List of wars involving Thailand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of wars involving the Kingdom of Thailand, its predecessor states, and by Siamese people, from antiquity to the present day. It also includes wars fought outside Thailand by Thailand military.

Ayutthaya Kingdom[]

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Ayutthaya–Lan Na War
(1441–1474)[1][full citation needed]

Location: Northern Ayutthaya, Southern Lan Na[2][full citation needed]

War elephants depicted from a later Siam–Burma war.
Ayutthaya Kingdom[1][full citation needed] Kingdom of Lanna[1][3] Stalemate[3]
First Siege of Ayutthaya
(1547–1549)

Location: Upper Tenessarim coast, western and central Siam

Painting by Prince Narisara Nuvadtivongs, depicting Queen Suriyothai (center) on her elephant putting herself between King Maha Chakkraphat (right) and the Viceroy of Prome (left).
Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Siamese defensive victory
  • The Burmese command decided to withdraw
  • Burma claims to regain Upper Tenasserim down to Tavoy (Dawei)
Second Siege of Ayutthaya
"War over the White Elephants"

(1563–64)

Location: Ayutthaya, Phitsanulok, Sukhothai

Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty
Vassal Lan Na
Vassal Sukhothai
Burmese victory
  • Ayutthaya becomes a Burmese vassal state
Third Siege of Ayutthaya
(1568–70)

Location: Ayutthaya, Phitsanulok, Kamphaeng Phet and Lan Xang

Ayutthaya Kingdom
Kingdom of Lan Xang
Toungoo Dynasty
Vassal Sukhothai
Burmese victory
  • Ayutthaya remains a Burmese vassal state
Fourth Siege of Ayutthaya
"Naresuan the Great campaigns to free Ayutthaya"

(1584–1593)

Location: Ayutthaya Kingdom and lower Tanintharyi Region

Elephant battle between Naresuan and Mingyi Swa during the Battle of Nong Sarai as wall murals in Phra Ubosot, Wat Suwan Dararam, Ayutthaya, Thailand.
Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Siamese victory
Siamese–Cambodian War
(1591–1594)

Location: Cambodia

Ayutthaya Kingdom Flag of Cambodia (pre-1863).svg Cambodia Kingdom Siamese victory
  • Siamese sack of Longvek (3 Jan 1594)
First Siamese invasions of Burma
(March 1594 –November 1605)

Location: Southern and central Burma

King Naresuan entered Pegu, mural painting by Phraya Anusatchitrakon, Wat Suwandararam, Ayutthaya.
Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Siamese victory
  • Siamese controlled the entire Tenasserim coast
  • Lan Na becomes Siamese vassal from 1602–1614
Burmese–Siamese War
(1613–14)

Location: upper Tenasserim coast and Lan Na

Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Burmese victory
  • Burma regains upper Tenasserim coast to Tavoy
  • Burma regains Lan Na
Second Siamese invasions of Burma
(1662–1664)

Location: Northern Siam and Tenasserim coast

Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Burmese defensive victory
  • Burma defends upper Burma
  • Status quo ante bellum
Burmese–Siamese War
(1675–76)

Location: Tenasserim coast

Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Burmese and Siamese defensive victory
  • Burma defends upper Tenasserim coast
  • Siam defeats counter Burmese invasion
Anglo-Siamese War
(1687–1688)

Location: Mergui and Coromandel coast

Ayutthaya Kingdom Kingdom of England England
British East India Company flag.svg East India Company
Inconclusive
  • East India Company fails to blockade the port of Mergui
  • The ports of Siam were closed to East India Company vessels until 1708
  • The East India had resumed trade using foreign-flagged vessels as early as 1705
Siege of Bangkok
(June 1688 - November 13, 1688)

Location: Bangkok, Thailand

Siege of the French fortress in Bangkok by the Siamese revolutionary forces of Phetracha in 1688.
Ayutthaya Kingdom
Supported by:
:VOC-Amsterdam.svg Dutch East India Company
 Kingdom of France
Kingdom of France French East India Company
Decisive Siamese victory
  • French negotiated retreat
Burmese–Siamese War
(1700–1701)

Location: Ayutthaya Kingdom

Ayutthaya Kingdom Toungoo Dynasty Siamese defensive victory
  • Siam defeats Burmese invasion
Siamese–Vietnamese War (1717)[4][5] Ayutthaya Kingdom Nguyễn lords Siamese victory
  • Siam gains suzerainty of Cambodia
  • Vietnam annexes several border provinces of Cambodia
Fifth Siege of Ayutthaya
(1759–1760)

Location: Tenasserim, Siam

Siege of the French fortress in Bangkok by the Siamese revolutionary forces of Phetracha in 1688.
Ayutthaya Kingdom Konbaung Dynasty Inconclusive
  • Burma captures the Tennasserim coast down to TavoyMergui frontier
Sixth Siege of Ayutthaya
(1765–1767)

Location: Tenasserim coast, Gulf of Siam coast, Suphanburi, Ayutthaya

Flag of Thailand (Ayutthaya period).svg Ayutthaya Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svgKonbaung Dynasty Burmese victory
  • End of Ayutthaya Kingdom

Thonburi Kingdom[]

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Thonburi reunification of Siam
(1767–1770/71)

Location: Siam

Flag of Thailand (Ayutthaya period).svg State of Thonburi (Thonburi Kingdom) State of Phimai
State of Phitsanulok
State of Sawangburi
State of Nakhon Si Thammarat
Principality of Hà Tiên
Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty (Burma)
Thonburi victory
  • Thonburi reunification of Siam following the fall of the Ayutthaya Kingdom in 1767
Siamese–Vietnamese War (1769–1773)[6][7] Flag of Thailand (Ayutthaya period).svg Thonburi Kingdom Đàng Trong under Nguyễn lords
Principality of Hà Tiên
Indecisive
Burmese–Siamese War (1775–1776)

Location: Northern and central Siam, Lan Na

Flag of Thailand (Ayutthaya period).svg Thonburi Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Siamese victory
  • The Burmese loss of southern Lan Na later proved to be the end of their 200 years rule.
  • Siam gains control of Chiang Mai, Lampang, Lamphun

Rattanakosin Kingdom[]

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Burmese–Siamese War (1785–1786)

Location: Southern and western Siam, Lan Na

Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Siamese victory
  • Siam consolidates control of Chiang Mai
Burmese–Siamese War (1788)

Location: Tenasserim Coast

Flag of Thailand (1782).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Burmese defensive victory
  • Burma successfully defends the Tenasserim Coast from a Siamese invasion
Burmese–Siamese War (1792–1794)

Location: Tenasserim Coast

Flag of Thailand (1782).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Burmese defensive victory
  • Burma successfully defends the Tenasserim Coast from a Siamese invasion
Burmese–Siamese War (1797–1798)

Location: Lan Na

Flag of Thailand (1782).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Siamese defensive victory
  • Siam successfully defends Lan Na from a Burmese invasion
Burmese–Siamese War (1802–1805)

Location: Lan Na

Flag of Thailand (1782).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Siamese victory
  • Siam captures Chiang Saen from Burma
Burmese–Siamese War (1809–1812)

Location: Phuket

Flag of Thailand (1782).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Siamese victory
  • Siam successfully defends Phuket from a Burmese invasion
First Anglo-Burmese War
(1824-1826)

Location: Burma, East Bengal, Assam, Manipur, Cachar and Jaintia

The storming of one of the principal stockades, near Yangon (Rangoon), 8 July 1824
United Kingdom British Empire
  • Flag of the British East India Company (1801).svg East India Company


Supported by:
Rattanakosin Kingdom

Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Burmese Empire
British victory
  • Treaty of Yandabo
  • Beginning of British rule in Burma
  • Burma cedes Assam, Manipur, Arakan and Tenasserim; loses influence in Cachar and Jaintia; pays one million pounds sterling in indemnity
Lao rebellion (1826–1828)

Location: Khorat Plateau, Thailand; Central and Southern Laos

Rattanakosin Kingdom Kingdom of Vientiane
Kingdom of Champasak
Military support:
Kingdom of Vietnam
Siamese victory
Siamese–Vietnamese War (1831–1834)

Location: Cambodia, Southern Vietnam

DaiNam1844.jpg
Rattanakosin Kingdom Nguyễn dynasty Vietnamese victory
Lê Văn Khôi revolt
(1833–1835)

Location: Southern Vietnam

The French-built Citadel of Saigon was taken over by the rebels on 18 May 1833 and held more than two years until September 1835.
Lê Văn Khôi rebels
Supported by:
Rattanakosin Kingdom
Nguyễn dynasty Decisive Nguyễn dynasty victory
Siamese–Vietnamese War (1841–1845)

Location: Cambodia, Southern Vietnam

A map showing the movement of Vietnamese troops (from June to December 1845) in Vietnam-Siamese War (1841–1845).
Rattanakosin Kingdom
Khmer anti-Vietnamese rebels
Nguyễn dynasty Stalemate
  • Cambodia came under joint Siamese-Vietnamese suzerainty
Burmese–Siamese War (1849–1855)

Location: Kengtung, Trans-Salween region

A watercolor of 3 Burmese infantry soldiers in 1855. It was not until soldiers like this were dispatched to combat the Siamese invasion that Siam was finally driven out of Burma.
Flag of Siam (1855).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Flag of the Alaungpaya Dynasty of Myanmar.svg Konbaung Dynasty Burmese defensive victory
Haw wars
(1865–1890)

Location: Northern Laos, western Vietnam, northern Thailand

A Siamese army during Haw wars in 1865
Flag of Siam (1855).svg Rattanakosin Kingdom Haw rebels (Red flag and Striped flag bands) Siamese victory
Franco-Siamese War
(1893)

Location: French Indochina, Siam

French ships Inconstant and Comète under fire in the Paknam incident, 13 July 1893
Kingdom of Siam French Third Republic French Republic
  • French Indochina
French victory; Entente Cordiale
World War I
(1914-1918)

Location: Europe

(Clockwise from the top)
* The aftermath of shelling during the Battle of the Somme * Mark V tanks cross the Hindenburg Line * HMS Irresistible sinks after hitting a mine in the Dardanelles * A British Vickers machine gun crew wears gas masks during the Battle of the Somme * Albatros D.III fighters of Jagdstaffel 11
Allied Powers:
Central Powers:
Allied victory
  • Central Powers victory on the Eastern Front nullified by defeat on the Western Front
  • Fall of all continental empires in Europe (including Germany, Russia, Turkey and Austria-Hungary)
  • Russian Revolution and Russian Civil War – the collapse of the Russian Empire and the subsequent formation of the Soviet Union
  • Widespread unrest and revolutions throughout Europe and Asia
  • Creation of the League of Nations (more ...)

After 1932 revolution[]

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Boworadet rebellion
(1933)

Location: Central Thailand, Bangkok and Ratchaburi

Siamese soldiers during the rebellion
Revolutionary Siamese Government (Khana Ratsadon) Prince Boworadet and other royalists and his allies Decisive win for the Siamese Government
Franco-Thai War
(1940-1941)

Location: French Indochina

French Indochina
 Thailand  Vichy France
  •  French Indochina
Indecisive
  • On Japanese decision, disputed territories in French Indochina ceded by France to Thailand
World War II
(1939-1945)

Location: Southeast Asia

(clockwise from top left)
  • Chinese forces in the Battle of Wanjialing
  • Australian 25-pounder guns during the First Battle of El Alamein
  • German Stuka dive bombers on the Eastern Front in December 1943
  • US naval force in the Lingayen Gulf
  • Wilhelm Keitel signing the German Instrument of Surrender
  • Soviet troops in the Battle of Stalingrad
Axis Powers:
Allied Powers:
  •  United States (1941-1945)
  •  United Kingdom
  •  Soviet Union (1941-1945)
  •  China
  •  France
  •  Poland
  •  Canada
  •  Australia
  •  New Zealand
  •  India
  •  South Africa
  •  Yugoslavia (1941-1945)
  •  Greece (1940-1945)
  •  Denmark (1940-1945)
  •  Norway (1940-1945)
  •  Netherlands (1940-1945)
  •  Belgium (1940-1945)
  •  Luxembourg (1940-1945)
  •  Czechoslovakia
  •  Brazil (1942-1945)
  •  Mexico (1942-1945)
  •  Philippines
  •  Ethiopia

Allied victory
  • Collapse of Nazi Germany
  • Fall of the Japanese and Italian Empires
  • Allied occupations of Germany and Japan and foundation of the Italian Republic
  • Beginning of the Nuclear Age
  • Dissolution of the League of Nations and creation of the United Nations
  • Emergence of the United States and the Soviet Union as rival superpowers and beginning of the Cold War (more ...)
Malayan Emergency
(1948-1960)

Location: Malay Peninsula, Southeast Asia

Australian Avro Lincoln bomber dropping 500lb bombs on communist rebels in the Malayan jungle (c. 1950)
Commonwealth forces:
 United Kingdom
  • Federation of Malaya Federation of Malaya
  •  Southern Rhodesia
    (until 1953)
  •  Rhodesia and Nyasaland
    (after 1953)
  • Fiji Fiji

Australia Australia
New Zealand New Zealand
Supported by:
 Thailand
(Thai–Malaysian border)

Communist forces:
Malayan Communist Party

Supported by:
China China[8][9][10]
North Vietnam Viet Minh
(until 1954)
 North Vietnam
(from 1954)[11][12][13]
 Soviet Union[10][14]
 Indonesia[9][10]

British/Commonwealth victory
  • Independence of Malaya on 31 August 1957
Chinese Civil War
(1949-1961)

Location: Mainland China (including Hainan) and its coast, China–Burma border

FClockwise from the top: Communist troops at the Battle of Siping; Muslim soldiers of the NRA; Mao Zedong in the 1930s; Chiang Kai-shek inspecting soldiers; CCP general Su Yu investigating the troops shortly before the Menglianggu Campaign
 Republic of China
  • ROC Armed Forces
  • Nationalist loyalist guerrillas, militias and regular troops left in Mainland China and Burma
Supported by:
  •  United States
  • Thailand
 People's Republic of China Supported by:
  •  Soviet Union
  • Burma
Chinese Communist Party victory
Korean War
(1950-1953)

Location: Korean Peninsula, Yellow Sea, Sea of Japan, Korea Strait, China–North Korea border

Clockwise from top: A column of the U.S. 1st Marine Division's infantry and armor moves through Chinese lines during their breakout from the Chosin Reservoir • UN landing at Incheon harbor, starting point of the Battle of Incheon • Korean refugees in front of a U.S. M46 Patton tank • U.S. Marines, led by First Lieutenant Baldomero Lopez, landing at Incheon • F-86 Sabre fighter aircraft
 South Korea

United Nations[a]

  •  United States
  •  United Kingdom
  •  Canada
  •  Turkey
  •  Australia
  •  Philippines
  •  New Zealand
  •  Thailand
  •  Ethiopia
  •  Greece
  •  France
  •  Colombia
  •  Belgium
  •  South Africa
  •  Netherlands
  •  Luxembourg
Medical support
Other support
  •  North Korea

  •  China
  •  Soviet Union
Medical support
Other support
Military stalemate
  • North Korean invasion of South Korea repelled
  • Subsequent U.S.-led United Nations invasion of North Korea repelled
  • Subsequent Chinese invasion of South Korea repelled
  • Korean Armistice Agreement signed in 1953
  • Korean conflict ongoing
  • Korean Demilitarized Zone established
  • North Korea gains city of Kaesong but loses a net total of 3,900 km2 (1,500 sq mi) to South Korea.[24]
Vietnam War
(1955-1975)

Location: South Vietnam, North Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, South China Sea, Gulf of Thailand

Clockwise, from top left: U.S. combat operations in Ia Đrăng, ARVN Rangers defending Saigon during the 1968 Tết Offensive, two A-4C Skyhawks after the Gulf of Tonkin incident, ARVN recapture Quảng Trị during the 1972 Easter Offensive, civilians fleeing the 1972 Battle of Quảng Trị, and burial of 300 victims of the 1968 Huế Massacre.
  •  South Vietnam
  • United States
  •  South Korea
  •  Australia
  •  New Zealand
  •  Laos
  • Cambodia (1967–1970)
  • Khmer Republic (1970–1975)
  •  Thailand
  •  Philippines
Supported by:
  •  North Vietnam
  • Viet Cong and PRG
  • Pathet Lao
  • GRUNK (1970–1975)
  • Khmer Rouge
  •  China
  •  Soviet Union
  •  North Korea
Supported by:
North Vietnamese and National Liberation Front victory
  • Withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam
  • Communist forces take power in South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos
  • Reunification of Vietnam
  • Start of the Cambodian–Vietnamese War
  • Start of the boat people crisis and Indochina refugee crisis
  • Reunification of North and South Vietnam into the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
Laotian Civil War
(1959-1975)

Location: Kingdom of Laos

Laos
 Kingdom of Laos
Forces Armées Neutralistes
(from 1962)
 United States
 South Vietnam
 Thailand
Supported by:
Pathet Lao
Forces Armées Neutralistes
(1960–1962)
Patriotic Neutralists
(from 1963)
 North Vietnam
Supported by:
Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese victory
Communist insurgency in Thailand
(1959-1975)

Location: Thailand (primarily northeast Thailand)

Ta Ko Bi Cave, a former hideout used by communist rebels.
 Thailand

 Taiwan (until July 1967)

  • Kuomintang 49th Division[citation needed]

 United States[citation needed]

  • United States Air Force

 Malaysia

  • Malaysian Armed Forces

Supported by:
 Indonesia (from 1968)[30]

Communist Party of Thailand

Pathet Lao[citation needed]
Khmer Rouge (until 1978)[citation needed]
Malayan Communist Party
Supported by:
 North Vietnam (until 1976)
 Vietnam (from 1976)
 China (1971–1978)
 Soviet Union
 North Korea

Thai government victory
  • Amnesty declared on 23 April 1980 by the Thai government
  • Order 66/2523 signed by Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda
  • Communist insurgency declines and ends in 1983
Cambodian Civil War
(1968-1975)

Location: Cambodia

US tanks entering a town in Cambodia in 1970.
Cambodia
(1967–1970)
Khmer Republic
(1970–1975)
 United States
 South Vietnam
Other support:
GRUNK (1970–1975)

 North Vietnam
Việt Cộng

Other support:
Khmer Rouge victory
  • Fall of the Kingdom of Cambodia
  • Creation, then collapse, of the Khmer Republic
  • Establishment of Democratic Kampuchea
  • Beginning of the Cambodian genocide
Communist insurgency in Malaysia
(1968-1989)

Location: Malaysian Peninsular and Sarawak

Sarawak Rangers (present-day part of the Malaysian Rangers) consisting of Ibans leap from a Royal Australian Air Force Bell UH-1 Iroquois helicopter to guard the Malay–Thai border from potential Communist attacks in 1965, two years before the war starting in 1968.
Anti-communist forces:
 Malaysia[31]
 Thailand[32][33]

Supported by:
 United Kingdom[34]
 Australia
 New Zealand[35]
 United States
 South Vietnam (until 1975)

Communist forces:

Malayan Communist Party[36]

Communist Party of Thailand (until 1983)
Supported by:
 China[37][38]
 Soviet Union[37]
 Vietnam (until late 1970s)
North Kalimantan Communist Party

Peace agreement reached
  • Communists agree to a ceasefire
  • Peace Agreement of Hat Yai 1989 signed between the communists and the governments of Malaysia and Thailand
  • Dissolution of the Malayan Communist Party (MCP)[39][40]
Third Indochina War
(1975-1991)

Location: Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, China

 China
Democratic Kampuchea

Lao royalists
Hmong insurgents
Flag of FULRO.svg FULRO
 Thailand
Supported by:
 United States
 North Korea[41]

 Vietnam
Laos Laos
People's Republic of Kampuchea People's Republic of Kampuchea
Communist Party of Thailand
  • Pak Mai

Supported by:
Warsaw Pact Logo.svg Warsaw Pact countries (until 1991)[41]

  • Removal of the Khmer Rouge from power
  • End of the Cambodian genocide
  • Pro-Vietnamese government installed in Cambodia
  • China withdraws from Vietnam after 27 days of fighting
  • Communist Party of Thailand abandons armed struggle
  • Vietnam withdraws from Cambodia in 1991
  • 1990 Chengdu summit leads to the normalization of relations between China and Vietnam
  • Restoration of the House of Norodom
  • Ongoing insurgency in Laos
Vietnamese border raids in Thailand
(1979–1989)

Location: Thai–Cambodian border, Gulf of Thailand

 Thailand
CGDK[42]
  • PDK (Khmer Rouge)
  • KPNLF
  • FUNCINPEC

Supported by:
 United States
 China

 Vietnam
People's Republic of Kampuchea (1979–89)
State of Cambodia (1989)
Supported by:
 Soviet Union
 Poland[43]
 Czechoslovakia[44]
 East Germany[45]
  • Destruction of numerous guerrilla bases and refugee camps along the Thai–Cambodian border
  • Isolated outbreaks of open hostility between Vietnamese and Thai troops
  • Withdrawal of Vietnamese troops from the border in 1989
Thai–Laotian Border War
(1987-1988)

Location: Chat Trakan District, Phitsanulok Province, Thailand
Botene District, Sainyabuli Province, Lao PDR

Sarawak Rangers (present-day part of the Malaysian Rangers) consisting of Ibans leap from a Royal Australian Air Force Bell UH-1 Iroquois helicopter to guard the Malay–Thai border from potential Communist attacks in 1965, two years before the war starting in 1968Noen 1428 (Hill 1428), the battlefield of Thai–Laotian Border War of 1988, view from Phu Soidao National Park, Chat Trakan, Phitsanulok.
 Thailand  Laos
 Vietnam
Peace talks in Bangkok
Persian Gulf War
(1990-1991)

Location: Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf

Clockwise from top: USAF F-15Es, F-16s, and a F-15C flying over burning Kuwaiti oil wells; British troops from the Staffordshire Regiment in Operation Granby; camera view from a Lockheed AC-130; the Highway of Death; M728 Combat Engineer Vehicle.
 Kuwait
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Saudi Arabia
 Egypt
 France
Iraq Coalition victory
International Force East Timor
(1999-2000)

Location: East Timor

Australian members of International Force East Timor (INTERFET), talk to a citizen in Dili, East Timor, in February 2000.
International Force:
  • Australia Australia – 5,500
  • New Zealand New Zealand – 1,200
  • Thailand Thailand – 1,600
  • Brazil Brazil 
  • Canada Canada 
  • Fiji Fiji 
  • France France 
  • Germany Germany 
  • Republic of Ireland Ireland 
  • Italy Italy 
  • Jordan Jordan 
  • Kenya Kenya 
  • Malaysia Malaysia 
  • Norway Norway 
  • Pakistan Pakistan 
  • Philippines Philippines 
  • Portugal Portugal 
  • Singapore Singapore 
  • South Korea South Korea 
  • United Kingdom United Kingdom 
  • United States United States [48]
Insurgents: Conflict ended
  • Defeat of pro-Indonesian militia
  • Stabilisation of East Timor
Operation Enduring Freedom – Horn of Africa
(2002-present)

Location: Horn of Africa, Gulf of Aden, Guardafui Channel

French Naval commandos (green) and United States soldiers from the 3rd Infantry Regiment (tan) participate in an exercise at Djibouti in June 2004.
 NATO:
  •  Belgium
  •  Canada
  •  Denmark
  •  France
  •  Germany
  •  Greece
  •  Italy
  •  Netherlands
  •  Portugal
  •  Spain
  •  Turkey
  •  United Kingdom
  •  United States

CJTF-HOA allies:

  •  Djibouti
  •  Somalia
  •  Ethiopia
  •  Sudan
  •  Seychelles
  •  Kenya

Non-NATO allies:

  •  Australia
  •  Azerbaijan
  •  China
  •  Colombia
  •  European Union
  •  India
  •  Indonesia
  •  Japan
  •  Kazakhstan
  •  Kyrgyzstan
  •  Malaysia
  •  New Zealand
  •  Pakistan
  •  Russia
  •  Singapore
  •  South Korea
  •  Tajikistan
  •  Thailand
  •  Turkmenistan
  •  Uganda
  •  Ukraine
  •  Uzbekistan

Dai Hong Dan incident:

  •  North Korea
Insurgents:

Pirates:

Ongoing
  • 21 high level Al-Shabaab leaders killed[53]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ On 9 July 1951 troop constituents were: US: 70.4%, ROK: 23.3% other UNC: 6.3%[15]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Jumsai 1976, p. 54.
  2. ^ Jumsai 1976, pp. 54–57.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Jumsai 1976, pp. 58–61.
  4. ^ Tucker, p. 13.
  5. ^ Tucker (2009), p. 722.
  6. ^ Kohn, p. 447.
  7. ^ Dupuy, p. 768.
  8. ^ John W. Garver (1 December 2015). China's Quest: The History of the Foreign Relations of the People's Republic of China. Oxford University Press. pp. 219–. ISBN 978-0-19-026106-1.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b A. Dahana (2002). "China Role's in Indonesia's "Crush Malaysia" Campaign". Universitas Indonesia. Archived from the original on 19 July 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c Mohd. Noor Mat Yazid (2013). "Malaysia-Indonesia Relations Before and After 1965: Impact on Bilateral and Regional Stability" (PDF). Programme of International Relations, School of Social Sciences, Universiti Malaysia Sabah. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  11. ^ Ching Fatt Yong (1997). The origins of Malayan communism. South Seas Society. ISBN 978-9971-936-12-9.
  12. ^ T. N. Harper; Timothy Norman Harper (9 April 2001). The End of Empire and the Making of Malaya. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-00465-7.
  13. ^ Major James M. Kimbrough IV (6 November 2015). Disengaging From Insurgencies: Insights From History And Implications For Afghanistan. Pickle Partners Publishing. pp. 88–. ISBN 978-1-78625-345-3.
  14. ^ Geoffrey Jukes (1 January 1973). The Soviet Union in Asia. University of California Press. pp. 302–. ISBN 978-0-520-02393-2.
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