War against the Islamic State

War against the Islamic State
Part of the Post-Cold War era, War on Terror, Iraqi conflict, Syrian Civil War and Spillover, Afghan conflict, Libyan Crisis, Yemeni Crisis, Boko Haram insurgency, Insurgency in the Maghreb and the Insurgency in the North Caucasus
From top to bottom, left to right:

Map of the current military situation in Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon
Map of the current military situation in Libya
Map of the current military situation in Nigeria
Map of the current military situation in Sinai
Map of the current military situation in Yemen
Date8 April 2013 – present
(11 years, 9 months and 3 days)
Location
Status
Ongoing; IS militarily defeated in Iraq, Syria and Libya
    • Airstrikes on IS positions in Iraq, Syria, Libya, Nigeria and Afghanistan
    • Multinational humanitarian efforts
    • Arming and supporting local ground forces
    • Millions of civilians in Iraq and Syria flee their homes, sparking a refugee crisis
    • Terrorist attacks in Paris (Jan 2015 and Nov 2015), Brussels (Mar 2016) and many other places
    • Thousands of civilians executed by IS forces in Iraq and Syria
    • IS controlled around 40% of Iraq at its peak in mid-2014
    • IS controlled around 50% of Syria by late May 2015
    • Emergence of independently-governed Kurdish regions
    • IS military defeated and lost all of its territory in Libya in December 2017
    • Boko Haram loses territory, but its insurgency continues
    • IS controlled 5.67% of Syria's land by November 2017 and around 3% of Iraq by October 2017
    • IS loses all territory in Iraq and most territory in Syria in December 2017
    • IS loses all remaining territory in Syria in March 2019
Belligerents
In multiple regions:


In Egypt


In Afghanistan

In Pakistan

Commanders and leaders

Donald Trump (2017–2021 and from 2025)
Pete Hegseth (from 2025)
Keir Starmer (from 2024)
John Healey (from 2024)
Emmanuel Macron (from 2017)
Catherine Vautrin (from 2025)
Anthony Albanese (from 2022)
Bart De Wever (from 2025)
Theo Francken (from 2025)
Hamad Al Khalifa
Mette Frederiksen (from 2019)
Troels Lund Poulsen (from 2023)
Mark Carney (from 2025)
David McGuinty (from 2025)
Friedrich Merz (from 2025)
Boris Pistorius (from 2023)
Giorgia Meloni (from 2022)
Guido Crosetto (from 2022)


Ahmed al-Sharaa (from 2024)


Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani (from 2022)
Nechirvan Barzani (from 2019)


Khalifa Haftar (from 2014)
Saddam Haftar (from 2016)


Ali Khamenei X

Allies

Joseph Aoun (from 2025)


Shehbaz Sharif (2022–2023 and from 2024)


Hibatullah Akhundzada (from 2016)


Abdel Fattah el-Sisi


Bola Tinubu (from 2023)
Mahamat Déby (from 2021)
Paul Biya
Abdourahamane Tchiani (from 2023)

Allies

Abu Hafs al-Hashimi al-Qurashi (Leader)

Former Leaders
Strength
United States:
  • 4,100 troops (in Iraq)
  • 2,500 troops (in Kuwait)
  • 7,000 contractors
  • 500 soldiers to retrain the Iraqi army
Australia:
  • 400 RAAF personnel
  • 200 special forces troops
  • 300+ regular soldiers (combined with 100+ New Zealand soldiers)
Canada:
Germany:
  • 1200 troops
Italy:
  • 130 search and rescue team
  • 1,200 troops

Russia:
  • 4,000 personnel
Iran:

Nigeria:
  • Army: 130,000 active frontline troops. 32,000 active reserve troops.
  • Police Force: 371,000 officers
Cameroon:
  • 20,000 soldiers
African Union:
  • 8,700 soldiers

Syrian Salvation Government:
  • 50,000+ soldiers
  • Islamic Front (2013-2015); 26,000-30,000 soldiers

Taliban in Afghanistan:
  • 168,000 soldiers
  • 210,121 police forces and pro-Taliban militia

Pakistan:
  • 200,000-345,000 soldiers
  • 90,000-120,000 paramilitary forces
IS:
  • 200,000 in Iraq and Syria (claim by Iraqi Kurdistan Chief of Staff)
  • 28,600–31,600 in Iraq and Syria (Defense Department estimate)
  • 35,000–100,000 (State Department estimate)
  • 1,500+ in Egypt
  • 6,500–10,000 in Libya
  • 7,000–10,000 in Nigeria
  • 1,000–3,000 in Afghanistan
  • At least 400 in the Philippines and Malaysia
  • Up to 600 tanks
Casualties and losses
Iraq:
    • 16,000+ killed and 13,000+ wounded
Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria:
    • 11,000+ fighters killed
Ba'athist Syria:
    • 8,000+ soldiers killed
Syrian Opposition (2011-2024):
    • 3,378+ fighters killed
Kurdistan Region:
    • 1,500+ fighters killed
    • 6,000+ fighters wounded
    • 52 fighters missing
Egypt:
    • 3,277+ security forces killed
    • 12,280+ personnel injured
Chad:
    • 101 servicemen killed
Turkey:
    • 76 servicemen killed
      6 police officers killed
Nigeria:
    • 48 servicemen killed
Iran:
    • 35 servicemen killed
Russia:
    • 28 servicemen killed
Niger:
    • 9 servicemen killed
United States:
    • 6 servicemen killed
    • 16 servicemen wounded
Cameroon:
    • 6 servicemen killed
Saudi Arabia:
    • 3 border guards killed
Canada:
    • 1 serviceman killed
France:
    • 2 servicemen killed
United Kingdom:
    • 3 servicemen killed
Jordan:
    • 1 serviceman killed

43 480 killed overall

31 296 Injured overall
Islamic State:
    • 80,000+ killed in Iraq and Syria since 2014
      • 41,459+ killed in Syria per SOHR
    • 1,500–2,500 killed in Libya
    • 974 killed in Philippines
    • 300 killed in Afghanistan
    • 1,000+ killed in Egypt

83,000+ militants killed overall

13,568+ Iraqi civilians killed by Islamic State
5,939+ Syrian civilians killed by Islamic State


8,317–13,190 civilians killed by Coalition airstrikes in Iraq and Syria (per Airwars)
1,417 civilians killed by Coalition airstrikes in Iraq and Syria (per Coalition)


4,096–6,085 civilians killed by Russian airstrikes in Syria


3,300,000 Iraqi civilians displaced

Support:

Military aid:
Intelligence aid:

Local forces:

Local forces in Syria:

Egyptian-led intervention: (in Libya)
Egypt
Libya


Nigerian-led intervention: (Boko Haram as part of the IS since 2015)
Nigeria
Cameroon
Chad
Niger
Burundi
United States
See also: American military intervention


Many states began to intervene against the Islamic State (IS), in both the Syrian civil war and the War in Iraq (2013–2017), in response to its rapid territorial gains from its 2014 invasion of Iraq, widely condemned executions, human rights abuses and the fear of further spillovers of the Syrian civil war. In later years, there were also minor interventions by some states against IS-affiliated groups in Nigeria and Libya. All these efforts significantly degraded the Islamic State's capabilities by around 2019–2020. While moderate fighting continues in Syria, as of 2026, IS has been contained to a small area and force capability.

In mid-June 2014, Iran, according to American and British information, started flying drones over Iraq, and Iranian soldiers were in Iraq fighting IS. Simultaneously, the US ordered a small number of troops to Iraq and started flying crewed aircraft over Iraq. In July 2014, Iran sent Sukhoi Su-25 aircraft to Iraq, and Hezbollah purportedly sent trainers and advisers to Iraq in order to help Shia militias to monitor IS's movements. In August 2014, the US and Iran separately began a campaign of airstrikes on IS targets in Iraq. Since then, fourteen countries in a US-led coalition have also executed airstrikes on IS in Iraq and in Syria. Starting from September 2014, the US began closely co-operating with Saudi Arabia and Jordan to wage a co-ordinated aerial bombing campaign against IS targets across Iraq and Syria.

In September 2015, Russian forces launched their military intervention in Syria to support that country's ally Bashar al-Assad in the fight against the Islamic State. Although Moscow officially portrayed its intervention as an anti-IS campaign and publicly declared support for the "patriotic Syrian opposition", the vast majority of its bombings were focused on destroying bases of the Syrian opposition militias of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and Southern Front. On the other hand, United States and its Western allies have been opposed to the former Ba'athist regime for its purported state-sponsorship of terrorism, violent repression of Syrian revolution and extensive use of chemical weapons. The US-led coalition trained, equipped and supported secular Free Syrian and Kurdish militias opposed to the Assad government during its anti-IS campaign. In the months following the beginning of both air campaigns, IS began to lose ground in both Iraq and Syria. Civilian deaths from airstrikes began to mount in 2015 and 2016. In mid-2016, the US and Russia planned to begin coordinating their airstrikes; however, this coordination did not materialize.

As of December 2017, IS was estimated to control no territory in Iraq, and 5% of Syrian territory, after prolonged actions. On 9 December 2017, Iraq declared victory in the fight against ISIL and stated that the War in Iraq was over. On 23 March 2019, IS was defeated territorially in Syria after losing the Battle of Baghuz Fawqani, after which the group was forced into an insurgency. IS's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, died during a US special operations raid in northern Syria in October 2019 and was succeeded by Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi. in August 2020, over 10,000 IS fighters were estimated to remain in Syria and Iraq, mainly as sleeper cells.