International military intervention against the Islamic State infobox Part of the war on terror , Second Libyan Civil War , War in Iraq (2013–2017) , Syrian civil war and spillover of the Syrian civil war , Sinai insurgency , Boko Haram insurgency , insurgency in the North Caucasus , Moro conflict , Insurgency in Cabo Delgado , Qandala campaign and the Sahel War 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 Date 13 June 2014 – present (9 years, 9 months, 1 week and 4 days) Location Status
Ongoing; ISIL militarily defeated in Iraq and Syria
Airstrikes on ISIL 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 ISIL forces in Iraq and Syria
ISIL controlled around 40% of Iraq at its peak in mid-2014[5]
ISIL controlled around 50% of Syria by late May 2015[6] [7]
Emergence of independently-governed Kurdish regions
ISIL lost all of its territory in Libya[8] [9]
Boko Haram loses territory, but its insurgency continues[10]
ISIL controlled 5.67% of Syria's land by November 2017[11] and around 3% of Iraq by October 2017[12]
ISIL loses all territory in Iraq and most territory in Syria in December 2017[13]
ISIL loses all remaining territory in Syria in March 2019[14]
Belligerents
In multiple regions:
In Iraq:
In Syria:
Syrian Arab Republic
Russia
Iran
Syrian Interim Government (2013–present)
Turkey
Syrian Salvation Government (2017–present)
Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (2015–present)
United States
In Libya:
In Afghanistan:
In West Africa:
Commanders and leaders
Joe Biden (from 2021)
Rishi Sunak (from 2022)
Emmanuel Macron (from 2017)
Anthony Albanese (from 2022)
Alexander De Croo (from 2020)
Hamad Al Khalifa
Mette Frederiksen (from 2019)
Justin Trudeau (from 2015)
Olaf Scholz (from 2021)
Giorgia Meloni (from 2022)
King Abdullah II
King Mohammed VI
Mark Rutte
Jonas Gahr Støre (from 2021)
Tamim Al Thani
King Salman (from 2015)
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Mohamed Al Nahyan
Bashar al-Assad
Vladimir Putin
Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani (from 2022)
Nechirvan Barzani (from 2019)
Qasem Soleimani
Ali Khamenei
Hassan Nasrallah
Michel Aoun
Shehbaz Sharif (from 2022)
Hibatullah Akhundzada (from 2016)
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
Bola Tinubu (from 2023)
Mahamat Déby (from 2021)
Paul Biya
Abdourahamane Tchiani (from 2023)
Évariste Ndayishimiye (from 2020)
Abdelmadjid Tebboune (from 2019)
Abu Hafs al-Hashimi al-Qurashi (leader) Abu al-Hussein al-Husseini al-Qurashi † (Former leader) Abu al-Hasan al-Hashimi al-Qurashi † (Former leader) Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi † (Former leader) Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi † (Former leader)[15]
Abu Ali al-Anbari † (Deputy Leader of ISIL)[16]
Abu Ayman al-Iraqi † (Head of Military Shura)[17] [18]
Abu Suleiman al-Naser † (Replacement Military Chief)[18]
Abu Muslim al-Turkmani † (Deputy Leader, Iraq)[19]
Abu Osama al-Masri † (Emir of Sinai)
Abu Omar al-Shishani † (Chief commander in Syria)[20] [21] [22] [23]
Abu Muhammad al-Kadari † (ISIL commander of the North Caucasus)
Abu Nabil al-Anbari † (former ISIL commander of North Africa)[24]
Abubakar Shekau † (ISIL Emir of West Africa)[4] [25]
Abu Abdullah al-Filipini † (ISIL Emir of the Philippines and Co-Leader of Abu Sayyaf)
Radullan Sahiron † (Co-Leader of Abu Sayyaf) Strength
4,100 troops (in Iraq)[26]
2,500 troops (in Kuwait)[27]
7,000 contractors[28] [29]
500 soldiers to retrain the Iraqi army[30]
400 RAAF personnel[31]
200 special forces troops
300+ regular soldiers (combined with 100+ New Zealand soldiers)[32]
130 search and rescue team
1,200 troops[35] [36]
Army : 130,000 active frontline troops. 32,000 active reserve troops.
Police Force : 371,000 officers
Syrian Salvation Government:
50,000+ soldiers[40] [41]
Islamic Front (2013-2015); 26,000-30,000 soldiers[42] [43]
200,000 in Iraq and Syria (claim by Iraqi Kurdistan Chief of Staff)[44]
28,600–31,600 in Iraq and Syria (Defense Department estimate)[45]
35,000–100,000 (State Department estimate)[46]
1,500+ in Egypt
6,500–10,000 in Libya[47] [48]
7,000–10,000 in Nigeria[49]
1,000–3,000 in Afghanistan[50] [51]
At least 400 in the Philippines and Malaysia
Up to 600 tanks[52] [53]
Casualties and losses
Republic of Iraq:
34,000+ killed and 13,000+ wounded[54] [55]
Syrian Arab Republic:
8,000+ soldiers killed[56]
Syrian Kurdistan:
11,000+ fighters killed[57]
Iraqi Kurdistan:
1,500+ fighters killed[58]
6,000+ fighters wounded[59]
52 fighters missing[60]
Egypt:
3,200+ security forces killed[61]
12,200+ wounded
Chad:
Nigeria:
Iran:
United States:
Cameroon:
Turkey:
Niger:
Saudi Arabia:
3 border guards killed[82]
Russia:
Canada:
France
United Kingdom
Jordan:
1 serviceman executed[88]
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant:
80,000+ killed[89] and 33,000+ targets destroyed or damaged in the American-led intervention in Iraq and Syria[90]
1,500–2,500 killed in Libya[91] [92]
974 killed in Philippines
300 killed in Afghanistan[93]
1,000+ killed in Egypt[94] [95] [96]
Total: 85,000+ militants killed
At least 28,000 Iraqi civilians killed by ISIL[58] [97] [98] 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)[99]
4,096–6,085 civilians killed by Russian airstrikes in Syria[100]
At least 5,939 civilians killed by ISIL in Syria[101]
7 civilians killed by airstrikes in Libya[102]
Thousands of civilians killed by ISIL outside of Iraq and Syria (See also List of terrorist incidents linked to ISIL )
7,600,000 Syrian civilians displaced[103] 3,300,000 Iraqi civilians displaced[103]