United States Wars / Conflicts

United States conflict history from wikipedia.org (click to visit).
| War or conflict's name(s) | Opponent(s) | Time | Conclusion(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| American Revolutionary War or American War of Independence |
September 1, 1774 – September 3, 1783 | Treaty of Paris Britain recognizes independence of the United States |
|
| Boston Campaign Part of the American Revolutionary War |
September 1, 1774–March 17, 1776 | Colonial victory, British forces driven from Boston area | |
| Naval operations in the American Revolutionary War Part of the American Revolutionary War |
1775–1783 | Treaty of Paris | |
| Canadian Campaign Part of the American Revolutionary War |
Canadian Militia |
June 1775–October 1776 | Defeat of Colonial invasion; British counter-offensive |
| New York and New Jersey Campaign Part of the American Revolutionary War |
July 1776 – March 1777 | New York: British gain control of New York City, British victory New Jersey: Americans lose and then regain control of New Jersey, American victory |
|
| Saratoga Campaign Part of the American Revolutionary War |
Brunswick-Lüneburg Hesse-Hanau Iroquois Confederation (except Oneidas) |
June 14, 1777–October 17, 1777 | Decisive American victory:
|
| Philadelphia Campaign Part of the American Revolutionary War |
Ansbach-Bayreuth |
1777–1778 | British occupation then evacuation of Philadelphia |
| Western Theater Part of the American Revolutionary War |
American Indians Great Britain |
1775–1782 | Military stalemate, U.S. diplomatic victory; Spanish Louisiana successfully defended |
| Chickamauga Wars (1776–1794) Part of the American Revolutionary War Part of the American Indian Wars |
American Indians Great Britain Creek Chickamauga MingoKickapoo Lenape Mascouten Potawatomi |
1776–1794 | Decisive American victory; U.S. diplomatic victory, American rights in Treaty of Parissuccessfully defended
Britain recognizes independence of the United States and cedes forts and influence in Indian territory. |
| Northern Theater Part of the American Revolutionary War |
1778–1782 | ??? | |
| Southern Theatre Part of the American Revolutionary War |
1775–1782 | Decisive Franco/American victory, Surrender of British army at Yorktown | |
| Yorktown Campaign Part of the American Revolutionary War |
Ansbach-Bayreuth |
January – October, 1781 | Decisive Franco/American victory |
| Northwest Indian War or Little Turtle's War or Miami Campaign |
Western Confederacy Canadian Militia |
1785–1795 | U.S. victory, Treaty of Greenville |
| Quasi-War or Franco-American War or Half War |
1798–1800 | Indecisive United States Victory; end of French privateer attacks on U.S. shipping; U.S. neutrality and renunciation of claims against France | |
| First Barbary War or Barbary Coast War or Tripolitan War |
1801–1805 | American victory, peace treaty | |
| Tecumseh's War or Tecumseh's Rebellion |
Tecumseh's Confederacy | August - November 1811 | American victory, peace treaty |
| War of 1812 or Second War of Independence |
Chickamauga Mingo Kickapoo Lenape Mascouten Potawatomi |
June 18, 1812 – March 23, 1815 | Treaty of Ghent Status quo ante bellum |
| Atlantic Theatre Part of the War of 1812 |
1812–1815 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Chesapeake Campaign Part of the Atlantic Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1813–1814 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Great Lakes and Western Theatre Part of the War of 1812 |
1812–1815 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Canadian Campaign Part of the Great Lakes and Western Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1812–1813 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| American Northwest Campaign Part of the Great Lakes and Western Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1813 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Niagara Frontier Campaign Part of the Great Lakes and Western Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1813–1814 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| St. Lawrence and Lower Canada Campaign Part of the Great Lakes and Western Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1813–1814 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Niagara and Plattsburgh Campaigns Part of the Great Lakes and Western Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1814 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| American West Campaign Part of the Great Lakes and Western Theatre of the War of 1812 |
1813–1814 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Southern Theatre Part of the War of 1812 |
1814–1815 | Treaty of Ghent; Status quo ante bellum | |
| Creek War Part of the Southern Theatre of the War of 1812 |
Red StickCreek | 1813–1814 | U.S./Allied Native American victory |
| Second Barbary War or Algerian War |
1815 | American victory | |
| First Seminole War | Seminole |
November 22, 1817 - April 12, 1818 | American victory |
| West Indies Anti-Piracy Operations | CaribbeanPirates | 1817–1825 | United States victory |
| African Anti-Slavery Operations | AfricanSlave Traders | 1819–1861 | Atlantic slave trade suppressed by 1865 |
| Callao Affair | November 5–6, 1820 | Spanish vow to punish those responsible for attacks on American shipping. | |
| Arikara War | Arikara | 1823 | The Arikara eventually settled with the Mandan and Hidatsa on the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota |
| Aegean Anti-Piracy Operations | GreekPirates | 1825–1828 | United States victory |
| Winnebago War or Le Fèvre Indian War |
Prairie La CrosseHo-Chunks, with a few allies | 1827 | U.S. victory; Ho-Chunks cede lead mining region to the U.S. |
| Black Hawk War or Black Hawk Campaign |
Black Hawk's British Band, with Ho-Chunk and Potawatomi allies | May–August 1832 | United States victory |
| First Sumatran Expedition | Chiefdom of Kuala Batee | February 6 – 9, 1832 | United States victory |
| United States Exploring Expedition | Fiji
|
1838–1842 | Successful expedition, victory in battle against aborigionals |
| Second Seminole War or Florida War |
Seminole | December 23, 1835 – August 14, 1842 | 3,800 Seminoles transported to Indian Territory, 300 left in Everglades |
| Second Sumatran Expedition | Chiefdom of Quallah Battoo | December 1838 – January 1839 | United States victory, Malays agree to cease attacks on American vessels |
| Capture of Monterey | October 19–20, 1842 | United States captures Monterey | |
| Battle of Kororareka | Maori | March 11, 1845 | Successful British and American rescue operations |
| Mexican–American War or Mexican War |
April 25, 1846 – February 2, 1848 | Decisive United States victory:
|
|
| Texas Campaign Part of the Mexican-American War |
1846 | Decisive US victory: All Mexican forces pushed out of State of Texas, Mexican bandits suppressed | |
| Conquest of California Part of the Mexican-American War |
1846–1847 | Decisive US victory:
Republic of California united with the United States
|
|
| New Mexico and Arizona Campaign Part of the Mexican-American War |
1846–1847 | Decisive US victory:
|
|
| Pacific Coast Campaign Part of the Mexican-American War |
1847–1848 | Decisive US victory
|
|
| Mexico City Campaign Part of the Mexican-American War |
1847 | Decisive US victory
|
|
| Navajo Wars | Navajo | 1858–1866 | United States victory, Long Walk of the Navajo |
| Cayuse War | Cayuse | 1847–1855 | United States victory |
| Pitt River Expedition | Tolowa Nomlaki Chimariko Wintun |
April 28 - September 13, 1850 | ??? |
| Apache Wars | Apache Ute Yavapai |
1851–1900 | Decisive American victory, Apaches moved to reservations |
| Bombardment of San Juan del Norte or Bombardment of Greytown |
July 13, 1854 | U.S. victory, town severely damaged | |
| Battle of Ty-ho Bay | ChinesePirates | August 4, 1855 | Anglo-American victory |
| First Fiji Expedition | Fiji | October 1855 | United States victory in battle, objective failed |
| Yakima War | Yakama | 1855–1858 | American victory, peace treaty |
| Rogue River Wars | Rogue River people | 1855–1856 | Indians relocated to Siletz, Grand Ronde, and Coast Reservations |
| Puget Sound War | Nisqually Muckleshoot Puyallup Klickitat Haida and Tlingit |
1855–1856 | Indians relocated to Siletz, Grand Ronde, and Coast Reservations. |
| Third Seminole War or Billy Bowlegs War |
Seminole | 1855–1858 | U.S. victory |
| Second Opium War or Second Anglo-Chinese War or Second China War |
1856–1859 | Treaty of Tianjin June 18, 1858 | |
| Second Fiji Expedition | Fiji | 6–16 October 1858 | United States victory |
| Paraguay Expedition | 1859 | Paraguay extended an apology to the United States, indemnified the family of the slain Water Witch crewman, and granted the United States a new and highly advantageous commercial treaty | |
| Reform War | March 6, 1860 | United States victory | |
| Paiute War or Paiute Indian War or Pyramid Lake War |
Paiute Bannock |
1860 | United States victory |
| American Civil War or War Between the States |
April 12, 1861 – April 9, 1865 | Unionvictory:
|
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| Reconstruction | 1867-1877 | Stalemate:
|
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| Eastern Theater Part of the American Civil War |
1861–1865 | Union victory | |
| Western Theater Part of the American Civil War |
1861–1865 | Union victory | |
| Lower Seaboard Theater Part of the American Civil War |
1862–1865 | Union victory | |
| Trans-Mississippi Theater Part of the American Civil War |
1862–1865 | Union victory | |
| Pacific Coast Theater Part of the American Civil War |
1862–1865 | Union victory | |
| Dakota War of 1862 or Sioux Uprising or Sioux Outbreak of 1862 |
August 17 – December 26, 1862 | United States victory | |
| Bombardment of Qui Nhon or Cochinchina Campaign |
July 31, 1861 | United States victory, fort silenced | |
| Colorado War | 1863–1865 | United States victory | |
| Battles for ShimonosekiBattles for Shimonoseki |
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| Powder River Expedition or Connor Expedition |
1865 | U.S. victory; raids along Bozeman trail stopped | |
| Snake War | Paiute Bannock |
1864–1868 | U.S. victory |
| Red Cloud's War or Bozeman War or Powder River War |
1866–1868 | United States victory:
|
|
| Formosa Expedition or Taiwan Expedition of 1867 |
Paiwan | June 1867 | United States objectives failed |
| Comanche Campaign or Comanche War |
Kiowa |
1867–1875 | United States victory |
| Battle of Boca Teacapan | MexicanPirates | June 17, 1870 | United States victory |
| Korean Expedition or Shinmiyangyo |
June 1, 1871 - July 3, 1871 | United States military victory, United States diplomatic failure; Korean-American Treaty of Amity and Commerce | |
| Modoc War or Modoc Campaign or Lava Beds War |
July 6, 1872 – June 4, 1873 | United States victory | |
| Oahu Expedition | Emmaites | February 12, 1874 | American and British forces quell riot. |
| Red River War | Kiowa |
June 27, 1874 - June 1875 | United States victory; end to the Texas-Indian Wars |
| Black Hills War or Great Sioux War of 1876–77 or Little Big Horn Campaign |
1876–1877 | United States victory | |
| Nez Perce War or Nez Perce Campaign |
1877 | United States victory | |
| Bannock War or Bannock Campaign |
Bannock |
1878 | United States victory |
| Cheyenne War or Cheyenne Campaign |
1878–1879 | United States victory | |
| Sheepeater Indian War | 1879 | United States victory | |
| White River War or Ute War or Ute Campaign |
Ute | 1879–1880 | United States victory |
| Egyptian Expedition or Second Anglo-Egyptian War |
June - July 1882 | United States forces protect consulate from rebels and extinguish fires | |
| Colombian Civil War | Colombianrebels | March 30-April 24, 1885 | Colon destroyed, rebels retreat, American hostages released; Ambrose Light and Colombian rebels captured |
| Samoan Crisis or First Samoan Civil War |
1887–1889 | Both squadrons wrecked | |
| Pine Ridge Campaign or Ghost Dance War |
November 1890 – January 1891 | United States victory | |
| Bering Sea Anti-Poaching Operations | Bering SeaPoachers | June 22 - October 5, 1891 | Suppression of seal poaching in the Bering Sea |
| Chilean Civil War | 1891 | United States Navy seizes Chilean ship; Breakdown of American and Chilean relations | |
| Rio de Janeiro Affair | BrazilianRebels | January 21–9, 1894 | United States victory, objective completed |
| Second Samoan Civil War | Mataafans | 1898–1899 | Mataafan victory, Mata'afa Iosefo becomes high chief of Samoa; United States acquires American Samoa, Germany acquires German Samoa |
| Spanish-American War | April 25 – August 12, 1898 | United States victory:
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|
| Pacific Theater Part of the Spanish-American War |
1898 | US victory | |
| Philippine Campaign Part of the Pacific Theatre of the Spanish-American War |
1898 | Expulsion of the Spanish colonial government during Spanish-American War (1898) | |
| Guam Campaign Part of the Pacific Theatre of the Spanish-American War |
1898 | United States victory:
|
|
| Caribbean Theater Part of the Spanish-American War |
1898 | US victory | |
| Cuban Campaign Part of the Caribbean Theatre of the Spanish-American War |
1898 | US victory | |
| Puerto Rican Campaign Part of the Caribbean Theatre of the Spanish-American War |
1898 | Militarily inconclusive, Spain cedes Puerto Rico in accordance with the accords of the Treaty of Paris of 1898 | |
| Philippine Insurrection or Philippine–American War or Philippine War of Independence |
June 2, 1899 – July 4, 1902 | United States victory and dissolution of the First Philippine Republic; The Philippines becomes an unincorporated territory of the United States | |
| Moro Rebellion | 1899–1913 | United States victory | |
| Boxer Rebellion or The Boxer Uprising |
September 28, 1899 - August 15, 1900 | Alliance victory | |
| Occupation of Nicaragua or Nicaraguan Campaign |
Liberal rebels | 1912–1933 | United States victory |
| Mexican Revolution or Mexican Expedition or Pancho Villa Expedition |
April 21, 1914 - June 16, 1919 | Porfirio Diaz ousted from power and exiled in France, Convention of Aguascalientes between revolutionary leaders, Mexican Constitution of 1917 enacted, assassination of important revolutionary leaders Madero, Zapata and Carranza, founding of the National Revolutionary Party | |
| Occupation of Haiti or Haitian Campaign or Caco War |
Caco rebels |
July 28, 1915 - August 1, 1934 | United States victory, Cacos defeated, Haiti occupied. |
| Occupation of the Dominican Republic or Dominican Campaign |
1916–1924 | United States victory, Dominican Republic occupied. | |
| World War I or First World War or Great War |
1917–1918 | Armistice with Germany November 11, 1918 Paris Peace Conference 1919 Treaty of Berlin (August 25, 1921) Treaty of Trianon (in part); Alliedvictory:
|
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| European Theatre Part of World War I |
1917–1918 | Allied victory; Treaty of Versailles, Treaty of Brest-Litovsk | |
| Western Front Part of the European Theatre of World War I |
1917–1918 | Allied victory. Collapse of the German Empire. | |
| Italian Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War I |
1917–1918 | Allied victory; Treaty of Versailles | |
| Asian and Pacific Theatre Part of World War I |
1917–1918 | Allied victory; Treaty of Versailles | |
| First Battle of the Atlantic Part of World War I |
1917–1918 | Allied victory; Treaty of Versailles | |
| Russian Civil War | 1918–1920 | Allied withdrawal from Russia | |
| North Russia Campaign Part of the Russian Civil War |
1918–1920 | Allied withdrawal | |
| Siberian Intervention Part of the Russian Civil War |
1918–1920 | Allied withdrawal | |
| World War II or Second World War |
December 7, 1941 - September 2, 1945 | Allied victory:
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| Second Battle of the Atlantic Part of World War II |
1941–1945 | Decisive Allied victory | |
| Pacific War Part of World War II |
1941–1945 | Decisive Allied victory End of World War II:
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| Burma Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
Decisive Allied victory, leading to later Independence of Burma in 1948 | ||
| New Guinea Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
Allied victory | ||
| Aleutian Islands Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
June 3, 1942 – August 15, 1943 | Allied victory | |
| Guadalcanal Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
August 7, 1942 – February 9, 1943 | Strategic Allied victory | |
| Solomon Islands Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
January 1942 – August 21, 1945 | Decisive Allied victory | |
| Gilbert and Marshall Islands Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
November, 1943 – February, 1944 | Allied victory | |
| Mariana and Palau Islands Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
June – November, 1944 | American victory | |
| Philippines Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
October 20, 1944–September 2, 1945 | Allied victory; Allied forces liberate the Philippines | |
| Volcano and Ryukyu Islands Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
January – June, 1945 | Allied victory | |
| Borneo Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
1 May - 1 August 1945 | Allied victory; the Japanese are pushed further from Australia | |
| Japan Campaign Part of the Pacific War of World War II |
16 February - 23 July 1945 | Allied victory | |
| Mediterranean, Middle East and African Theatres Part of World War II |
1941–1945 | Allied victory | |
| Algeria-French Morocco Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
8–16 November 1942 | Allied victory | |
| Anzio Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
January 22, 1944 – June 4, 1944 | Operation successful; VI Corps established beachhead; Battle of Anzio followed | |
| Egypt–Libya Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
1942–1943 | Allied forces finally succeed in driving all Axis forces out of Libya | |
| Naples-Foggia Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
(to 8 September) |
3 September 1943 – 16 September 1943 | Allied victory |
| North Apennines Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
25 August-17 December 1944 | Inconclusive | |
| Po Valley Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
6 April 1945 – 2 May 1945 | Decisive Allied victory:
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| Rome-Arno Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
22 Jan 1944 - 9 Sep 1944 | German resistance crumbled | |
| Sicily Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
9 July – 17 August 1943 | Allied victory | |
| Southern France Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
15 August 1944 – 14 September 1944 | Allied victory | |
| Tunisia Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
17 November 1942 – 13 May 1943 | Decisive Allied victory | |
| European Theatre Part of World War II |
1942–1945 | Decisive Allied victory:
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| Normandy Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
6 June 1944 – mid-July 1944 | Decisive Allied victory | |
| Northern France Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
6 June – 25 August 1944 | Decisive Allied victory | |
| Rhineland Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
25 August 1944 – March 1945 | Allied victory | |
| Ardennes-Alsace Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
16 December 1944 – 28 January 1945 | Allied victory | |
| Central Europe Campaign Part of the European Theatre of World War II |
February 8, 1945 – May 8, 1945 | Allied victory | |
| Cold War | 1947–1991 | Dissolution of the USSR; United States becomes world's sole superpower | |
| First Indochina War or French Indochina War Part of the Cold War |
1950–1954 | Geneva Conference Departure of the French from Indochina |
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| Korean War or Korean Conflict or The Forgotten War Part of the Cold War |
1950–1953 | Cease-fire armistice, North Korean invasion of South Korea repelled, UN invasion of North Korea repelled, Chinese invasion of South Korea repelled, Korean Demilitarized Zone established, little territorial change at the 38th parallel border, essentially uti possidetis | |
| Second Indochina War or Vietnam War or Vietnam Conflict Part of the Cold War |
1953–1975 | Withdrawal of American forces from Indochina, Dissolution of South Vietnam, Communist governments take power in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos | |
| Laotian Civil War or Secret War Part of the Second Indochina War of the Cold War |
1953–1975 | Establishment of the Lao People's Democratic Republic | |
| 1958 Lebanon crisis or Operation Blue Bat |
July 15 - October 25, 1958 | Opposition successfully intimidated | |
| Bay of Pigs Invasion | April 17 - April 19, 1961 | Cuban government victory | |
| Cambodian Civil War Part of the Second Indochina War of the Cold War |
1970–1975 | Fall of the Khmer Republic to the Khmer Rouge; creation of Democratic Kampuchea; Beginning of Cambodian Genocide | |
| Invasion of the Dominican Republic or Operation Power Pack Part of the Cold War |
Supported by: |
April 28, 1965 – September 1966 | United States victory, Juan Bosch excluded from Presidency, election of Joaquín Balaguer |
| Invasion of Grenada or Operation Urgent Fury Part of the Cold War |
25 October – 15 December 1983 | Decisive United States/CPF victory | |
| Lebanese Civil War or Multinational Force in Lebanon |
Shia militia |
August 24, 1982 - February 7, 1984 | Withdrawal starting February 7 |
| 1981 Gulf of Sidra incident or First Gulf of Sidra Incident |
August 19, 1981 | US victory; Deterioration of Libya – United States relations | |
| Action in the Gulf of Sidra or Operation Prairie Fire |
March 1986 | Tactical US victory | |
| Bombing of Libya or Operation El Dorado Canyon |
April 15, 1986 | Tactical US victory | |
| Iran-Iraq War or Operation Earnest Will or Tanker War |
1987–1988 | Operation Prime Chance, Operation Nimble Archer, Operation Praying Mantis; US victory | |
| 1989 Gulf of Sidra incident or Second Gulf of Sidra Incident |
January 4, 1989 | US victory; Deterioration of Libya – United States relations | |
| Invasion of Panama or Operation Just Cause |
20 December 1989 – 12 January 1990 | Decisive United States victory | |
| Gulf War or Persian Gulf War or Operation Desert Storm |
August 2, 1990 – February 28, 1991 | Coalitionvictory:
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| Iraqi no-fly zones | 1991–2003 | Operation Provide Comfort, Operation Southern Watch, Cruise missile strikes on Iraq (June 1993), Cruise missile strikes on Iraq (1996), Operation Northern Watch, Operation Desert Fox, Operation Southern Focus; Coalition victory | |
| Somali Civil War or Operation Restore Hope |
1992–1994 | Multinational success | |
| Bosnian War or Operation Deliberate Force |
1993–1995 | Dayton Accords | |
| Operation Uphold Democracy | 19 September 1994 – 31 March 1995 | Reinstatement of Jean-Bertrand Aristide as President of Haiti | |
| Bombings of Afghanistan and Sudan or Operation Infinite Reach |
August 20, 1998 | Disputed | |
| Kosovo War or Operation Allied Force or Operation Noble Anvil |
March 24 – June 10, 1999 | Kumanovo Treaty, UN Security Council Resolution 1244; Reflagged as KFOR in 1999 in support of Operation Joint Guardian | |
| War on Terror | Caucasian militants Hezbollah |
7 October, 2001 – present | Ongoing:
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| Operation Enduring Freedom Part of the War on Terror |
In Afghanistan:
In the Philippines: In Somalia:
In Sahara: |
7 October 2001 – present | Conflicts ongoing;
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| Operation Enduring Freedom - Afghanistan or War in Afghanistan Part of Operation Enduring Freedom of the War on Terror |
Insurgent groups:
2001 Invasion: |
October 7, 2001 – present | Conflict ongoing:
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| Operation Enduring Freedom - Philippines or Operation Freedom Eagle Part of Operation Enduring Freedom of the War on Terror |
15 January 2002 – ongoing | Conflict ongoing | |
| Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa Part of Operation Enduring Freedom of the War on Terror |
Insurgents: See: Somali Civil War'Pirates:
|
7 October 2002 – present | Conflict ongoing |
| Operation Enduring Freedom – Trans Sahara Part of Operation Enduring Freedom of the War on Terror |
6 February 2007 – ongoing | Conflict ongoing | |
| Operation Iraqi Freedom or Iraq War Part of the War on Terror |
Insurgent groups: Special Groups Islamic Army of Iraq Ansar al-Sunnah |
March 20, 2003 – December 15, 2011 | Coalition combat operations concluded, low level internal conflict ongoing:
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| War in North-West Pakistan or Operation Freedom Eagle Part of the War on Terror |
Ghazi Force |
March 16, 2004 – ongoing | Conflict ongoing:
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| Yemeni al-Qaeda crackdown Part of the War on Terror |
Islamic Emirate of Abyan |
January 14, 2010 - ongoing | Conflict ongoing |
| Second Liberian Civil War | Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy Movement for Democracy in Liberia |
2003 | US Forces withdraw in 2003 after UNMIL is established |
| 2004 Haitian rebellion | 2004 | Aristide ousted; interim government installed | |
| 2011 Libyan civil war or Operation Odyssey Dawn |
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March 19 - October 23, 2011 | Death of Muammar Gaddafi
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| Lord's Resistance Army insurgency | Lord's Resistance Army | 2011 | Conflict Ongoing |









