Chaibian War
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Chaibian War | ||||||||
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Part of the Atomic Age (1945–present) | ||||||||
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Belligerents | ||||||||
Supported by: ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Nadauran drug cartels and right-wing paramilitaries
Supported by: X |
Nadauran guerrillas
Supported by: ![]() X | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | ||||||||
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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 | ||||||||
![]() 19,840 injured (1982–1990) |
![]() 39,000 demobilized ![]() 1,740 captured Armala cartel: 3,400 killed |
![]() 22,000 demobilized (since 2016) 900 captured (since 1985) ![]() 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 throughout the 1980s 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 in 1979.
TBD