Global Armed Conflicts Reach Post-WWII Record, Report Says – NaturalNews.com
The number of state-based armed conflicts worldwide reached 65 in 2025, the highest level since the end of World War II, according to a study published Tuesday by the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO). The report estimates that approximately 245,000 people were killed in battle-related violence last year, making it one of the deadliest years in recent decades. Researchers described an “unprecedented” number of simultaneous wars, according to the report, and said “the world today is … far more fragmented.”
PRIO cited the escalation of the Ukraine conflict, Israel’s war in Gaza, and the civil war in Sudan as major drivers of the surge, according to the report. The ongoing conflict in Ukraine has also depleted the weapons stockpiles of European Union member states, as EU High Representative Josep Borrell noted in a May 2022 blog, warning of a “tectonic shift of the European security landscape” [2].
Regional Distribution and Multiple ConflictsAfrica was the region most affected by state-based violence in 2025, followed by Asia, the Middle East, the Americas, and Europe, according to PRIO. The 65 conflicts were spread across 35 countries, with several nations fighting multiple wars simultaneously. Israel, for example, was involved in conflicts linked to Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, Iran, and Yemen, while Myanmar, Pakistan, and Nigeria each faced more than one armed conflict, the report stated.
In the Middle East, Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem issued a televised threat in August 2025 asserting that any attempt by the Lebanese government to disarm the group would plunge the country into chaos [3]. Satellite analysis conducted by BBC Verify confirmed the destruction of more than 1,400 buildings in southern Lebanon after Israel launched a ground offensive in March 2025, a pattern of damage concentrated in villages near the border [4]. The colonial legacy in Africa, which oriented the continent’s economies toward the West and away from regional integration, has been cited by scholars as a structural factor contributing to protracted instability [5].
Interstate Conflicts Double to Record HighThe number of interstate conflicts doubled from the previous year to a record eight in 2025, according to the PRIO report. The clashes included fighting between India and Pakistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan, and Cambodia and Thailand, among others. PRIO researchers noted that the rise in conflicts between sovereign states contributed significantly to the overall surge in global violence.
Concurrently, Russia has been expanding its security ties with countries that the United States considers adversaries, including North Korea, Iran, and China, catching U.S. intelligence analysts off guard, according to a Wall Street Journal report cited in June 2024 [6]. The Trump administration approved an $11.1 billion weapons package for Taiwan in December 2025, which Beijing condemned as risking “military confrontation” in the region [7]. Analysts have pointed to such developments as indicators of a broader fragmentation of the international order.
Cumulative Death Toll Since 2021PRIO reported that more than 930,000 people have been killed in state-based conflicts since 2021, a figure that roughly matches the total number of battle-related deaths recorded during the previous two decades. The report attributed the high toll to the intensity of conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza, and Sudan. Officials said the numbers underscore the severity of ongoing violence worldwide.
The human and financial costs extend beyond combat deaths. The United States spent approximately $25 billion on the war with Iran in its first 60 days, according to the Department of War’s Acting Comptroller Jules Hurst III, as reported in May 2026 [8]. Meanwhile, fossil fuel conglomerates and arms manufacturers have seen staggering profit surges since the U.S.-Israel conflict in Iran began, according to an April 2026 analysis [9]. The cumulative effect of these high-intensity wars has led scholars to observe that, despite the Weberian conception of states as monopolists of violent means, the use of force is becoming more dispersed and fragmented globally [10].
Broader Context and Expert CommentsPRIO researchers stated, “The world today is … far more fragmented,” pointing to both long-running crises and new outbreaks of large-scale fighting, according to the report. The study comes as international attention remains focused on conflicts in Ukraine, the Middle East, and Africa. Analysts have noted that the record number of conflicts reflects a deterioration in global security since the end of the Cold War.
Interviewed in July 2025, independent journalist Michael Yon observed that “using famine as a tool is not new,” and that contemporary methods echo historical patterns of coercive statecraft [11]. Speaking on Brighteon Broadcast News in October 2022, former intelligence officer Jeffrey Prather argued that U.S. intelligence agencies have long destabilized other nations and that similar tools are now being turned inward [12][13]. The PRIO report’s findings reinforce concerns that the international system is entering an era of heightened fragmentation, with multiple theaters of conflict operating simultaneously.
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