Sunna insurgents surprise attack American forces, successfully defeating them. American forces in retaliation launch Operation Quick Strike, in which an al-Qaeda-planted IED killed 15 Marines. | |
Operation Whalers | 13-18 August | American forces defeat Taliban insurgents who had retreated earlier in the summer. | |
Battle of Tal Afar | 1-18 September | American and Iraqi forces capture Tal Afar. | |
13 October | The Yarmuk Jamaat take on Nalchik, Kabardino-Balkaria in Russia. They are defeated by Russian security forces. | ||
18 December | Rally for Democracy and Liberty attack the government garrison at Adre, Chad. The garrison had been forewarned, and defeats their attackers, taking few casualties. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Battle of Gimry | 2-5 January | Dagestani mujahedeen rebels are pushed back. | |
Raid on Borota | 6 January | Janjaweed defeat Chadian government | |
Raid on Amdjereme | 6 March | Janjaweed break the Tripoli Agreement | |
Battle of Ramadi | 15 March-15 November | Coalition forces defeat Al-Qaeda in Iraq | |
Action of 18 March 2006 | 18 March | American naval vessels fend off Somali pirates | |
April 2006 Iran–Iraq cross-border raids | 3 April | Iran and PJAK clash. | |
13 April | The Chadian rebel group United Front for Democratic Change attacks N'djamena. The rebels are forced to retreat by the Military of Chad. Chad breaks off relations with Sudan as a result. | ||
2006 Dutch/Australian Offensive | late April – 16 July | coalition victory | |
Raid on Dalola | 1 May | Janjaweed raid Chadian villages. | |
7 May – 11 July | Militia loyal to the Islamic court union defeats the Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism and takes control of the Somali capital Mogadishu. | ||
12 May | Sri Lanka Navy victory | ||
15 May – 31 July | The largest offensive against the Taliban since 2001 is launched by Coalition forces. | ||
14 June – 24 October | The Coalition is unsuccessful in succoring Baghdad and reducing violence. | ||
Siege of Sangin | 27 June-5 April | Coalition forces defeat Taliban insurgents attempting to breach Sangin | |
28 June – 26 November | Israel enters the Gaza Strip searching for soldier Gilad Shalit, who was abducted in a raid. | ||
Operation Perth | July | Australian special forces victory | |
Second Battle of Avtury | July 4 | Chechen soldiers ambush Russians. | |
First Battle of Panjwaii | 8 July-19 August | Coalition forces defeat Taliban, but pull out of Panjwayi. | |
12 July | A cross-border Hezbollah raid captures two Israeli soldiers. Israeli troops enters Lebanon in an unsuccessful attempt to get them back. This ignites the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict. | ||
15 July – December | U.S. Marines of the Third Battalion, Second Marine Division, sweep through urban sprawl between Ramadi and Fallujah in a series of operations (i.e. Operations Rubicon and Sidewinder), disrupting flow of Al-Qaeda into both cities, and killing and capturing over 300 insurgents. Action centered around Kilo Company, nicknamed "Voodoo", in the town of Husaybah, on the outskirts of Ramadi, killing 20+ insurgents and capturing/wounding 137, while losing only 4 Marines KIA, 17 WIA. The battalion lost 14 Marines KIA, 50+ WIA. | ||
24 July – 11 August | Israel retreats after attempting to take the town of Bint Jbail in Lebanon, regarding it as a "Hezbollah stronghold". | ||
31 July – 11 August | Israel engages in a firefight with Hezbollah members in the Lebanese town of Ayta ash-Shab. | ||
1 & 2 August | An Israeli airborne operation captures five Lebanese civilians and kills what it claims to be Hezbollah members. | ||
4 August | Israel successfully raids Tyre to attack Hezbollah members based there. | ||
11–14 August | Israel launches the final offensive in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict to clear Southern Lebanon of as many Hezbollah militants as possible before the ceasefire takes effect. The battle and war end with United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701. | ||
11 August – 29 October | Stalemate | ||
Battle of Diwaniya | 28 August | Iraqi forces and Mahdist insurgents reach a ceasefire. | |
28 August – 4 September | Sri Lankan Army victory over Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam | ||
2–17 September | Coalition troops attack the Taliban insurgency, recapturing Panjwayi. | ||
16 September 2006 – 15 January 2007 | Coalition forces launch a successful follow up to Operation Medusa in an attempt to clear eastern Afghanistan of the Taliban. | ||
Battle of Al Rumaythah | 26 September | Australian Tactical victory | |
Battle of Amarah | 19-20 October | Iraqi forces retake the city after a ceasefire | |
Battle of Turki | 15-16 November | A fledgling Iraqi insurgent group, ISIL, defeats American soldiers. | |
27 November 2006 – 29 November 2006 | Ceasefire and mutual disengagement to pre-battle positions | ||
4–9 December | Tamil Tigers victory | ||
20–26 December | ICU militia battle the Somali Transitional Federal Government. Ethiopian and TFG troops successfully defend and counterattack against the ICU taking the ICU base cities of Dinsoor and Bur Hakaba. | ||
2006 and 2007 Tunisia clashes | 23 December-3 January | Tunisian forces clash with Algerian jihadist group Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat. | |
23–25 December | Ethiopian/Puntland offensive in Bandiradley, Somalia pushes the Islamic Courts out of the city and opens up a northern front in the Somali Civil War. | ||
24–25 December | Ethiopian offensive towards the city of Jowhar overruns the Islamic Courts stronghold of Beledweyne during the Somali Civil War. | ||
27 December | Ethiopian/TFG armoured offensive hits the ICU stronghold of Jowhar, forcing the Islamists to pull back, and bringing the Ethiopians/Government troops within 90 km of Mogadishu. The battle also effectively flanked and threatened to cut off ICU forces still in the Bay region. | ||
28 December | Ethiopia captures Mogadishu. | ||
Battle of Nawzad | 2006-2014 | US and allied forces are unable to capture Nawzad from Taliban forces. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
2006 and 2007 Tunisia clashes | 3 January | Tunisian troops engage in a shootout with Islamists. | |
5–12 January | The Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, in coalition with Ethiopia and the US, defeats the Islamic Courts Union. | ||
Battle of Haifa Street | 6-24 January | ISIL forces defeat Iraqi forces in Baghdad, but are then pushed out by coalition forces. | |
Karbala provincial headquarters raid | 20 January | Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq members, posing as American soldiers, capture 4 American soldiers at an American base - the largest ambush during the war. | |
Battle of Najaf (2007) | 28–29 January | Iraqi and Coalition forces defeat the Soldiers of Heaven cult. | |
14 February – 24 November | US troops successfully battle Iraqi insurgents to restore law and order in Baghdad. | ||
2007 West Azerbaijan clashes | 22 February-1 March | Iran and Kurdish PJAK forces clash, with parts spreading to Iraq. | |
Battle of Basra | 27 February-3 September | Mahdist forces take over central Basra. | |
Battle of Same | 4 March | inconclusive Australian minor victory | |
Battle of Baqubah | 10 March-19 August | Coalition forces capture Baqubah from the Islamic State. | |
21 March – 26 April | Ethiopian, Somalian and Ugandan forces battle the Popular Resistance Movement indecisively. | ||
2007 Kurram Agency conflict | 6-13 April | Sunni, Taliban, and Shia forces clash in Northwest Pakistan. | |
Battle of Route Bismarck | 23-24 April | Australian victory in Iraq | |
25 April – 11 July 2007 | Sri Lankan Army victory | ||
6–30 May | Tactically successful Coalition operation in Afghanistan to clear the Helmand Province of Taliban terrorists. | ||
20 May – 7 September | Armed conflict after Fatah al-Islam, an Islamist militant organization, lays siege to the refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared for Palestinians in Lebanon. | ||
Operation Hoover | 24-25 May | Coalition forces led by Canada push out Taliban militants from villages. | |
Operation Kamin | 26 May | Taliban militants launch a series of attacks across Afghanistan, and clash with Afghan soldiers. | |
Operation Pickaxe-Handle | 30 May-14 June | NATO forces clear out Taliban militants from Kajaki, but the Talban return shortly afterwards. | |
Battle of Bargal | 31 May-3 June | American and Puntlander forces defeat Islamic Courts Union forces. | |
7–15 June | Hamas defeats the Fatah, and takes over the Gaza Strip. | ||
15–19 June | Coalition forces capture Chora District in Oruzgan Province from the Taliban. | ||
Battle of Point Pedro | 19 June | One of the last battles of the Sri Lankan Civil War, Sri Lankan forces defeat Tamil sailors in an area where Tamils had defeated Sri Lankans a year prior. | |
Battle of Donkey Island | 30 June-1 July | ISIL forces defeat a small group of coalition soldiers. | |
Siege of Lal Masjid | 3-11 July | Pakistani forces besiege TeT followers at the historic mosque of Lal Masjid, triggering fighting in northwestern Pakistan. | |
Operation Hammer | 24-27 July | Coalition forces led by the British regain territory south of the Helmand river. | |
Battle of Al Waki Market | 7 August | British forces defeat a small group of Iraqi insurgents. | |
Battle of Firebase Anaconda | 8 August | American and Afghan forces defeat Taliban insurgents launching a frontal assault. | |
Battle of Karbala | 27-29 August | Polish and Bulgarian forces defend Karbala against insurgents. | |
Raids on Haskanita | 30 September-early October | Unknown forces in Darfur attack an AUMIS post on September 30, and then the town was set on fire in early October. | |
October 2007 clashes in Hakkâri | 7-8 October, 21 October | Turkish forces capture Kurdish guerrilla leaders, but suffer heavy casualties in a Kurdish counterattack | |
Battle of Mirali | 7-10 October | Pakistan launches an offensive against Tehrik-e-Taleban, but clashes become deadly. | |
Battle of Las Anod | 15 October | Somalilander forces defeat Puntland, which had captured a rural Somalilander city. | |
22 October | Tamil Tigers victory | ||
First Battle of Swat | 25 October-8 December | Pakistani forces launch an offensive against Tehrik-e-Taleban militants, leading to a short-lived ceasefire. | |
Action of 28 October 2007 | 28 October | American forces defeat Somali pirates. | |
Dai Hong Dan incident | 29 October | American forces and North Korean sailors defeat hijacking Somali pirates. | |
Operation Harekate Yolo | late October-7 November | Coalition forces, led by Germany and Norway, push back Taliban incursions. | |
Operation Commando Fury | 10-14 November | Afghan forces besiege Taliban strongholds in Kapisa Province. | |
7–12 December | ISAF and Afghan forces capture Musa Qala District in Helmand Province from the Taliban. | ||
December 2007 Turkish incursion into northern Iraq | 16-26 December | Turkey bombards PKK positions in Northern Iraq. | |
25 December | Disputed |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
2 January – 24 November | Victorious 2008 SLA Northern Offensive in Sri Lanka | ||
Operation Phantom Phoenix | 8 January-28 July | Coalition forces defeat Iraqi militants in Diyala and Saladin governorates, but fail to in Kirkuk and Mosul. | |
Operation Zalzala | 24 January-20 May | Pakistani forces capture Spinkai, but fail to capture Qari Hussain. | |
2–4 February | Forces loyal to the President of Chad defeat a rebellion. | ||
2008 Turkish incursion into northern Iraq | 11-19 February | Turkish forces launch a ground offensive into Iraq to clear out PKK rebels. | |
29 February – 3 March | Israel Defense Forces campaign in the Gaza Strip in response to Qassam rockets fired by Hamas. | ||
4 March | Skirmishes between the unrecognized Republic of Artsakh and Azerbaijan, victory undecided. | ||
25–31 March | Iraqi Army attempt to clear the city of Basra from Mahdi Army militiamen is successful and the Maliki government forces them to cease activities. | ||
25 March | Sea Tigers patrol intercepted by a Sri Lankan Navy patrol | ||
Invasion of Anjouan | 25 March | After Anjouani president Mohamed Bacar refused to step down following a disputed presidential election, African Union forces with Comoros invade the island. | |
10–12 May | The Darfuri rebel group Justice and Equality Movement attack the Sudanese cities of Omdurman and Khartoum unsuccessfully. | ||
10–13 June | Minor skirmishes between Djibouti and Eritrea, ending in victory of Djibouti forces. | ||
Battle of Am Zoer | 18 June | Chadian forces ambush a rebel column, and successfully destroy it. | |
18–19 June | NATO led forces launch a successful offensive to clear the Taliban out of Arghandab district and from nearby Kandahar. | ||
Operation Sirat-e-Mustaqeem | 28 June-9 July | Pakistani forces destroy Taliban training bases. | |
Siege of Baidoa | 8 July 2008 – 26 January 2009 | al-Shabaab besiege and control Baidoa, the last city in southern Somalia under government control. | |
13 July | Significant American casualties among the defending paratroopers leads to American withdrawal following Taliban early morning attack. | ||
16 July | Sri Lankan Army fought Tamil Tigers | ||
Operation Augurs of Prosperity | 29 July-11 August | A joint US-Iraqi raid on al-Qaeda and ISIL leaders is successful. | |
Battle of Khetagurovo | 7-8 August | Georgian forces shell an Ossetian town, but retreat. | |
Battle of Bajaur | 7 August 2008 – 28 February 2009 | Pakistani forces launch a campaign to retake Bajaur District from Taliban. | |
Battle of Ebrahimkhel | 8 August | After having battered American positions for days, Taliban and American troops engage in a large-scale firefight, with an American victory. | |
8–10 August | Georgians attack the South Ossetian capital city of Tskhinvali ending in withdrawal by the Georgians. | ||
9–12 August | Georgian civilians flee their homes in Upper Abkhazia. Georgian military engages Abkhazian military forces unsuccessfully. | ||
Battle of North Cotobato | 9 August-late August | Filipino government forces defeat Islamist rebels, who later found Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters. | |
Battle off the coast of Abkhazia | 10 August | Russia blockades Georgia navally. | |
Occupation of Poti | 11 August-13 September | Russian forces invade Poti, and ransack Georgian weaponry. | |
Occupation of Gori | 13-22 August | Russian and Ossetian forces capture Gori, forcing the Georgian government to begin negotiations. | |
Uzbin Valley ambush | 18 August | Taliban ambush French troops in Afghanistan, causing heavy losses. | |
Battle of Kismayo | 20-22 August | al-Shabaab takes control of Kismayo from pro-government militias. | |
Battle of Khaz Oruzgan | 2 September | Taliban victory | |
Carré d'As IV incident | 2-15 September | Somali pirates capture a French yacht, but are unable to retain it. | |
Angur Ada raid | 3 September | American troops fight Taliban militants in Pakistan. | |
25 October | Part of the ongoing 2008 Nord-Kivu war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. | ||
Battle of Kiwanja | 5-6 November | Hutu rebels seize control of Kiwanja from Mai-Mai. | |
2008 Kufra conflict | 8-20 November | Libyan government forces and Toubou rebels clash for two weeks, although a ceasefire is reached. | |
Action of 11 November 2008 | 11 November | British sailors defeat Somali pirates. | |
Fall of Rwindi | 18-19 November | Hutu rebels capture Rwindi with little resistance, but are stopped while trying to push further on. | |
23 November – 2 January | Sri Lankan Army victory | ||
Balamorghab ambush | 27 November | Taliban insurgents ambush Afghan soldiers, capturing many vehicles and weaponry. | |
14 December – 15 March | The Ugandan Army withdraws, but the LRA is weakened. | ||
27 December – 18 January | Israel launches an air and ground operation to stop Hamas from launching of Qassam and Grad rockets from the Gaza Strip. | ||
30 December – 1 January | Tamil Tigers fought Sri Lankan Army | ||
Operation Defeat Al Qaeda in the North | 2008 | US troops stationed north of Lake Tharthar raid Iraqi militants over a months-long period. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
2–25 January | The Sri Lankan army defeats the Tamil Tigers in a battle over the town of Mullaitivu. | ||
Operation Shahi Tandar | 7-31 January | American and Afghan troops raid Taliban bases. | |
Third Battle of Elephant Pass | 9 January | Sri Lanka defeats LTTE. | |
2009 Eastern Congo offensive | 20 January-27 February | A joint DRC-Rwandan offensive defeats rebels. | |
2–6 February | Sri Lankan Army battles Tamil Tigers to capture one of the last Sea Tiger naval bases. | ||
Operation Diesel | 6-7 February | British and Afghan forces defeat Taliban. | |
Battle of South Mogadishu | 24-25 February | Indecisive, | |
Action of 3 March 2009 | 3 March | German and American forces defeat Somali pirates. | |
14–23 March | Codename Operation Dinner Out – French and Afghan troops defeat Taliban insurgents in the Alasay Valley. | ||
16 March – 12 April | Two battles of Australian forces against Taliban insurgents, both victorious. | ||
29 March – 5 April | Decisive victory of the Sri Lanka military against the Tamil Tigers. | ||
2–5 April | Government victory | ||
April 2009 raid off Somalia | 9 April | French forces raid a vessel hijacked by Somali pirates. | |
2009 Afghanistan–Iran clash | 23 April | Status quo ante bellum. | |
Operation Black Thunderstorm | 26 April-14 June | Pakistan fully recaptures four districts from Taliban. | |
Attack on Bari Alai | 1 May | Taliban overrun a checkpoint for the first time. | |
7 and 8 May | The Chadian Army defeats UFR rebels. | ||
Battle of Mogadishu | 7 May-1 October | Insurgents take control of Mogadishu, the Somali capital, but fail to topple the government. | |
Battle for Central Somalia (2009) | 11 May-1 October | Jihadist rebels from Al-Shabaab defeat the Somali alliance and capture parts of central Somalia. | |
16 May – 15 July | The Pakistani Army retakes the town of Mingora from the Taliban, killing many leaders. | ||
Battle of Wabho | 7 June | Ahlu Sunna Waljama'a defeats Al-Shabaab. | |
Sobat River ambush | 12 June | Jikany Nuer groups ambush a SPLA convoy escorting UN food. | |
Operation Panther's Claw | 19 June-20 August | British forces consolidate coalition positions. | |
Operation Rah-e-Nijat | 19 June-12 December | Pakistan fully retakes South Waziristan District. | |
Operation Strike of the Sword | 2 July-20 August | US Marines launch an offensive in Helmand Province. | |
Operation Scorched Earth | 11 August 2009 – 12 February 2010 | Yemen launched a military offensive against Houthis, but it ends in a stalemate. | |
12–15 August | US, UK and Afghan troops capture the city from Taliban insurgents. | ||
Battle of Rafah | 14-15 August | Hamas defeats Jund Ansar Allah. | |
2009 Khyber Pass offensive | 1 September-30 November | Pakistan defeats Taliban from roads throughout Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. | |
Battle of Sabzak | 3-4 September | Spanish troops defeat Taliban | |
Action of 7 September 2009 | 7 September | German sailors defeat Somali pirates. | |
2009 Baraawe raid | 14 September | US forces kill Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan. | |
Battle of Kismayo | 1-7 October | al-Shabaab takes full control of Kismayo. | |
3 October | Taliban insurgents attack a US Combat Outpost. They are repulsed, but the outpost is abandoned due to damage. | ||
Dongo conflict | 30 October-13 December | Clashes break out between rebels and government forces in Dongo, Democratic Republic of the Congo. | |
1 November | Naval Battle | ||
10 November | Clash between South and North Korean naval troops at the Northern Limit Line, ending in a victory for the South. | ||
4–7 December | Successful US-led offensive in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Eritrean–Ethiopian border skirmish | 1 January | Eritrean forces clash with Ethiopian troops in the Ethiopian town of Zalambessa. | |
First Battle of Beledweyne | 10-14 January | Ahlu Sunna Waljama'a captures the town from Hizbul Islam. | |
Operation Blow to the Head | 13 January-12 February | Pro-government Yemeni troops attempt to capture Saada from a Houthi-AQAP alliance, but fail, destroying much of Saada in the process. | |
Second Battle of Beledweyne | 22-24 January | Following a counterattack, Hizbul Islam recaptures the town. | |
13 February – 7 December | ISAF pacification offensive in the area that is described as the "poppy-growing belt" of Helmand Province in southern Afghanistan. NATO troops attack Marjah, but are forced to withdraw by Taliban | ||
2010 Nagorno-Karabakh clashes | 18 February | Armenia and Azerbaijan clash in Nagorno-Karabakh. | |
Orakzai and Kurram offensive | 23 March-3 June | Pakistani forces launch an offensive in Orakzai District and Kurram District, clearing the areas of Taliban by early June. Low-level clashes continue until January 21, 2011. | |
Action of 30 March 2010 | 30 March | Seychellois coast guard defeat Somali pirates. | |
South Darfur clash | 23 April | SPLA troops clash with either Sudanese troops or Rizeigat insurgents. | |
Battle of Tamassi | 24-28 April | Chadian forces defeat allied rebels | |
Ayn clashes | 22 May-19 July | Ethiopian and Somalilander troops clash. | |
Shah Wali Kot Offensive | 10-14 June | Coalition victory | |
June 2010 Mardakert clashes | 18-19 June | Armenian and Azeri troops clash in Nagorno-Karabakh, with no significant changes. | |
Saric shootout | 1 July | Beltrán-Leyva Cartel victory on Sinaloa Cartel | |
Kenya–Al-Shabaab border clash | 20 July | al-Shabaab attack a Kenyan border outpost. | |
Battle of Sangin | July 2010-October 2011 | NATO captures Sangin from Taliban. | |
First Battle of Lawdar | 19-25 August | Yemeni troops recapture Lawdar. | |
23 August 2010 – 6 August 2011 | The eighth recognised battle over Mogadishu since 1993. Pro-government militias and allies fully hold the capital. | ||
24 August | A combined Australian Army and Afghan National Army patrol defeats Taliban forces. | ||
September 2010 Mardakert clashes | 1 September | Azeris and Armenians clash a second time, although it fizzles out quickly. | |
Operation Dragon Strike | 15 September-31 December | NATO forces defeat Taliban insurgents and capture one Quds serviceman. | |
Hsipaw ambush | 1 October | KNLA ambush Burmese junta troops near the Thai border leading up to escalated clashes. | |
Operation Halmazag | 31 October-4 November | Coalition forces, led by Germany, push out Taliban from Kunduz Province. | |
Battle of Myawaddy | 8-9 November | Burmese troops capture Myawaddy, a KNLA stronghold near the Thai border, in the first major clash in 2010. | |
Karen State clashes | 10-27 November | Low-level clashes in Kayin State following the battle at Myawaddy. | |
12-25 November | Joint U.S. and Afghan counter-insurgent mission in Kunar province, Afghanistan, against Taliban forces. | ||
Bombardment of Yeonpyeong | 23 November | North Korean artillery hits military and civilian targets during a South Korean training exercise. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
16–21 January | The South Korean Navy rescues the crew of the hijacked Samho Jewelry, killing eight Somali pirates. | ||
Battle off Minicoy Island | 28 January | Indian troops defeat Somali pirates. | |
16–18 February | Protestors seize control of the city after clashes with security forces – first battle of the Libyan Civil War. | ||
17–20 February | Libyan rebel forces free the city from Col. Gaddafi's rule. | ||
18 February – 15 May | After Months of intense fighting, the rebels take full control of Misrata, supported by NATO aircraft. | ||
24 February – 10 March | Zawiya is retaken by Libyan elite soldiers, one of the rebels' commanders is killed. | ||
2 March | Pro-Gaddafi troops fail to retake Brega from rebel forces. | ||
4–12 March | After initial success by the rebel forces, Ras Lanuf is retaken by government troops. | ||
6 March | Gaddafi forces retake Bin Jawad – the initial Rebel offensive westwards is halted. | ||
13–15 March | Brega is retaken by Gaddafi forces after the defeats at Ras Lanuf and Bin Jawad. | ||
15–26 March | Initial success by government troops is halted and they are pushed back by rebels, under fire from NATO aircraft. | ||
19–20 March | Loyalist forces fail to recapture Benghazi from the now UN-backed rebels. | ||
Battle of Saada | 19-26 March | Houthis take control of Saada. | |
India–Pakistan border skirmish | 30 March-1 April | Both sides claim the other was the instigator. | |
31 March – 7 April | A rebel advance on Brega is repelled with heavy artillery, Pro-Gaddafi forces march on Ajdabiya. | ||
Battle of Abidjan | 31 March - 11 April | Pro-Ouattara forces capture the largest Ivorian city of Abidjan and prompt the arrest of President Laurent Gbagbo. | |
Battle of Jubbada Hoose | 1 April-16 October | Somali troops and al-Shabaab clash near the Kenyan border, | |
8 April – 13 July | Advances on Brega and Ajdabiya by the opposing forces lead to a stagnant frontline in-between the two cities. | ||
Battle of Wazzin | 21 April-29 July | Anti-Gaddafi rebels initially capture Wazzin, although pro-Gaddafi forces capture the border post by Tunisia a week later. Backed by Tunisian troops, rebels recapture the border post with fighting continuing until July. | |
Siege of Daraa | 25 April - 5 May | Syrian forces suppress anti-Assad protests in Syria. | |
Battle of Gedo | 27 April - late 2012 | After fierce Somali and allied bombardment, al-Shabaab leave Gedo region. | |
Siege of Homs | 6 May 2011 - 9 May 2014 | Syrian rebels, spurred by anti-regime protests, battle for Homs. | |
7–9 May | Kandahar is besieged by Taliban insurgents, Afghan Police Forces are able to fend them off. | ||
Siege of Baniyas | 7-14 May | Syrian forces suppress anti-regime protests in Baniyas. | |
Siege of Talkalakh | 14-19 May | Syrian forces violently suppress anti-regime protests. | |
Battle of the Misrata frontline | 16 May-23 August | Rebels capture various cities, but pro-Gaddafi troops make gains south of Sirte. | |
23 May – 7 June | Hashid tribal forces under Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar fight Army troops loyal to president Saleh, resulting in a cease-fire. | ||
25 May | US and Afghan government troops are ambushed by Taliban insurgents and kill most of the attackers. | ||
25 May | Sinaloa Cartel attack a convoy of Los Zetas starting a violent battle in which there were used two Narco tanks. | ||
Battle of Zinjibar | 27 May-10 September | AQAP captures the rural Yemeni town of Zinjibar. | |
28 May – 4 June | First major violent outbreak in the Syrian civil war. | ||
Battle of Taiz | 28 May-7 June | Alliance of Yemeni Tribes hold the city from the Yemeni army. | |
Jisr ash-Shughur clashes | 4-12 June | The Syrian civil war escalates into armed clashes. | |
Sabha clashes | 8-13 June | Pro-Gaddafi forces hold Sabha. | |
Zawiya skirmish | 11-12 June | Pro-Gaddafi forces hold Zawiya. | |
Jabal al-Zawiya operation | 28 June-7 July | Unorganized but armed protestors clash with Syrian troops. | |
Siege of Hama | 3 July-4 August | Syrian forces suppress protestors. | |
Operation Koh-e-Sufaid | 4 July-18 August | Pakistani forces defeat Taliban. | |
Iran–Iraq cross-border raids | 11 July-29 September | Iranian special forces launch attacks on PJAK bases in Iraq. | |
14 July – 22 August | After initial victories of pro-Gaddafi forces, rebels take Brega in late August. | ||
Battle of Zliten | 21 July-19 August | Following a failed uprising in Zliten, anti-Gaddafi rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces clash, with a final anti-Gaddafi victory. | |
Msallata clashes | 3-9 August | Anti-Gaddafi rebels take control of Msallata, independently from other Libyan rebels. | |
Battle of Tawergha | 11-13 August | Anti-Gaddafi rebels capture Tawergha. | |
Raid on Ras Lanuf | 12 August | Anti-Gaddafi forces successfully drive off pro-Gaddafi assaults, but facilities are heavily damaged. | |
Battle of Gharyan | 13-18 August | Anti-Gaddafi rebels capture Gharyan. | |
Siege of Latakia | 13-19 August | Syrian troops suppress protests in Latakia. | |
13–20 August | Rebel forces capture Zawiya and advance on Tripoli. | ||
Ras Ajdir clashes | 13-26 August | After multiple failed assaults, rebels capture Ras Ajdir. | |
20–28 August | Tripoli is captured by rebel forces, Gaddafi government collapses. | ||
Second Battle of Bin Jawad | 23-27 August | NTC rebels capture the town of Bin Jawad from pro-Gaddafi forces. | |
28 August – 31 October | Mexican army Victory, Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel were weaken. | ||
Hama Governorate clashes | 1 September 2011 – 14 April 2012 | Syrian troops largely capture the city of Hama, but rebels control the countryside of the region. | |
8 September – 17 October | Initially, pro-Gaddafi forces fend off anti-Gaddafi forces but on 9 October anti-Gaddafi forces launch a new offensive against the defenders, taking Bani Walid by 17 October. | ||
Idlib Governorate clashes | 8 September 2011 – 27 March 2012 | anti-Assad protestors, now a somewhat organized force, take control of most of Idlib Governorate. | |
Battle of Doan | 9 September | Australian/coalition victory | |
Battle of Elwaq | 9-10 September | Somali forces liberate Elwaq from jihadists. | |
15 September – 20 October | National Liberation Army soldiers attack Sirte, the last capital of the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and take it on 20 October. Colonel Muammar Gaddafi also dies this day. | ||
Raid on Ghadames | 24-26 September | NTC repels pro-Gaddafi fighters, but some hit-and-run attacks succeeded, | |
27 September – 1 October | Syrian army retakes the city. | ||
Siege of Dammaj | 15 October-22 December | Houthis attempt to capture Dammaj, ending in a bloody ceasefire. | |
Operation Linda Nchi | 16 October 2011 – 31 May 2012 | Kenyan troops intervene in the Somali civil war, capturing various border areas. | |
Battle of Deynile | 20 October | al-Shabaab fighters ambush Burundian troops in a Mogadishu suburb. | |
Rif Dimashq clashes | 3 November 2011 – 1 April 2012 | Protests are largely suppressed by the Syrian government, | |
Daraa Governorate clashes | 14 November 2011 – 3 January 2013 | An FSA offensive captures multiple cities in the governorate. | |
Shayrat and Tiyas airbase ambush | 25 November | Syrian rebels successfully ambush the airbase. | |
Deir ez-Zor clashes | 26 November 2011 – 10 April 2014 | Rebels hold off a Syrian government offensive on the city. | |
Syrian–Turkish border clash | 5-12 December | Syrian troops repulse armed men from the Turkish border. | |
December 2011 Baneh clash | 28 December | Iran and PJAK clash, albeit inconclusively. | |
Battle of Beledweyne | December 2011-31 December 2012 | Ethiopian and Somali forces capture Beledweyne. |
Battle | Date | Outcome | |
---|---|---|---|
First Battle of Zabadani | 7 – 18 January | Ceasefire | |
Attack on Spanish oiler Patiño | 12 January | Spanish victory | |
First Battle of Menaka | 17 January | Both parties claim victory | |
Battle of Aguelhok | 17–25 January | MNLA victory | |
Battle of Tessalit | 18 January – 11 March | rebels victory | |
Battle of In Emsal | 20 January | MNLA-Jihadist victory | |
Battle of Douma | 21–30 January | Syrian government's victory | |
Bani Walid uprising | 23–25 January | Rebel victory | |
Fall of Andéramboukane | 26 January | MNLA victory | |
First Battle of Rastan | 29 January – 5 February | FSA victory | |
Homs offensive | 3 February-14 April | Syrian Army recaptures 70% of the city. | |
Second Battle of Zabadani | 4-11 February | FSA victory | |
Battle of Tinzaouaten | 7–8 February | MNLA victory | |
Battle of al-Qusayr | 10 February – 20 April | Stalemate | |
Aleppo Governorate clashes | 10 February-19 July | FSA victory | |
Battle of Taftanaz | 11 February-5 April | Syrian victory | |
Kufra conflict | 12 February-1 July | Ceasefire | |
Nozhay-Yurtovsky District clashes | 13–17 February | Unclear | |
Battle of Goumakoura | 24 February | Malian government victory | |
Sudan Air Campaign | 1 March – ? September | Incumbent | |
Battle of Dofas | 4–5 March | Ansar al-Sharia victory | |
Battle of Azaz | 6 March – 23 July | FSA victory | |
Battle of Yurkud | 10 March | Ethiopian Victory | |
Battle of Idlib | 10–13 March | Syrian government's victory | |
Battle of Saraqeb | 24–27 March | Syrian government's victory | |
First Battle of Heglig | 26–28 March | South Sudanese victory | |
Battle of Kidal | 26-30 March | MNLA victory | |
April Idlib Governorate Operation | 31 March-14 April | Syria recaptures three cities | |
Battle of Taftanaz | 3–5 April | Syrian government's victory | |
Scarborough Shoal standoff | 8 April 2012 – present | De-escalation of tensions between claimant nations | |
Second Battle of Heglig | 10–20 April | Sudan victory | |
Agok Skirmish | 17 April | Indecisive | |
Armenian–Azerbaijani border clashes | 25 April – 4 June | Status quo ante bellum | |
Abyan offensive | 12 May – 15 June | Decisive Yemeni government's victory | |
Second Battle of Rastan | 14 May | FSA victory | |
Siege of Northern Homs | 14 May 2012 – 29 April 2018 | Syrian government victory | |
Idlib Governorate clashes | 3 June 2012 – 18 April 2013 | Partial FSA victory and stalemate | |
Tripoli airport clashes | 4 June | Libyan Government's victory | |
Battle of al-Haffah | 5–13 June | Syrian government's victory | |
Zintan clashes | 11–18 June | NTC control reestablished | |
Hakkari clashes | 19 June 2012 – 11 August | Turkish claim victory | |
Battle of Gao | 26–28 June | Decisive Islamist victory; end of state of Azawad | |
Battle of Tremseh | 12 July | FSA victory | |
Battle of Damascus | 15 July-4 August | Syrian government's victory | |
19 July 2012 – 22 December 2016 | Decisive Syrian government's & allied victory | ||
Siege of Nubl and al-Zahraa | 19 July 2012 – 3 February 2016 | Syrian government forces break the siege. | |
Al-Hasakah Governorate campaign | 20 July 2012 – 31 December 2013 | YPG makes gains in the cities, ISIS makes gains in the countryside. | |
2012 Gorno-Badakhshan clashes | 24–25 July | Tajikistan government victory | |
Battle of Anadan | 29–30 July | FSA victory | |
Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012) | 15 August-7 October | SAA pushes rebels out of some areas, but not all. | |
Lopota incident | 28 August – 30 October | Georgian government's victory | |
September 2012 Beytüşşebap attack | 2 September | Turkish victory | |
9 September – 26 October | Libyan Government's victory | ||
19 September 2012 – 6 March 2013 | Rebels capture Raqqa and surrounding sites. | ||
Siege of Base 46 | 22 September-19 November | FSA captures Base 46 in the Syrian desert | |
28 September – 1 October | Somalian government's & allied victory | ||
Battle of Khirbet Al-Joz | 6 October | FSA victory | |
11 October 2012 – 18 April 2013 | Syrian Army forces break the siege. | ||
8–13 October | rebels victory | ||
Battle of Harem | 17 October – 24 December | Rebel victory | |
2 November 2012 – 27 August 2014 | Rebel victory; SAA largely leave the governorate by 2014. | ||
Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–February 2013) | 7 November 2012 – 5 February 2013 | FSA takes control of Darayya, Zamalka, Harasta, and Arbin, but the offensive stalls. SAA then attacks Darayya. | |
First Battle of Ras al-Ayn | 8 November – 17 December 2012 (first phase) | YPG victory | |
Siege of Darayya and Muadamiyat | 9 November 2012 – 19 October 2016 | SAA forces capture Darayya in August 2016, rebels leave Muadamiyat after 4 years of ceasefire in October. | |
Operation Pillar of Defense | 14–21 November 2012 | Ceasefire, both sides claim victory | |
15 November 2012 – 14 February 2013 | Syrian army and Hezbulla victory | ||
Ambush of Tagarangabotte | 16 November | MNLA victory | |
Battle of In-Delimane | 16 November | Islamist victory | |
Battle of Menaka | 16–20 November | Islamists Victory | |
MT Zafirah hijacking | 18–22 November | Vietnamese victory | |
Battle of Yarmouk Camp | 5-17 December | FSA and the Palestinian Liwa al-Asifa militia take control of the camp. | |
2012 Hama offensive | 16-31 December | FSA attempts to capture Hama Governorate, but fail. |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
10–18 January | Malian army retakes the town Konna with French air-strikes after losing the town by Islamists groups. | ||
14–21 January | Malian and French troops retake Diabaly by the Islamists groups. | ||
Second Battle of Ras al-Ayn | 17 January-19 February | Clashes break out again after a ceasefire, but end with another ceasefire. | |
Second Battle of Gao | 25–27 January | French forces attacked and successfully took Gao out of MOJWAs hands after they launched an offensive on Gao. | |
Battle of Safira | 6–19 February | Al-Nusra Front's rebels attacked and captured the town of As-Safira from the government. | |
Third Battle of Gao | 9–11 February | Jihadists were defeated by Malian government forces with the support of troops from France. | |
Battle of Shadadeh | 12–14 February | Al-Nusra Front victory, capturing the city from the Syrian government forces. | |
Fourth Battle of Gao | 20–22 February | The Islamist group MOJWA tried to retake the city. The attempt was repelled by Malian government forces with the support of troops from France and Niger. | |
Battle of Khalil | 22–23 February | ||
Battle of Ifoghas | 22 February | ||
Battle of Iminenas | 27 February – 1 March | ||
Battle of Raqqa | 3–6 March | ||
Battle of Tin Keraten | 6 March | ||
Battle of Tigharghar | 12 March | ||
Battle of Djebok | 12–17 March | ||
Battle of Timbuktu | 20–21 March | ||
Second Battle of Timbuktu | 20 March – 1 April | ||
Fifth Battle of Gao | 24 March | ||
Battle of In Arab | 29–30 March | ||
Sanamayn clashes | 10 April 2013-December 2016 | Clashes break out between defecting SAA officers and the Syrian government. | |
Battle of Jdaidet al-Fadl | 16–21 April | ||
Battle of Hamakouladji | 4 May 2013 | ||
Battle of al-Qusayr (2013) | 19 May – 5 June 2013 | ||
Battle of Agadez and Arlit | 23 May 2013 | ||
Battle of Sidon (2013) | 23–25 June 2013 | ||
17-20 July | YPG cement control over the city. | ||
Battle of Ma'loula | 4–15 September 2013 | ||
21–28 October 2013 | |||
15 November – 15 December 2013 | |||
10 December 2013 |
Battle | Date | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
22–23 January 2014 | |||
1 February – 23 October 2014 | |||
23 February 2014 | |||
20 March 2014 | |||
21–31 March 2014 | |||
3 April – 14 August 2014 | |||
11–30 April 2014 | |||
12 April – 5 July 2014 | |||
25 April – 4 August 2014 | |||
6 May – 14 June 2014 | |||
13–14 May 2014 (1 day) | |||
16–21 May 2014 | |||
26–27 May 2014 | |||
Zarb-e-Azb | 15 June 2014 – 22 February 2016 | ||
26–30 June 2014 | |||
13 July – 23 August 2014 | |||
16–26 July 2014 | |||
16 July – 26 August 2014 | |||
19 July 2014 | |||
19–23 July 2014 | |||
21 July – 6 September 2014 | |||
1–4 August 2014 | |||
2–7 August 2014 | |||
7 August – 2 September 2014 | |||
10–28 August 2014 | |||
16–19 August 2014 | |||
25–28 August 2014 | |||
15 September 2014 | |||
Second Battle of Sanaa | 16-21 September 2014 (5 days) | ||
28 September 2014 – 21 January 2015 | |||
15 October 2014 – 28 December 2017 | |||
28 October – 6 November 2014 | |||
29 October–21 December 2014 | |||
1 November 2014 – 15 December 2014 | |||
21 November 2014 – 17 May 2015 | |||
25 November 2014 – 9 February 2015 |
Battle | Date | Description | Conflict | |
---|---|---|---|---|
12 January 2015 | Boko Haram insurgency | |||
14 January – 20 February 2015 | War in Donbas | |||
23 January – 24 December 2015 | Boko Haram insurgency | |||
24 January 2015 | War in Donbas | |||
25 January 2015 | Moro conflict | |||
6 February 2015 | Boko Haram insurgency | |||
9 February – June 2015 | Kokang conflict | |||
10 February – 3 July 2015 | War in Donbas | |||
2 March – 17 April 2015 | Iraqi Civil War | |||
14 March – 31 May 2015 | Libyan Civil War | |||
19 March 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
19 March 2015 | Mexican Drug War | |||
6 April 2015 | Mexican Drug War | |||
24 March – 26 May 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
25 March – 22 July 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
26 March – 11 August 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
27 March – 4 August 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
28 March 2015 – 19 July 2018 | Syrian civil war | |||
29 March – 15 August 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
2–16 April 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
Al-Karmah offensive | 14 April – 3 May 2015 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
15 April 2015 – present | Yemeni Civil War | |||
24 April – 14 October 2015 | War in Afghanistan | |||
1 May 2015 – 1 May 2015 | Mexican Drug War | |||
9–10 May 2015 | Inter-ethnic clashes in the Republic of Macedonia | |||
22 May 2015 | Mexican Drug War | |||
3 June 2015 | War in Donbas | |||
11–19 June 2015 | Piracy in the Strait of Malacca | |||
26 June 2015 | War in Somalia War | |||
? July 2015 – ? November 2015 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict | |||
1–2 July 2015 | Sinai insurgency | |||
24–25 July 2015 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict Turkey–ISIL conflict DHKP/C insurgency in Turkey | |||
24 July 2015 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict Turkey–ISIL conflict DHKP/C insurgency in Turkey | |||
? August 2015 – ? May 2016 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict | |||
4–11 September 2015 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict | |||
7 September 2015 – present | Sinai insurgency | |||
18 September 2015 | War in North-West Pakistan | |||
6 October 2015 – present | Yemeni Civil War | |||
12 – 15 November 2015 | Iraqi Civil War | |||
? December 2015 – 11 February 2016 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict | |||
2–3 December 2015 | Yemeni Civil War | |||
3 December 2015 – 10 March 2016 | Kurdish–Turkish conflict | |||
First phase 19 December 2015 – 23 January 2016 Second phase 30 January 2016 – present | Yemeni Civil War |
Battle | Date | Description | Conflict | |
---|---|---|---|---|
8 January 2016 | Mexican-American victory, the Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquín Guzmán was recaptured. | Mexican Drug War | ||
15 January 2016 | El Adde was captured by Al Shabaab after a military massacre. | War in Somalia War | ||
2 February – 22 May 2016 | The city Fallujah was fully besieged by Iraqi government forces and recaptured the town Al-Karmah. | Iraqi Civil War | ||
14 February – 6 March 2016 | The Afghan National Army recaptured 22 villages from ISIL. | War in Afghanistan | ||
20 February – 1 March 2016 | The Maute Group retreated after the attempted attack. | Moro conflict | ||
7–9 March 2016 | The Tunisian forces defended Ben Gardane. | ISIL insurgency in Tunisia | ||
12 March – 14 April 2016 | The Iraqi Army recaptured Hit. | Iraqi Civil War | ||
Mosul offensive | 24 March – 22 September 2016 | Pro-Iraqi government forces capture Qayyarah Airfield West, Qayyarah, and Al-Shirqat. | Iraqi Civil War | |
1–5 April 2016 | Azerbaijan takes 800–2,000 hectares (8–20 km2) of land in the conflict area. A ceasefire was signed by both parties and both claim their victory. | Nagorno-Karabakh conflict | ||
9 – 14 April 2016 | The Abu Sayyaf retreated after their attack and killing 18 soldiers and losing 31 fighters. | Moro conflict | ||
12 April 2016 – 8 September 2016 | War in Afghanistan | |||
19 April 2016 – present | Kurdish separatism in Iran | |||
24–25 April 2016 | Decisive Saudi-led Coalition victory by capturing Mukalla. | Yemeni Civil War | ||
12 May – 6 December 2016 | GNA recaptured 4 towns and villages and Sirte itself from ISIL. | Libyan Civil War | ||
16 – 18 May 2016 | Iraqi Army recapture Ar-Rutbah District/Town. | Iraqi Civil War | ||
22 May – 29 June 2016 | Iraqi forces recaptured the entire city of Fallujah and its suburbs. | Iraqi Civil War | ||
12–13 June 2016 | Status quo ante both sides claim victory. | Eritrean–Ethiopian border conflict | ||
23 June 2016 – 31 January 2019 | South Sudanese Civil War | |||
7–11 July 2016 | Ceasefire declared. | South Sudanese Civil War | ||
19 July 2016 | Ansar Dine and ANSIPRJ killed both 17 soldiers in their army base attack. | Northern Mali conflict | ||
10 August – 5 September 2016 | War in Afghanistan | |||
15–20 August 2016 | The FSA gains full control over al-Rai after a second offensive. | Syrian civil war | ||
16–23 August 2016 | Ceasefire declared. The NDF leaves al-Hasakah and is barred from reentering. | Syrian civil war | ||
Siege of Derna | August 2016 – 28 June 2018 | The Libyan National Army captures Derna from the Shura Council of Mujahideen in Derna | Second Libyan Civil War | |
3–4 October 2016 | The Afghan Army captured the city Kunduz from the Taliban. | War in Afghanistan | ||
16 October 2016 – 20 July 2017 | The Iraqi Army recaptured the city of Mosul after a 9-month battle from ISIL. | Iraqi Civil War | ||
20 November – 4 December 2016 | Rebels capture the town of Mong Ko, but are later forced to retreat by the Myanmar Army. | Internal conflict in Myanmar | ||
26–30 November 2016 | The Maute Group retreated for the second time from Butig after an attempted attack. | Moro conflict | ||
Oromia–Somali clashes | 14 December 2016 – present | In 2016, when Ethiopia redistricted its kebeles, multiple Jarso people voted to move their kebele into Oromia region from Somali Region, leading to Somali minority villagers fleeing into Somali region. Clashes broke out between Oromo and Somali people over control of the kebeles. | Ethiopian civil conflict (2018–present) | |
18–23 December 2016 | Ceasefire declared. Both sides claim to have repelled the other's attacks. | War in Donbas | ||
29 December 2016 – 30 April 2017 | FSA-led rebels capture more than 1,800 square kilometres (~695 square miles) of territory from ISIL. | Syrian civil war |
Battle | Date | Description | Conflict |
---|---|---|---|
? January 2017 – 23 March 2017 | Taliban capture Sangin from the government. | War in Afghanistan | |
13 January – 4 March 2017 | Syrian Army captures 1,702 square kilometres and 52 settlements, including Palmyra. | Syrian civil war | |
14 January – 14 February 2017 | ISIL cut the road to Deir ez-Zor Airport, splitting the government-held areas of Deir ez-Zor into two parts. | Syrian civil war | |
17 January 2017 – 5 April 2017 | The Syrian Army captures 250 villages, the city of Dayr Hafir and 2 towns. The FSA captures 6-7 villages and SDF captures 14 villages from ISIL. | Syrian civil war | |
20 January – 9 March 2017 | The Tahrir al-Sham captures multiple cities, towns and villages. | Syrian civil war | |
27 January 2017 | Al-Shabaab captures Kulbiyow however the Kenyan army recapture the city within hours later. | War in Somalia War | |
29 January 2017 | Yemeni Civil War | ||
29 January 2017 – 4 February 2017 | War in Donbas | ||
First phase 12 February – 8 March 2017 Second phase 6 – 26 April 2017 Third phase 24 May – 6 June 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
13 February 2017 – present | War in North-West Pakistan | ||
18 February – 29 May 2017 | Rebels and pro-government forces made a deal for transporting rebels and their family members to the Idlib Governorate. The Syrian Army takes control of the neighborhoods. | Syrian civil war | |
20 – 27 February 2017 | ISIL captured Tasil and two other towns from the rebels. | Syrian civil war | |
22 February 2017 – present | War in North-West Pakistan | ||
3 March 2017 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
3 March 2017 – 14 March 2017 | Libyan Civil War | ||
5 March – 12 May 2017 | The Syrian Army made a buffer zone around Palmyra by capturing more than 230 square miles of territory around the city. | Syrian civil war | |
17 March 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
21 March – 28 April 2017 | The Syrian Army recaptured all lost territory as well as one captured in rebels previous offensive. Including the cities of Taybat al-Imam and Halfaya. | Syrian civil war | |
22 March – 10 May 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
9–27 April 2017 | War in Afghanistan | ||
11 April 2017 – 15 May 2017 | Moro conflict | ||
25 April 2017 – 27 June 2017 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
26–27 April 2017 (3 hours) | War in Afghanistan (2001–present) | ||
28 April – 31 May 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
? May 2017 – present | War in Afghanistan | ||
5 May 2017 | Afghanistan–Pakistan skirmishes | ||
5 May 2017 | Yemeni Civil War | ||
7 May – 13 July 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
9 May 2017 – 8 June 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
18 May 2017 | Libyan Civil War | ||
23 May 2017 | Yemeni Civil War | ||
23 May – 23 October 2017 | Moro conflict | ||
31 May – 18 June 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
6 June – 17 October 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
6 – 25 June 2017 | War in Afghanistan | ||
7 – 23 June 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
8 June 2017 | War in Somalia War | ||
13 – 30 June 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
20 June – 14 August 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
24 June – 1 July 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
1 July – 25 August 2017 | South Sudanese Civil War | ||
14 July – 21 October 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
14 – 23 July 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
21 July 2017 – 28 August 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
30 July 2017 | War in Somalia War | ||
20 August – 2 September 2017 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
First phase 8 September 2017 – 5 March 2018 Second phase 1 May – 4 August 2018 Third phase: Preparations ongoing | Syrian civil war | ||
14 September – 17 December 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
14 September – 17 November 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
16 – 21 September 2017 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
18 September – 21 October 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
19 – 29 September 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
20 September – 8 October 2017 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
4 October 2017 | Insurgency in the Maghreb | ||
4 – 17 October 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
23 October – 6 December 2017 | Syrian civil war | ||
7 October 2017 – present | Syrian civil war | ||
9 October 2017 – 13 February 2018 | Syrian civil war | ||
15 – 20 October 2017 | Iraqi–Kurdish conflict | ||
26 October 2017 – 9 December 2017 | Iraqi Civil War | ||
First phase 14[1] – 25 November 2017[2] Second phase 29 December 2017 – 17 January 2018 | First phase All of the areas captured by the rebels in Harasta were reported by pro-government sources to have been retaken by government forces. Second phase Government forces defended the military base.[3] | Syrian civil war | |
21[4] – 22 November 2017 | The ISIL leader Akhmed Chatayev died in the siege together with 2 others and 1 soldier. | None | |
28 November 2017[5] – 2 January 2018[6] | Syrian military captures Tal Bardiyah, rebel forces surrender Beit Jinn and leave to Idlib.[7] | Syrian civil war | |
28 November – 4 December 2017[8] | Ali Abdullah Saleh was killed by Houthi forces,[9] and the Houthis gain total control of Sanaa. | Yemeni Civil War | |
6 December 2017[10] – Present | Yemeni Civil War | ||
Uvira clashes | 2017 | MONUSCO and Congolese army forces repel an attack by CNPSC. |
Battle | Date | Description | Conflict | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 January – 20 February 2018 | ISIL captures 90% of Yarmouk. | [11] [12] | ||
Battle of Tukaraq | 8 January 2018(smaller clashes from 15–24 May) | The first time both Somaliland and Puntland forces clashed. | Puntland–Somaliland dispute | |
12 January – 6 March 2018 | Over 20 jihadists were killed or captured in an attempt attack. | [13] [14] | ||
15 January 2018 (1 day) | Pro-Government's forces of Venezuela killed six rebels and one woman and lost 3 pro-Government's forces in a raid in the neighborhood El Junquito in Caracas. | [15] | ||
First phase 20 January – 24 March 2018 Second phase 25 March 2018 – Present | First phase Turkish Armed Forces and their allies capture most of the Afrin District (282 towns and villages), including Afrin city. | [16] [17] [18] [19] | ||
28 – 31 January 2018 | STC gains control of most of Aden, on the reach of Al-Mashaiq Palace with support of UAE. | [20] [21] | ||
7 – 8 February 2018 | SDF success defended Khasham. | [22] [23] | ||
9 February 2018 – Present | [24] | |||
10 February 2018 (1 day) | Israeli fighter jets attack additional sites, after an Iranian drone was shot down after entering Israeli airspace, bringing the total to 12 being hit. | [25] | ||
17 – 18 February 2018 | 70% of Al Masini valley cleared from AQAP. | [26] [27] | ||
18 February – 12 April 2018 | Syrian army captures the entirety of the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta pocket. | [28] [29] | ||
19 February – 24 April 2018 | Ceasefire established. | [30] [31] | ||
3 March 2018 (1 day) | [32] | |||
10 March 2018 – Present | [33] | |||
12 – 20 March 2018 | ISIL takes control of 90% of al-Qadam, SAA controls one neighborhood. | [34] [35] | ||
29 March – 6 April 2018 | French troops killed at least two militant commanders. | [36] [37] | ||
29 March 2018 (1 day) | PKK attacked a Turkish military base in Eruh and killed 6 soldiers. | [38] | ||
14 April 2018 (1 day) | MINUSMA and French troops defend the camp. | [39] [40] | ||
15 – 20 April 2018 | A Ceasefire was declared and all rebels surrender and withdrawal. | [41] [42] | ||
17 – 25 April 2018 | Syrian Army captures the entirety of the rebel-held eastern Qalamoun pocket. And the rebels surrender and evacuate from eastern Qalamoun. | [43] [44] | ||
19 April – 21 May 2018 | The Syrian Army captured the entire rebel-held pocket in south Damascus after reaching an evacuation agreement. | [45] [46] [47] | ||
29 April 2018 (1 day) | SDF recaptures all four villages. | [48] [49] | ||
30 April – 14 May 2018 | Two weeks after the takeover on 14 May, Saudi troops were also deployed to Socotra and a deal was brokered between the United Arab Emirates and Yemen for a joint military training exercise and the return of administrative control of Socotra's airport and seaport to Yemen. | [50] [51] [52] | ||
Gedeo–Guji clashes | April–July 2018 (4 months) | Clashes between the Gedeo people and Gujii clan led to 800,000 Gedeo fleeing their homes. | Ethiopian civil conflict (2018–present) | |
7 May 2018 – 28 June 2018 | Khalifa Haftar captures Derna from the Shura Council of Mujahideen in Derna. | [53] [54] | ||
10 May 2018 (1 day) | After Iranian forces reportedly fired around 20 projectiles towards Israeli army positions in the Golan Heights, Israel attacked Iranian bases in Syria. | [55] | ||
14 – 16 May 2018 | Afghan Government's victory and recapturing the city Farah. | [56] [57] | ||
2018 Armenian–Azerbaijani clashes | 20-27 May 2018 (7 days) | Azeri forces accused Armenian troops of attacking Nakhchivan. | Nagorno-Karabakh conflict | |
22 May – 11 June 2018 | Pro-Government's forces defend the town Abu Kamal from ISIL. | [58] [59] | ||
3 – 5 June 2018 | GATIA/MSA killed 6 ISIL members one of them is commander and Amat Ag Assalate and lost both 3 soldiers. | [60] [61] | ||
6 – 22 June 2018 | Syrian Army captures a number of towns, villages and many hills. | [62] [63] | ||
13 June – 13 November 2018 | An offensive by the Hadi Government to attack the port city of Al Hudayah and cut off the Houthis from supply lines. At first, Saudi-backed forces capture the town, then lose the airport to the Houthis, and then the Houthis recapture the town. | [64] | ||
18 June 2018 – 31 July 2018 | Pro-Government forces capture all the rebels territory. | [65] [66] | ||
12 July – 1 August 2018 | Battle between Taliban and the Islamic State's Khorasan Province (ISIL-K), which resulted in a major Taliban victory | |||
28 July 2018 (1 day) | Ambazonian separatists burning down Ndop prison, and liberate 163 inmates, the separatists sized also some weapons and ammunition from the prison. | [67] | ||
6 August – 19 November 2018 | Syrian forces capture the ISIL-held part of As-Suwayda. | [68] | ||
10 – 15 August 2018 | Government's forces regain control of Ghazni city, but only three districts in Ghazni Province remain under full government control | [69] [70] | ||
27 August 2018 – 25 September 2018 | A series of clashes in Tripoli end after a ceasefire. | [71] | ||
17 September 2018 | ||||
2018 Syrian-Turkish border clashes | 31 October-6 November 2018 | Turkey attacks Kurdish militias in northern Syria, stalling the Deir ez-Zor offensive. | Syrian civil war, Rojava conflict | |
2018 Batangafo clashes | 31 October-17 November 2018 | Anti-balaka and Ex-Séléka groups clashes in Batangafo. | Central African Republic Civil War | |
25 November 2018 | Russian Border Guard captures three Ukrainian naval vessels. | [72] | ||
National Front for Liberation – Tahrir al-Sham conflict | 1 January 2019 – 10 January 2019 (1 week and 2 days) | Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a Sunni militant group, launched attacks on rebel positions in Idlib; the conflict ended when the National Front for Liberation agreed to withdraw on 10 January, allowing the militants to seize the area. | Syrian civil war | [73] | |
Battle of Baghuz Fawqani | 9 February 2019 - 23 March 2019 | The last stand of the Islamic State's territorial holdings, with the Syrian Democratic Forces taking control. | Syrian civil war, Rojava–Islamist conflict | ||
Battle of Aden | 7 August 2019 – 29 August 2019 (3 weeks and 1 day) | The Southern Transitional Council took Aden and the Presidential Palace despite Saudi and Yemen Army missile strikes. | Yemeni Civil War | [74] | |
Battle of the Jabara Valley | 26 August 2019 – 29 August 2019 (3 days) | 1,100 soldiers from the Saudi Army's Al-Fateh Brigade launched an offensive into Yemen's Jabara Valley, but were surrounded by Houthi forces for four days; the Saudis launched airstrikes against Yemeni positions, but failed to break through, and, on 29 August 2019, 100 managed to escape across the border, with the remaining 1,000 killed in action or captured. | Yemeni Civil War | [75] | |
2019 Western Michoacán clashes | 30 August 2019 – 30 August 2019 (0 day) | Indecisive | Mexican Drug War | ||
2019 Dhamar Airstrike | 1 September 2019 | The Saudi-led coalition launched an airstrike on a university being used as a Houthi detention center; according to the Red Cross, there were 100 fatalities and 40 injured, after which the Houthis were persuaded by the United Nations to release 290 detainees, 42 of whom had survived the airstrike. | Yemeni Civil War | [76] | |
2019 Abqaiq-Khurais attack | 14 September 2019 | Houthi officials announced 10 drones had been used to attack two Saudi Aramco oil processing facilities in Eastern Saudi Arabia; Saudi officials said they believed more drones and cruise missiles were used, and that they originated from Iran; the United States and Saudi Arabia have stated that Iran was behind the attack while France, Germany, and the United Kingdom jointly stated Iran bears responsibility for it, while Iran denies involvement. | Yemeni Civil War | [77] | |
Battle of Culiacán | 17 October 2019 | Sinaloa Cartel Victory. Ovidio Guzmán López was released. | Mexican Drug War | [78] | |
Operation Kayla Mueller | 26 October 2019 – 27 October 2019 (2 days) | The U.S. Joint Special Operations Command's 1st SFOD-D (Delta Force) raided Idlib Province in northern Syria, culminating in the death of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi by canine Conan |
Battle of Sirte | 6 January 2020 (0 days) | The Libyan National Army captured Sirte from forces loyal to the Government of National Accord. | Second Libyan Civil War | [79] |
Battle of Chinagodrar | 9 January 2020 (0 days) | A large group of Boko Haram militants assaulted a Nigerien military base in Chinagodrar. | Insurgency in the Maghreb | [80] |
Operation Spring Shield | 27 February – 6 March 2020 (8 days) | Ceasefire Turkish Armed Forces and their allies capture the strategic Zawiya Mountain and 18 villages Syrian Government forces and their allies capture the strategic Saraqib city and 4 villages | Syrian civil war | |
Al Jawf Offensive | 29–5 February 2021 | Houthi offensive that captured 95% of Al Jawf governate including its capital, Al Hazm. | Second Yemeni Civil War | |
Operation Gideon | 3 May 2020 – 4 May 2020 (1 day) | Venezuelan dissidents and American private military contractors unsuccessfully attempt to land in Venezuela and remove Nicolás Maduro from office. | Crisis in Venezuela | |
2020-2021 China-India skirmishes | 5 May 2020 – ongoing | Series of melee skirmishes, face-offs, and high tensions along the Sino-Indian border near Ladakh and Tibet. | Sino-Indian border dispute | |
Battle of Talahandak | 3 June 2020 (0 days) | French soldiers ambushed an al-Qaeda hideout near the Algerian border, killing the AQIM leader Abdelmalek Droukdel. | Mali War | |
July 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani clashes | 12–16 July 2020 (4 days) | Small clash near Tavush, Armenia between Armenia and Azerbaijan where 21 soldiers from both sides perished. | Nagorno-Karabakh conflict | |
Mocímboa da Praia offensive | 5 August 2020 – 11 August 2020 (6 days) | Militants from Islamic State's Central Africa Province captured the city of Mocímboa da Praia from Mozambican security forces and South African private military contractors. | Insurgency in Cabo Delgado | [81] |
Madagiz offensive | 27 September 2020 - 3 October 2020 (6 days) | Azerbaijani victory against Armenian forces in the towns of Talish and Madagiz. | Second Nagorno-Karabakh War | |
Battle of Hadrut | 7 October 2020 – 15 October 2020 (8 days) | Azerbaijani forces took control of Hadrut, and several villages and heights surrounding it. | Second Nagorno-Karabakh War | [82] |
4 November Northern Command attacks | 4 November 2020 (1 day) | Tigray People's Liberation Front soldiers attack Ethiopian Northern Command headquarters in various cities in the Tigray Region. | Tigray War | [83] |
Battle of Shusha | 6 November 2020 – 8 November 2020 (2 days) | Azerbaijani forces seized Shusha, the second city of the Republic of Artsakh. | Second Nagorno-Karabakh War | [84] |
Battle of Humera | 9-11 November 2020 | The battle was the first confirmed action involving Eritrean forces during the Tigray War. After Tigrayan forces reportedly abandoned the city, Ethiopian and Eritrean forces took control. Ethiopian forces subsequently massacred the Tigray inhabitants. | Tigray War | |
Mekelle offensive | 17 November 2020 - 28 November 2020 (11 days) | ENDF forces launched artillery on the Tigrayan capital of Mekelle, hitting mainly civilians. | Tigray War | |
2020-2021 Ayn Issa clashes | 22 November 2020 - 19 April 2021 (4 months, 3 weeks, 6 days) | Syrian Democratic Forces repel a push by the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army; results inconclusive. | Turkish involvement in the Syrian civil war |
Siege of Qamishli and Al-Hasakah | 10 January – 2 February 2021 (3 weeks, 2 days) | Kurdish Asayish police forces laid siege upon Syrian government-controlled areas of the cities of Qamishli and Al-Hasakah. | Rojava conflict | ||
Operation Claw-Eagle 2 | 10-14 February 2021 (4 days) | Turkey attempts to rescue Turkish prisoners held by the PKK in Duhok Governorate. Iraq, but fails. | Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present) | ||
Battle of Marib | 22 February 2021 – present | Struggle between Houthi insurgents and Saudi-backed Yemenis over control of Marib. | Yemeni civil war (2014–present) | ||
Battle of Doctor Coss | 13-14 March 2021 (1 day) | Gulf Cartel soldiers and Los Zetas soldiers, both major cartels in Northern Mexico, clash at the small town of Doctor Coss. | Mexican drug war | ||
2021 Ataye clashes | 18-31 March 2021, 16–18 April 2021 | Ethnic conflict between Oromo and Amhara militias during the Tigray War, leading to much of the city of Ataye being destroyed. | Tigray War | ||
2021 Apure clashes | 21 March 2021 – present | Ongoing conflict between Colombian paramilitias and the Venezuelan military. | Venezuelan crisis | [85] | |
Battle of Palma | 24 March 2021 – 5 April 2021 (12 days) | Battle over control of the city of Palma in Mozambique, between the Mozambique Defence Armed Forces, Mozambican security forces and private military contractors against Islamist rebels reportedly associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). The Islamists invaded the city, killing dozens of people before Mozambique regained control days later. | insurgency in Cabo Delgado | [86] | |
2021 Kalay clashes | 28 March 2021 – ongoing | Clashes between Tatmadaw and anti-coup protestors in Kalay. | Myanmar civil war (2021–present) | ||
Capture of Aguililla | 6 April 2021 – 28 April 2021 (22 days) | CJNG Victory captured Aguililla successfully | Mexican Drug War | [87] | |
2021 Northern Chad offensive | 11 April 2021 – 9 May 2021 (4 weeks) | Conflict between Chadian rebels and the government leading in the death of dictator Idriss Déby, and the installation of his son Mahamat Déby. | Insurgency in Northern Chad | ||
Battle of Qamishli (2021) | 20 April 2021 – 26 April 2021 (6 days) | Clashes between the Syrian Armed Forces and the Asayish, the Kurdish police forces. | Rojava conflict | ||
Clash at Thaw Le Hta | 26 April 2021 (0 days) | Clash between Karen National Liberation Army and the Tatmadaw near Thailand-Myanmar border. | Internal conflict in Myanmar | ||
2021 Kyrgyzstan–Tajikistan clashes | 28 April 2021 – 1 May 2021 (3 days) | Small clashes arisen by the installation of Tajik security cameras on a water tower in disputed territory. | Post-Soviet conflicts | ||
2021 Israel–Palestine crisis | 6 May 2021 – 21 May 2021 (15 days) | On 6 May 2021, Palestinian and Israeli protestors clashed with each other, eventually causing a police response, which also got involved with the conflict. Hamas delivered an ultimatum to Israel to remove all police forces the Haram al Sharif mosque site and Sheikh Jarrah by 10 May at 6 P.M, in their current timezone. Just a few minutes after this deadline passed, Hamas fired over 150 rockets into Israel, triggering an Israeli response. On 21 May 2021, after constant Israeli bombings, Hamas agreed to a ceasefire between them and Israel. | Israeli–Palestinian conflict | ||
Battle of Sambisa Forest | 14 – 19 May 2021 (5 days) | ISWAP victory. Sambisa Forest is captured by ISWAP | Boko Haram insurgency | ||
Battle of Kunduz (2021) | 21 June - 11 August 2021 (1 month and 3 weeks) | Taliban forces attack Kunduz, with ANA forces holding out until mid-August. | 2021 Taliban offensive | ||
Battle of Kandahar (2021) | 9 July – 16 August 2021 (1 week) | Taliban offense against Kandahar, the second largest city in Afghanistan. | 2021 Taliban offensive | ||
Fall of Herat | 28 July – 13 August 2021 (16 days) | Taliban offensive capturing the city of Herat, by the Iranian border. | 2021 Taliban offensive | ||
Battle of Lashkargah | 29 July – 13 August 2021 (15 days) | Taliban offensive capturing the city of Lashkargah. | 2021 Taliban offensive | ||
Capture of Zaranj | 6 August 2021 (0 days) | Taliban offensive capturing the city of Zaranj. | 2021 Taliban offensive | ||
Fall of Kabul | 15 August 2021 (0 days) | Taliban insurgents invaded Kabul following the United States' evacuation of military personnel, swiftly taking the city faster than anticipated. | 2021 Taliban offensive | [88] | |
Turkish airstrikes on Sinjar (2021) | 16 August 2021 (0 days) | Turkey strikes Kurdish Sinjar Resistance Units forces in Iraq. | Kurdish–Turkish conflict | ||
2021 Daraa offensive | 29 July – 5 September 2021 (1 month, 1 week, 1 day) | Syrian government victory. | Syrian civil war | [89] | |
2021 Galmudug clashes | 30 September 2021 – ongoing | Skirmishes between the Somali Armed Forces and Ahlu Sunna Waljama'a, a Sufi jihadist militia. | Somali Civil War (2009–present) | ||
Afar–Somali clashes | 28 October 2020 – 23 May 2022 (1 year, 7 months, 6 weeks, and 3 days) | In 2014, Ethiopia redrew the administrative divisions between Afar Region and Somali Region, leading to multiple majority-Somali kebeles being under Afar rule. Because of this, villagers from the Somali region have attempted to regain control of these kebeles, with clashes sometimes even spreading into Djiboutian territory. | Ethiopian civil conflict (2018–present) | ||
2021 Afghanistan–Iran clashes | 1 December 2021 (0 days) | Taliban soldiers accidentally capture multiple Iranian outposts before withdrawing. | Afghanistan conflict (1978–present) |
2022 Arauca clashes | 2 January | The ELN and FARC, both far-left militant groups, fought leaving 23 dead. | Colombian conflict | [90] |
Battle of Loikaw (2022) | 6 January-8 February | The Burmese junta launches an offensive against Karenni independence groups and anti-junta rebels, but fails to fully weed them out. | Myanmar civil war (2021–present) | |
Battle of al-Hasakah (2022) | 22 – 26 January | ISIS militants escaped a prison in SDF-controlled areas of Syria, causing a shootout in parts of al-Hasakah. | Syrian civil war, Rojava–Islamist conflict | |
2022 Kyrgyzstan–Tajikistan clashes | 27 January-20 September | Sporadic clashes between Kyrgyz and Tajik border guards kill 2 Kyrgyz civilians and 2 Tajik border guards between January and June, and injured dozens more on both sides. | Post-Soviet conflicts | |
Siege of Djibo | 16/17 February-present | AQIM besieges the city of Djibo, in northern Burkina Faso. | Jihadist insurgency in Burkina Faso | |
Snake Island campaign | 24 February – 30 June | Russian forces seize Snake Island, capturing the 13 man garrison. While Russian forces manage to hold the island, they are repeatedly attacked by Ukrainian forces until they withdraw, to which Russia subsequently bombards Ukrainian forces that retake the island. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | [91] |
Battle of Antonov Airport | 24 – 25 February | Russian paratroopers failed to capture Hostomel Airport in Kyiv on the first assault, but capture it on the second assault. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | [92] |
Battle of Sumy | 24 February - 4 April | Russians initially capture Sumy, but are forced to retreat. The city is later besieged and surrounded. However, Ukrainian forces manage to defeat the siege and a battle rages in the northern part of the city for a month. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Kyiv (2022) | 24 February – 31 March | Russians enter parts of Kyiv Oblast and the city limits, but are later forced to retreat. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Siege of Chernihiv | 24 February – 4 April | Ukrainians repel Russian attempt at seizing Chernihiv, causing the Russian forces to begin a siege on Chernihiv. On 31 March, Ukraine manages to break the siege but fighting continued north of the city. On 4 April, Russian forces had fully withdrawn. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Kherson | 24 February – 2 March | Russians attempt to take Kherson, fail, and then divert to capture Nova Kakhovka. Later, they capture Kherson but with heavy losses and a still fierce resistance. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Kharkiv (2022) | 24 February – 14 May | Russian forces attempt to seize Kharkiv, including shelling civilians to do so. The battle has been described as one of the deadliest in the war. After two months of attempting to surround the city, though, Russian forces were pushed back to the Ukrainian-Russian border in early May. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Okhtyrka | 24 February – 26 March | Russians attempt to capture Okhtyrka, but never manage to. Ukrainian forces hold the city during the pullout of Russian forces in late March, but bombing continues. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Siege of Mariupol | 24 February – 16 May | Russian, Chechen, and rebel forces siege the city from all sides, with fighting destroying 95% of the city and killing as many as 20,000 citizens. By mid-April, the last Ukrainian forces were holed up in the Azovstal steel complex. In mid-May, Azov leader Denys Prokopenko and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that a deal had been reached to evacuate wounded Ukrainian soldiers, and surrender the remaining able-bodied Ukrainian soldiers. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Melitopol | 25 February – 1 March | Russians capture Melitopol, the first major city to be captured in their invasion. They later abduct and torture the Melitopol mayor, Ivan Fedorov, before releasing him. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Volnovakha | 25 February-12 March | Donbass rebels capture Volnovakha, but the town is destroyed and both the DPR and Ukrainian generals are killed. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Hostomel | 25 February – 1 April | Russians capture the city on March 5, but are forced to retreat in late March. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Mykolaiv | 26 February – 8 April | Russians, failing to go north, attempt to capture and surround Mykolaiv. While managing to reach as far north as Voznesensk, they are pushed back to the borders of Mykolaiv and Kherson oblasts. Bombing of the city however continues. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Lebedyn | 26 February – 4 April | Ukrainians hold the city, although Russians managed to encroach on neighboring villages. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Bucha | 27 February-12 March (1st phase)29-31 March (2nd phase) | Russian forces capture Bucha, forcing a mass exodus of civilians. The occupying forces later massacre much of the town's population, which is discovered by Ukrainian forces in late March. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Makariv | 27 February-25 March | Russian forces capture the town of Makariv on the way to capture Kyiv, although are pushed out, leaving 40% of the town destroyed. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Irpin | 27 February-28 March | Russian forces capture half of Irpin, and almost all of the population flees. Later, Ukraine reports that the city came under full Ukrainian control following the pullout of the Kyiv offensive. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Enerhodar | 28 February 2022 – 4 March | Russians capture Enerhodar, and the largest nuclear power plant in Europe. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Voznesensk | 2–3 March (1st phase) 9–13 March (2nd phase) | Russians are defeated once and later capture Voznesensk in an attempt to encircle Mykolaiv, but the city is soon recaptured by Ukraine. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Izium | 3 March – 1 April | Russian troops capture northern half of the city, but are repeatedly pushed back by Ukrainian troops. After more Russian pushback, the Russians capture the southern half of the city. Ukrainian forces recapture the city bloodlessly on September 10. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Huliaipole | 5 March 2022-ongoing | One of the few notable towns on the Zaporizhzhian front of the Southern Ukraine offensive, Russian forces have attempted to storm Huliaipole from the south, however the stalemate with constant artillery barrages has left much of the town destroyed. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Brovary | 9 March – 1 April | Russians push on Brovary, to the east of Kyiv. After a Russian pullout from the north of Ukraine, Ukrainian forces hold the town. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Rubizhne | 15 March – 12 May | During fighting in the battle of Donbas, Russian and LPR forces capture 60% of Rubizhne and the nearby town of Kreminna, the southern half of the city being still held by Ukraine. Later, combined LPR-Russian forces captured the whole city, leaving Sievierodonetsk as the last major Ukrainian-held city north of the Donets river. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Marinka | 17 March 2022-25 December 2023 | DPR forces launch an offensive on the city of Marinka, a Ukrainian-held settlement on the outskirts of the city of Donetsk with Ukrainian forces completely withdrawing from the city by 25 December 2023. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Slavutych | 18-27 March | Russians "take" Slavutych - it stays under Ukrainian control, but the citizens are forced to turn over their weapons to Russians. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Popasna | 18 March – 7 May | Russian forces capture Popasna after a month of fighting, with Ukrainian forces retreating to the north and west of the city. The town is destroyed during the fighting. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Siege of Moura | 27-31 March | Malian and Russian paramilitary forces lay siege to an ISIS-held town, and commit a massacre against its civilians. | Mali War | |
2022 Gadzi clashes | 27 March - 11 April | Fulani militias under the 3R militia attack villages. | Central African Republic Civil War | |
2022 M23 offensive | 27 March 2022-ongoing | M23 rebels in North Kivu launch an offensive backed by Rwanda, causing tensions and clashes between the DRC and Rwanda. | Kivu conflict | |
2022 northeastern Russia–Ukraine border skirmishes | 6 April 2022-ongoing | After Russian forces left Sumy and Chernihiv oblasts in early April, border clashes have erupted along the Russian and Ukrainian borders there. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Operation Claw-Lock | 17 April 2022-ongoing | Turkish forces begin an offensive on Kurdish regions of Iraq governed by the PKK. | Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present) | |
Battle of Donbas | 18 April 2022 - ongoing | Russian leaders began a campaign to capture the full territory of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, areas claimed by the separatists, and create a land border from Russia to the Russian-backed separatists in Transnistria. The outlines of this offensive, mainly centered between on an Izyum-Rubizhne-Huliaipole-Mariupol line, are notably similar to the Novorossiya proposal. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Plaine du Cul-de-Sac | 24 April-6 May | Haitian gang 400 Mawozo attacks Chen Mechan, a rival gang, and attempts to capture a neighborhood loyal to Chen Mechan. | Haitian crisis (2018–present) | |
Sinjar clashes (2022) | 1-7 May | Iraqi and Kurdish YBŞ forces, after weeks of tensions, clash and Iraqi forces attempt to clear Sinjar of Kurdish militia control. A ceasefire was put in effect, and YBŞ left central Sinjar. | Iraqi conflict (2003–present) | |
Battle of Sievierodonetsk | 6 May-24 June | Russian and Luhansk forces attempt to capture Sievierodonetsk, destroying 70% of the city's infrastructure. By mid-June, most Ukrainian troops were holed up at the Azot chemical plant, until they retreated on the 24th allowing Russian and LPR forces to seize the city. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of the Siverskyi Donets | 5-13 May | Russian forces, attempting to cross the strategic Donets river multiple times, are attacked by Ukrainian forces each time in what becomes the deadliest single event for Russians in the war. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
2022 Tripoli clashes | 17 May–December | Clashes erupted between forces loyal to prime ministers Fathi Bashagha from the LNA and Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh from the GNA. | Libyan Crisis (2011–present) | |
Battle of Davydiv Brid | 27 May-16 June | Ukrainian forces in late May launched a counter-offensive across the Inhulets river in Southern Ukraine. The town of Davydiv Brid saw the most fighting, with control of the town switching back and forth between Ukraine and Russia until the Ukrainian river crossing was destroyed, leaving an assessed Russian victory. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
First battle of Sviatohirsk | 30 May – 8 June | Russian and LPR forces attempt to capture Sviatohirsk, the last important city north of the Donets river. The battle saw widespread damage and destruction to the historic Sviatohirsk Lavra monastery. Russian forces claimed victory on June 6, although fighting subsided on June 8. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
2022 Ahrar al-Sham–Levant Front clashes | 18-20 June | Two factions of the Syrian National Army clashed over the control of small villages in the Al-Bab countryside. Ended with status quo ante bellum. | Inter-rebel conflict during the Syrian civil war | |
2022 Jabal al-Bishrī clashes | 20-23 June | Syrian government forces and ISIS clash in central Syria. | Syrian civil war | |
Battle of Lysychansk | 25 June – 3 July | Russian and LPR forces attempt to storm Lysychansk, the last major Ukrainian-held city in Luhansk Oblast, from the south. On July 2 Russian forced claimed to have seized the city, the following day the Armed Forces of Ukraine stated that they had withdrawn from the city of Lysychansk, marking the end of the battle. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Bakhmut | 3 July 2022 – 20 May 2023 | Russian and allied forces encroach on the city of Bakhmut. The battle becomes one of the longest and most important of the war, with the entire city of Bakhmut destroyed. Wagnerite forces captured much of the city by May 21, although Ukrainian forces controlled a sliver of the city limits and conducted attacks on the city's outskirts. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
2022 Port-au-Prince gang battles | 8-9 July | Tensions between rival gangs G-Pep and G9 caused multiple violent outbreaks throughout the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince. | FRG9 insurgency in Haiti | |
2022 al-Shabaab invasion of Ethiopia | 20 July - early August | Al-Shabaab, a terrorist group in Somalia, launched an invasion into Ethiopia's Somali Region, although were pushed back. | Ethiopian-Somali conflict and Somali Civil War | |
Battle of Pisky (2022) | 28 July – 24 August | Russian and DPR forces capture Pisky, a small village on the outskirts of Donetsk that Ukraine had controlled since 2014. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Bambui | 31 July | Cameroonian forces launch an offensive into Ambazonian-controlled territory. | Anglophone Crisis | |
Battle of Soledar | 3 August 2022 – 16 January 2023 | Russian and allied forces capture half of Soledar, where the battlefield stalls for months. In early January, a Wagnerite offensive successfully captures Soledar with heavy Ukrainian losses. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | [93] |
August 2022 Bam ambush | 4 August | Jihadist militants attack Burkinabe forces during a counter-terrorism operation. | Jihadist insurgency in Burkina Faso | |
2022 Gaza-Israel clashes | 5-7 August | Israel launches a series of airstrikes against Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza, killing 49 Palestinians, including multiple PIJ military leaders. | Gaza–Israel conflict | |
2022 Southern Yemen offensive | 7 August-19 November | Southern Transitional Council forces capture Shuqrah, Ataq, and other southern towns by late August, and control much of Abyan and Shabwah provinces by November. | Yemeni civil war (2014–present) | |
Second battle of Lyman | 3 September-2 October | Ukrainian forces push towards the railroad hub of Lyman, which Russia had captured in late May. Throughout September, Ukraine laid siege to the town, attacking from the south and fighting for small villages north and west of Lyman. After completing an encirclement, Ukraine regained control of the town. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Talataye (2022) | 6-7 September | ISGS stormed the town of Talataye briefly capturing it from MSA and JNIM forces. | Mali War | |
Battle of Kupiansk | 8-16 September | Ukrainian forces reach Kupiansk by September 8, capturing the western side of the city by September 12. Fighting continuing in the eastern side, Kupiansk-Vuzlovyi until Ukraine secured the town on September 16. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
September 2022 Armenia–Azerbaijan clashes | 12-14 September | Azeri forces launch an attack on Armenian border settlements, in a steep escalation since the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. | Armenia–Azerbaijan border crisis | |
2022 Kyrgyzstan–Tajikistan clashes (September) | 14-20 September | In an escalation of border clashes from earlier in the year, Kyrgyz officials accused Tajik border guards of taking positions in Kyrgyz territory. Tajik forces allegedly entered border villages in Kyrgyzstan, leading to the deaths of civilians, while Tajik officials accused Kyrgyz forces of attacking a mosque with a Bayraktar TB2. | Post-Soviet conflicts | |
Luhansk Oblast campaign | 2 October-ongoing | Following the Ukrainian recapture of Lyman and the Kharkiv counteroffensive, Ukrainian and Russian forces battle over villages between Svatove and Kreminna as the frontline stabilizes, with lots of fighting centered at Chervonopopivka and the R66 highway running through it. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Battle of Bal'ad | 7 October | Somali Army forces repulse an al-Shabaab attack on a Somali military base. | Somali Civil War (2009–present) | |
October 2022 northern Aleppo clashes | 10-19 October | After Hamza Division members killed a man and his pregnant wife in Al-Bab, Third Legion soldiers launched an offensive in northern Aleppo governorate. After capturing Afrin and Jindires, Tahrir al-Sham declared their peace treaty with Third Legion voided. | Inter-rebel conflict during the Syrian civil war | |
Battle of Vuhledar | 28 October – present | Russian/DPR forces started storming the city of Vuhledar on the night of 28 October, after capturing Pavlivka. Ukrainian forces pushed the Russians out of the city. Fighting ongoing south of the city. Currently a stalemate. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Ungkaya Pukan clash | 8-10 November | Clashes broke out between the Philippine Army and Moro Islamic Liberation Front for two days until a ceasefire was signed. | Moro conflict | |
Liberation of Kherson | 11 November | Following a large-scale counteroffensive and the Russian withdrawal from right bank Kherson Oblast, Ukraine retakes the city of Kherson. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | |
Northwestern Syria clashes (December 2022–present) | 2 December - present | Tahrir al-Sham launches guerrilla attacks on Syrian Army positions in Idlib, Aleppo, and Hama governorates. | Syrian civil war | |
2022 Boala attack | 7 December | A skirmish erupts at a market in Boala Department, Burkina Faso, between unknown jihadists and Volunteers for the Defense of the Homeland. | Jihadist insurgency in Burkina Faso | |
2022 Yangtse clash | 9 December | Non-fatal clashes broke out in Arunachal Pradesh between India and China, with scores of injured. | Sino-Indian border dispute |
Battle | Date | Description | Conflict | Ref(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 Sinaloa unrest | 5–13 January | Cartel violence broke out in Culiacán following the Mexican government arresting Ovidio Guzmán, nephew of Sinaloa drug kingpin El Chapo. | Mexican drug war | ||
Battle of Nyala | 15 April–26 October | RSF militants capture the Nyala airport and several eastern neighborhoods, but a truce is brokered by April 20 between the SAF and RSF. While it holds for several weeks, sporadic clashes break out in Nyala in May and June. | War in Sudan | [94] | |
Battle of Merowe | 15–21 April | Rapid Support Forces took control of the airport and city on April 15. Sudanese Armed Forces sent reinforcements to the city and the RSF fully retreated from the city on 21 April. During the battle, RSF captured several Egyptian Armed Forces soldiers who were not participating in the conflict. | War in Sudan | [95] [96] | |
Battle of El Fasher | 15 April–ongoing | RSF launch attacks on El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur. While they capture parts of the city, a Joint Darfur Force led by Darfur governor Minni Minnawi reverses RSF gains. | War in Sudan | ||
Siege of El Obeid | 15 April–1 September | RSF forces attempt to capture a Sudanese Army garrison in El Obeid, capital of North Kordofan, but fail. However, the city is besieged by May 29. By August, a SAF offensive reverses RSF gains in the city, and the SAF regains full control of El Obeid by September 1. | War in Sudan | ||
Battle of Khartoum | 15 April–present | Rapid Support Forces launch attacks on government sites in Khartoum after tensions between RSF leader Hemedti and Sudanese prime minister Abdel Fattah al-Burhan rise over. Battles take place in neighborhoods, markets, military sites, and the Khartoum International Airport. | War in Sudan | ||
Battle of Geneina | 15 April–22 June | RSF forces besiege the West Darfuri capital of Geneina, launching attacks on Sudanese forces and Masalit civilians. After capturing the city, allegations of genocide against non-Arab civilians emerge. | War in Sudan | ||
Siege of Zalingei | 15 April–31 August | War in Sudan | |||
Battle of Kabkabiya | 15–23 April | War in Sudan | |||
2023 Gaza–Israel clashes | 9-13 May | Israel conducts airstrikes on Gaza after killing several top Palestinian Islamic Jihad members. A ceasefire is held. | Israeli–Palestinian conflict | ||
Grayvoron incursion | 22–23 May | Russian opposition groups allied with Ukraine, including the Russian Volunteer Corps and Freedom of Russia Legion, launch an incursion into Belgorod Oblast towards Grayvoron, capturing the town of Kozinka and other small villages in Grayvoronsky District, but are forced to retreat. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
2023 Afghanistan–Iran clash | 27 May | Taliban and Iranian border guards clash, but both sides resolve it. | Afghan conflict | ||
Battle of Kutum | 30 May–4 June | War in Sudan | |||
Shebekino incursion | 1 June-15 June | Russian opposition groups launch a second incursion in Belgorod Oblast, this time towards Shebekino. While they are forced to retreat from the town, a small strip of Russian territory remains under opposition control. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive | 4 June 2023 – late 2023 | Ukrainian forces launch a counteroffensive in eastern Ukraine to retake territory occupied by Russia and recapture 14 villages, but fail to advance further. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
Battle of Kadugli | 8 June–present | War in Sudan | |||
Be'eri standoff | 7-8 October | Hamas captured the town of Be'eri and took dozens of people hostage, forcing Israel into a stand-off. Israel eventually retook the town. | Israel–Hamas war | ||
Battle of Re'im | 7 October | Hamas captured the Re'im Army Base, which was later recaptured by Israel later in the day. | Israel–Hamas war | ||
Battle of Sderot | 7-9 October | Hamas captured a police garrison in Sderot. Later recaptured by Israel. | Israel–Hamas war | ||
Battle of Sufa | 7-10 October | Israel–Hamas war | |||
Zikim attack | 7 October | Hamas overran two military bases near Zikim, massacred civilians at Zikim beach, and were repelled at Bahad 4 and Zikim kibbutz itself. | Israel–Hamas war | [97] | |
Battle of Avdiivka | 10 October 2023–17 February 2024 | Russian Federation occupied Avdiivka in February 2024. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
Battle of Beit Hanoun | 27 October–24 December | Israel–Hamas war | |||
Siege of Gaza City | 2 November – present | Israel–Hamas war | |||
Battle of Jabalia | 8 November – present | Israel–Hamas war | |||
Siege of Khan Yunis | 1 December – present | Israel–Hamas war | |||
Battle of Wad Madani | 15–19 December | War in Sudan | |||
Battle | Date | Description | Conflict | Ref(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Battle of the Tendra Spit | 28–29 February | Ukrainian forces attempted to land on the Tendra Spit in an occupied area in Kherson Oblast but were repelled by Russian forces, suffering heavy casualties in the process. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | [98] | |
March 2024 Western Russia incursion | 12 March – 7 April | Russian anti-government groups launched an incursion from Ukraine into the Kursk and Belgorod oblasts in Russia. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | [99] | |
Battle of Chasiv Yar | 4 April 2024 – present | After taking Bakhmut, Russian forces launched an offensive on a strategically important city west of it, Chasiv Yar. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
Battle of Krasnohorivka | 8 April 2024 – present | Russia attempts to capture the city of Krasnohorivka in Donetsk Oblast. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
Battle of Toretsk | 4 April 2024 – present | Russian forces launch an offensive in the direction of Toretsk in northern Donetsk Oblast, advancing into satellite settlements east of it. | Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||
Battle of Tinzaouaten (2024) | 25–27 July 2024 | CSP-PSD rebels ambushed a convoy of Wagner Group mercenaries and Malian soldiers near Tinzaouaten, resulting in a battle for the commune. | Mali War | [100] [101] |