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Where Is There Conflict In The World Today?

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Last updated on 7 min read

Quick Fact: As of 2026, active armed conflicts persist in roughly 30 countries worldwide. The most intense violence clusters in the Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America. Conflict epicenters include 28.0°N, 67.0°E (Balochistan, Pakistan), 12.8°N, 44.8°E (Sana'a, Yemen), and 19.4°N, 99.1°W (Mexico City, Mexico).

Where are the world's conflict hotspots?

Most active conflicts cluster in the Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America.

Conflict doesn’t spread evenly across the planet. It flares up where governments struggle to maintain control, resources run thin, or old grudges refuse to die. The Middle East—from the Levant to the Persian Gulf—stays explosive thanks to clashing regional powers, deep-seated sectarian splits, and outside interference. Down in Sub-Saharan Africa, especially the Sahel, drought, extremist groups, and post-colonial tensions keep instability alive. Latin America’s conflicts often revolve around drug cartels and weak states, with Mexico’s never-ending cartel wars showing how crime and governance failures feed each other. These places sit on major trade routes, migration paths, and energy corridors, so when they wobble, the whole world feels it.

What are the deadliest conflicts right now?

The most severe ongoing conflicts, ranked by fatalities and displacement, include Yemen, Ethiopia (Tigray), Mexico, Sudan, Ukraine, and Myanmar.

Here’s the grim tally as of 2026:

Country/Region Primary Parties Start Year Estimated Deaths (2024–2026) Internally Displaced Persons (2026)
Yemen Houthi rebels, Saudi-led coalition, UAE-backed forces 2014 3,500–4,200 4.5 million
Ethiopia (Tigray War) Ethiopian government, Tigray People’s Liberation Front 2020 600,000+ 2.5 million
Mexico (Drug War) Mexican government, cartels (e.g., CJNG, Sinaloa) 2006 15,000–18,000/year N/A
Sudan (RSF vs. Army) Sudanese Armed Forces, Rapid Support Forces 2023 10,000–12,000 8.5 million
Ukraine Russia, Ukraine 2022 70,000+ 6.3 million
Myanmar (Civil War) Junta, Ethnic Armed Organizations (EAOs) 2021 (post-coup) 4,000–5,000 2.8 million

Sources: Data aggregated from UNHCR, ACLED, and ICRC reports as of 2026.

Why did the Tigray War start?

The Tigray War erupted from decades of political rivalry, a sudden power shift in 2018, and climate-driven famine that pushed tensions past the breaking point.

This conflict isn’t just a recent flare-up. It’s the result of old wounds reopening. Back in the 1990s, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) ran Ethiopia for decades. Then Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sidelined them in 2018, sparking fury. Add in a brutal drought that turned into famine, and suddenly you’ve got a full-blown war. By 2026, over 2.5 million people had fled their homes, and 90% of Tigray’s 6 million residents depended on aid. Honestly, this is one of the worst humanitarian disasters on the planet right now.

What’s driving Yemen’s civil war?

Yemen’s war is a proxy fight between Iran (backing the Houthis) and Saudi Arabia/UAE (supporting the internationally recognized government).

This mess started in 2014 but keeps dragging on. The Houthis, a rebel group, took over much of the country. Saudi Arabia and the UAE jumped in to back the official government, turning Yemen into a battleground for regional powers. The result? A collapsed healthcare system, 24 million people needing help (that’s 80% of the population), and a healthcare system in shambles (WHO, 2026). After twelve years, there’s still no end in sight.

How has Mexico’s drug war changed over time?

Mexico’s drug war has evolved into a low-intensity but high-casualty conflict, with cartels adopting military tactics and expanding their territorial control.

Since 2006, this conflict has killed over 350,000 people. Cartels like the Jalisco New Generation (CJNG) don’t just sell drugs anymore—they run de facto governments in parts of the country. They use military gear, intimidate locals, and bribe officials to carve out their own fiefdoms. Mexico’s position as a cocaine and fentanyl transit hub to the U.S. keeps the violence stoked. The U.S. has sent billions in security aid (hello, Mérida Initiative), but critics say it’s just made things more militarized without fixing the root problems—poverty and weak institutions.

Which countries should travelers avoid?

The U.S. State Department advises “Do Not Travel” to Afghanistan, Yemen, parts of Ethiopia (Tigray, Amhara), Sudan, and Mexico’s states of Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, and Michoacán.

If you’re planning a trip, skip these places entirely. Kidnappings, gunfire, and random detentions aren’t exactly vacation vibes. For areas with active fighting but slightly lower risk—like Ukraine’s frontlines—you’ll need to register with your embassy’s evacuation program and buy war-zone travel insurance. Journalists and aid workers? They’ll need special permits and armed escorts just to move around safely. The Overseas Security Advisory Council posts real-time security updates for anyone working in unstable regions.

Where can I find reliable reports on these conflicts?

Organizations like the ICRC and Human Rights Watch publish detailed reports on civilian casualties, war crimes, and humanitarian access.

Want to dig deeper without putting yourself in danger? Start with the ICRC and Human Rights Watch. They track civilian deaths, document war crimes, and explain who’s blocking aid. Prefer books? *Dancing in the Glory of Monsters* by Jason Stearns gives you Congo’s backstory, while *The Looming Tower* by Lawrence Wright dives into Yemen’s chaos. For a modern twist, check out virtual reality documentaries from The New York Times’ VR team—they’ll drop you into conflict zones without the risk.

What’s the humanitarian impact of these wars?

These conflicts have displaced millions and triggered severe humanitarian crises, with millions more dependent on aid for survival.

Take Sudan: over 8.5 million people have been forced from their homes. In Yemen, 24 million—80% of the population—need help just to eat and get medical care. Ethiopia’s Tigray region? 90% of its 6 million residents rely on aid after years of blockade and war. Ukraine’s 6.3 million displaced people are scattered across Europe, struggling to rebuild. These aren’t just numbers. They’re families torn apart, hospitals without medicine, and kids growing up knowing nothing but conflict.

How do climate issues tie into modern conflicts?

Climate change worsens conflicts by deepening droughts, reducing farmland, and fueling mass migration that strains already fragile governments.

Look at the Sahel. Droughts are getting worse, farmland is shrinking, and extremist groups step in to “help” desperate communities—then take control. In Ethiopia, a climate-driven famine turned political rivalry into all-out war. These aren’t future problems. They’re happening now, and they’re making conflicts harder to solve. Weak governments can’t handle the fallout, and the cycle of violence just keeps spinning.

What role do outside powers play in these conflicts?

Foreign governments often fuel conflicts by supplying weapons, funding factions, or intervening directly in local disputes.

Yemen’s war wouldn’t last this long without Iran arming the Houthis and Saudi Arabia/UAE bombing rebel-held areas. Ukraine’s fight against Russia only escalated after Moscow’s full-scale invasion in 2022. Even in Mexico, U.S. security aid has shaped the drug war’s direction—sometimes for better, often for worse. Outside interference rarely solves problems. Most of the time, it just makes them messier.

How have conflict tactics evolved in recent years?

Modern conflicts increasingly feature drone strikes, cyber warfare, and hybrid tactics blending military force with disinformation campaigns.

Gone are the days when wars were just about tanks and trenches. Now, drones drop bombs with terrifying precision. Cyberattacks cripple power grids and spread chaos online. Disinformation floods social media, turning neighbors against each other. Even non-state groups like cartels in Mexico mimic military units, using drones for surveillance and targeted hits. War isn’t just blood and bullets anymore—it’s algorithms and air strikes.

What’s the economic cost of these ongoing wars?

The financial toll includes destroyed infrastructure, lost productivity, and billions in military spending that drains national budgets.

Ukraine’s war has cost Russia untold billions, while Ukraine’s reconstruction tab keeps climbing. Sudan’s conflict has wrecked an already fragile economy, pushing inflation sky-high. In Yemen, the war has collapsed basic services, leaving the country dependent on imports for food and fuel. These aren’t just local problems. Global supply chains stutter when key regions spiral into chaos, and the price tags keep rising for everyone.

Are there any signs these conflicts might end soon?

With the exception of localized ceasefires, most major conflicts show no clear path to resolution by 2026.

Yemen’s war drags into its twelfth year. Ethiopia’s government and Tigrayan forces signed a peace deal in 2022, but violence keeps flaring up. Sudan’s army and RSF are still battling, with no talks in sight. Ukraine’s fight against Russia only intensifies. Short of a miracle—or a major shift in global politics—these wars look set to keep burning. And that means more suffering, more displacement, and more uncertainty for the people caught in the middle.

Edited and fact-checked by the MeridianFacts editorial team.
Elena Rodriguez

Elena Rodriguez is a cultural geography writer and travel journalist who has visited over 40 countries across the Americas and Europe. She specializes in the intersection of place, history, and culture, and believes every map tells a human story.