Sunday 19 December 2010

The World at War


The World at War

Current Conflicts

AlgeriaInsurgency1992 -->
AngolaCabinda1975-2006?
BurmaInsurgency1950 -->
ChinaSenkaku Islands1968 -->
ChinaSpratly Islands1988 -->
ChinaUighur1996 -->
ColombiaInsurgencies1970s-->
Congo (Zaire)Congo War1998-->
GeorgiaCivil War1991-->
IndiaAssam1985 -->
IndiaKashmir1970s-->
IndiaNaxalite Uprising1967 -->
IsraelPalestine1967 -->
Ivory CoastCivil War2002 -->
KoreaKorean War1953 -->
KyrgyzstanCivil Unrest2010 -->
LaosHmong Insurgency2000 -->
MexicoDrug War2006 -->
NamibiaCaprivi Strip1966-->
NepalMaoists1996-2006 ?
NigeriaCivil Disturbances1997 -
PakistanBaluchistan2004 -
PakistanPashtun Jihad2001 -
PalestineCivil War2007-->
PeruShining Path1970s-->
PhilippinesMoro Uprising1970s-->
RussiaNorth Caucasus Insurgency1992 -->
SomaliaCivil War1991-->
SpainBasque Uprising1970s-->
ThailandIslamic Rebels2001 -->
TurkeyKurdistan1984 -->
United StatesAfghanistan1980 -->
United StatesDjibouti2001 -->
United StatesIraq1990 -->
United StatesPhilippines1898 -->
UzbekistanCivil Disturbances2005 -->
YemenSheik al-Houti2004 -->



"Perpetual peace is no empty idea, but a practical thing which, through its gradual solution, is coming always nearer its final realization..."
IMMANUEL KANT

The United Nations defines "major wars" as military conflicts inflicting 1,000 battlefield deaths per year. In 1965, there were 10 major wars under way. The new millennium began with much of the world consumed in armed conflict or cultivating an uncertain peace. As of mid-2005, there were eight Major Wars under way [down from 15 at the end of 2003], with as many as two dozen "lesser" conflicts ongoing with varrying degrees of intensity.

Most of these are civil or "intrastate" wars, fueled as much by racial, ethnic, or religious animosities as by ideological fervor. Most victims are civilians, a feature that distinguishes modern conflicts. During World War I, civilians made up fewer than 5 percent of all casualties. Today, 75 percent or more of those killed or wounded in wars are non-combatants.

Africa, to a greater extent than any other continent, is afflicted by war. Africa has been marred by more than 20 major civil wars since 1960. Rwanda, Somalia, Angola, Sudan, Liberia, and Burundi are among those countries that have recently suffered serious armed conflict.

War has caused untold economic and social damage to the countries of Africa. Food production is impossible in conflict areas, and famine often results. Widespread conflict has condemned many of Africa's children to lives of misery and, in certain cases, has threatened the existence of traditional African cultures.

Conflict prevention, mediation, humanitarian intervention and demobilization are among the tools needed to underwrite the success of development assistance programs. Nutrition and education programs, for example, cannot succeed in a nation at war. Billions of dollars of development assistance have been virtually wasted in war-ravaged countries such as Liberia, Somalia, and Sudan.


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