Template:Yemeni civil war infobox

Yemeni civil war
Part of the Yemeni crisis, the Arab Winter, the war on terror, and the Iran–Saudi Arabia proxy conflict

Political and military control in Yemen in February 2024:
(For a detailed map of the military situation in Yemen and border areas in Saudi Arabia, see here.)
Date16 September 2014 – present
(10 years, 2 months, 3 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Yemen, southern Saudi Arabia, UAE and Israel (spillovers)
Status

Ongoing, ceasefire since 2 April 2022 with some periodic clashes

Main belligerents

Supreme Political Council (formerly SRC)

 Republic of Yemen (internationally-recognized; led by the PLC since 2022)



STC (2017–2022)[53]

 United Arab Emirates[54][55][56]

Al-Qaeda and allies[57]


 Islamic State

Commanders and leaders

Sa'ad bin Atef al-Awlaki
Ibrahim al Qosi[74]

Casualties:

Islamic State Abu Hafs al-Hashimi al-Qurashi

Strength
150,000–200,000 fighters[84]
113,500 soldiers and paramilitary[citation needed]
100 warplanes; 150,000 troops[85]
30 warplanes;[86] 10,000 troops[87]
15 warplanes;[86] 300 troops[88]
10 warplanes; 1,000 troops[86][89]
6 warplanes[86]
6 warplanes;[86] 1,500 troops[86][33]
4 warplanes; 8,000–30,000 troops[90][91][92]
2,100 troops[86][93]
4 warships[94] and warplanes[95]
1,800 security contractors[96]

al-Qaeda


Islamic State IS: 300[101]
Casualties and losses
"Thousands" killed (per Al Jazeera; as of May 2018)
11,000+ killed (Arab Coalition claim; as of December 2017)[102]
Yemen Unknown
1,000[103]–3,000[104]United Arab Emirates 108 soldiers killed[111]
Emirati losses
Sudan 1,000–4,000 soldiers killed[117][118]
Bahrain 11 soldiers killed[119][120][121]
1 F-16 crashed[122]
Qatar 4 soldiers killed[123][124]
Morocco 10 servicemen killed[125][126]
1 F-16 shot down[126] Jordan 1 F-16 lost[127]
71 PMCs killed[37]
United States 1 killed

Al-Qaeda

Overall 377,000+ direct and indirect deaths (150,000+ people killed in violence) (2014–2021) (UN)[129][130]
85,000 Yemeni children dead from starvation (2015–2018) (Save the Children)[131]
~4,000 dead from cholera epidemic; 2.5+ million cases overall (2016–2021)[132]
4 million people cumulatively displaced (2015–2020) (UNHCR)[133][134]
500+ killed in Saudi Arabia by Houthi attacks (2014–2016) (Saudi Arabia figure)[135]
3 civilians killed in the UAE


Notes

edit
  1. ^ Since April 2022, the Southern Transitional Council is part of the Yemeni government led by the Presidential Leadership Council. Multiple sources:
    • Salem, Mostafa; Kolirin, Lianne (7 April 2022). "Hopes of peace in Yemen as President hands power to new presidential council". CNN. Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
    • Ghobari, Mohamed (7 April 2022). "Yemen president sacks deputy, delegates presidential powers to council". Reuters. Aden. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
    • Al-Sakani, Ali (19 April 2022). "Yemen inaugurates new presidential council". Al Jazeera. Archived from the original on 1 March 2023.
  2. ^ logistic support and assistance with the naval blockade of Houthi-held territories in October 2016[42][43][44]
  3. ^ training, intelligence, logistical support, weapons, and blockade up to 2017[46][47][48][49]

References

edit
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  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference Hezbollah was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
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