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Template:War on terror infobox

War on terror

Photographs, clockwise from top left: U.S. servicemen boarding an aircraft at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan; explosion of an Iraqi car bomb in Baghdad; a U.S. soldier and Afghan interpreter in Zabul Province, Afghanistan; Tomahawk missiles being fired from the warships at ISIL targets in the city of Raqqa, Syria
Map: Countries with major military operations of the war on terror.
DateMain phase: 14 September 2001[1]30 August 2021[note 1] (19 years, 11 months, 2 weeks and 2 days)[note 2]
Location
Globally, but mainly in the Middle East and Africa
Status Major wars ended, ongoing in small operations[a]
Belligerents
Main countries: Main opponents:
Commanders and leaders
George W. Bush
Barack Obama
Osama bin Laden X
Ayman al-Zawahiri X
Ba'athist Iraq Saddam Hussein Executed
Casualties and losses
4.5–4.6 million+ people killed[note 3][b]
(937,000+ direct deaths including 387,000+ civilians, 3.6–3.7 million indirect deaths)[note 4][c]
At least 38 million people displaced[d]

Notes

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  1. ^ The war on terror was also officially declared over in May 2010 and again in May 2013
  2. ^ Origins date back to the 1980s.
  3. ^ The Costs of War Project report defined post-9/11 war zones as conflicts that included significant United States counter-terrorism operations since 9/11, which in addition to the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, also includes the civil wars in Syria, Yemen, Libya and Somalia. The report derived their estimate of indirect deaths using a calculation from the Geneva Declaration of Secretariat which estimates that for every person directly killed by war, four more die from the indirect consequences of war. The report's author Stephanie Savell stated that in an ideal scenario, the preferable way of quantifying the total death toll would have been by studying excess mortality, or by using on-the-ground researchers in the affected countries.[2]
  4. ^ The definition of "indirect" is paraphrased by the Washington Post as "caused by the deterioration of economic, environmental, psychological and health conditions." Savell says it includes "mounting poverty, food insecurity, environmental contamination, the ongoing trauma of violence, and the destruction of health and public infrastructure, along with private property and means of livelihood."[2]

References

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  1. ^
    • Daniel, DePetris. "The US war on terror continues. We just don't talk about it". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 9 May 2023.
    • John, Haltiwanger (10 December 2023). "Graphic Truth: The US's "Global War on Terror" never ended". Costs of War. GZERO.
  2. ^
  3. ^
  4. ^
  1. ^ "Video: Pres. Bush Declares War on Terror". ABC News archives. September 15, 2001.
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference :2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).