Chaibian War: Difference between revisions
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|casualties2= {{flagicon image|Flag_of_CLUN.png}} [[United Free Corps of Nadauro|CLUN]]: 1,065 killed<br>39,000 demobilized<br>{{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_AAE_Nadauro.png}} [[Aliança Anticomunista dos Elias|AAE]]: 967 killed<br>1,740 captured<br>[[Armala cartel]]: 3,400 killed | |casualties2= {{flagicon image|Flag_of_CLUN.png}} [[United Free Corps of Nadauro|CLUN]]: 1,065 killed<br>39,000 demobilized<br>{{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_AAE_Nadauro.png}} [[Aliança Anticomunista dos Elias|AAE]]: 967 killed<br>1,740 captured<br>[[Armala cartel]]: 3,400 killed | ||
|casualties3= {{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_MNAP.png}} [[Popular Liberation Front (Nadauro)|FLP]]: 7,829 killed (1982–1990)<br>22,000 demobilized (since 2016)<br>900 captured (since 1985)<br> {{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_Ditlihis.png}} [[Revolutionary Army of 1st of March|ER1M]]: 2,990 killed<br>4,000 captured (since 1990) | |casualties3= {{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_MNAP.png}} [[Popular Liberation Front (Nadauro)|FLP]]: 7,829 killed (1982–1990)<br>22,000 demobilized (since 2016)<br>900 captured (since 1985)<br> {{flagicon image|Flag_of_the_Ditlihis.png}} [[Revolutionary Army of 1st of March|ER1M]]: 2,990 killed<br>4,000 captured (since 1990) | ||
|casualties4= Civilians killed: 164,427<br>Individuals abducted: 25,027<br>Total number of individuals displaced: 3,363,000–5,100,000<br>Total number of refugees: 100,000+ | |||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Chaibian War''' ({{wp|Portuguese language|Lavish}}: ''Guerra do Chaibia''), also referred to as the '''Nadauran War''' ({{wp|Portuguese language|Lavish}}: ''Guerra do Anadaúro'') and commonly as '''A Violência''' ({{wp|literal translation|lit.}} "The Violence"), was a {{wp|low-intensity conflict}} dominated by {{wp|asymmetric warfare}} between the [[Government of Nadauro|federal government]] of [[Nadauro]] and the state government of [[Chaibia]], {{wp|right-wing politics|far-right}} {{wp|paramilitary}} groups, {{wp|drug cartel}}s, and {{wp|left-wing politics|far-left}} {{wp|guerrilla warfare|guerrilla}} groups, following the collapse of the [[Caravelas regime]] and the [[Third Empire of Nadauro]]. | |||
''TBD'' | |||
==Names== | |||
==Background== | |||
==Timeline of events== | |||
==Impact and legacy== | |||
==Statistics== | |||
==See also== | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{Template:Nadaurotopics}} | |||
{{Teleon}} | |||
[[Category:History of Nadauro]] |
Revision as of 12:10, 21 August 2024
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Chaibian War | ||||||||
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Part of the Atomic Age (1945–present) | ||||||||
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Belligerents | ||||||||
Supported by: Free States (1982–) Waldrich (1982–) UCOMCA (1987–1992) |
Nadauran drug cartels and right-wing paramilitaries
Supported by: X |
Nadauran guerrillas
Supported by: Hyacinthe (until 1990) X | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | ||||||||
Nataniel Magalhães (2021–present) | ||||||||
Strength | ||||||||
Ground Self-Defense Force: 177,400 Naval Self-Defense Force: 47,250 Air Self-Defense Force: 33,350 National Police: 267,560 |
Paramilitary and successor groups: 4,500–26,000 CLUN: 40,200 |
FLP: 34,000 (2015) ER1M: 13,890 (2006) MAR: 1,200 (1990) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | ||||||||
Nadauro: 6,401 killed (1982–1990) 19,840 injured (1982–1990) |
CLUN: 1,065 killed 39,000 demobilized AAE: 967 killed 1,740 captured Armala cartel: 3,400 killed |
FLP: 7,829 killed (1982–1990) 22,000 demobilized (since 2016) 900 captured (since 1985) ER1M: 2,990 killed 4,000 captured (since 1990) | ||||||
Civilians killed: 164,427 Individuals abducted: 25,027 Total number of individuals displaced: 3,363,000–5,100,000 Total number of refugees: 100,000+ |
The Chaibian War (Lavish: Guerra do Chaibia), also referred to as the Nadauran War (Lavish: Guerra do Anadaúro) and commonly as A Violência (lit. "The Violence"), was a low-intensity conflict dominated by asymmetric warfare between the federal government of Nadauro and the state government of Chaibia, far-right paramilitary groups, drug cartels, and far-left guerrilla groups, following the collapse of the Caravelas regime and the Third Empire of Nadauro.
TBD