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Chaibian War

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Chaibian War
Part of the Atomic Age (1945–present)
Chaibian War collage.png
Clockwise from top left: A Fallish UC peacekeeper during UCOMCA involvement in the Battle of Caridoso in 1989, a Nadauran military helicopter hovers over an abandoned FLP anti-aircraft weapon in 1987, the Easter Agreement is signed by President Tadeu Espíndola in 1990, internally displaced people in Itzalcoatl
Date2 January 1982 – present
(42 years, 10 months, 2 weeks and 5 days)
Location
Nadauro, with spillover into X
Status

Ongoing, Nadauran peace process

Belligerents

Nadauro


Supported by:
 Free States (1982–)
 Waldrich (1982–)
UCOMCA (1987–1992)

Nadauran drug cartels and right-wing paramilitaries


Supported by:
X

Nadauran guerrillas

  • FLP (1980–)
  • ER1M (1982–)
  • FDDI (1984–1990)
  • MAR (1981–1992)
  • PDT (1984–1990)
  • ERDL (1987–1989)
  • FPS (1985–1986)

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 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

Names

Background

Timeline of events

Impact and legacy

Statistics

See also

Notes