• 0 Posts
  • 37 Comments
Joined 4 months ago
cake
Cake day: January 20th, 2025

help-circle











  • Copy, paste. Who is left?

    1. United Kingdom (brexit, haha)

    • Iraq War (2003–2009): Participated in the U.S.-led invasion; airstrikes caused civilian casualties.
    • Afghanistan (2001–2021): Conducted airstrikes as part of NATO; civilian deaths documented.
    • Libya (2011): NATO bombing campaign against Gaddafi’s forces; civilian deaths reported (e.g. Tripoli and Majer bombings).
    • Syria (from 2015): RAF airstrikes against ISIS; some operations resulted in unintended civilian deaths.

    2. France

    • Afghanistan (2001–2012): Part of NATO; airstrikes caused civilian deaths.
    • Libya (2011): One of the most active in NATO bombings.
    • Iraq and Syria (from 2014): Participated in coalition against ISIS; civilian deaths reported.

    3. Italy

    • Libya (2011): Participated in NATO airstrikes.
    • Iraq and Syria (support roles): Less direct but provided logistical and drone support with potential indirect effects on civilian areas.

    4. Netherlands

    • Iraq and Syria (2014–2018): Conducted airstrikes as part of anti-ISIS coalition. In 2015, a Dutch airstrike on Hawija (Iraq) killed around 70 civilians.

    5. Denmark

    • Iraq and Syria (from 2014): Participated in anti-ISIS airstrikes.
    • Afghanistan: Part of NATO operations with ground and air support.

    6. Norway

    • Libya (2011): Dropped nearly 600 bombs; at least one operation reportedly killed civilians.

    7. Belgium

    • Syria and Iraq (from 2014): Carried out airstrikes in the coalition against ISIS.

    8. Spain

    • Iraq War (2003–2004): Participated initially, mostly in ground operations; limited air role.