| Conflict |
Combatant 1 |
Combatant 2 |
Results |
Head of state |
Nicaraguan Independence Movements (1811–1812) |
Nicaraguan revolutionaries |
Spanish Empire |
Defeat
|
José de Salvador y Antoli |
Civil war of 1824 (1824) |
Fiebres |
Timbucos |
Fiebres victory
|
José Anacleto Ordóñez |
Cerda-Argüello War (1827–1828) |
Liberal Federalists |
Conservative Federalists |
Liberal victory
|
Juan Argüello del Castillo |
Flores' Rebellion (1834) |
Nicaraguan Government |
Anti-Constitutionalist Rebels |
Government victory
- Cándido Flores is defeated in Managua and later flees Granada
|
José Núñez |
|
Invasion of Guanacaste
(1836) |
Nicaragua
Costa Ricans exiled
|
Costa Rica
|
Defeat
- Withdrawal of Nicaraguan forces
|
Manuel Quijano |
Malespín's War (1844–1845) |
|
|
Allied victory[1][2]
|
Emiliano Madriz Blas Antonio Sáenz Silvestre Selva |
Recapture of San Juan del Norte (1848) |
Nicaragua |
United Kingdom
Kingdom of Mosquitia |
Defeat
|
José María Guerrero |
Granada-León Civil War (1853–1855) |
Legitimists |
Democrats |
Stalemate
|
Fruto Chamorro Francisco Castellón |
Filibuster War (1855–1857) |
|
|
Central American alliance victory |
Fruto Chamorro William Walker |
Barrios' War of Reunification (1885) |
|
|
Anti-Barrios victory
|
Adán Cárdenas |
Nicaragua Crisis of 1895 (1894–1895) |
Nicaragua |
United Kingdom |
Victory
|
José Santos Zelaya |
Honduran Civil War (1906–1907) |
Liberal Rebels
Nicaragua |
Honduras
El Salvador |
Victory
- Dávila becomes President of Honduras
|
Estrada's Rebellion (1909–1910) |
Liberal Government |
Conservative Rebels
United States |
Regime change
- Estrada recognized as President of Nicaragua
|
Mena's Rebellion (1912) |
Conservative Government
United States |
Liberal Rebels |
Government victory
- Liberal rebels exiled to Panama
|
Adolfo Díaz |
World War I (1918) |
Allied Powers:
and others ... |
Central Powers:
and others ... |
Allied Powers victory (see Aftermath of World War I) |
Emiliano Chamorro Vargas |
Constitutionalist War (1926 –1927) |
Nicaraguan Government (Conservatives) Supported by:
United States |
Nicaraguan rebels (Liberals) Supported by:
Mexico (provided weapons and supplies) |
Peace of Tipitapa
|
Sandinistas War (1927–1933) |
Conservative Government
United States |
Sandinistas |
Government victory
- Sandinistas surrender their weapons
|
Adolfo Díaz |
World War II (1941–1945) |
Allies
United States
Soviet Union
United Kingdom
China
France
Poland
Canada
Australia
New Zealand
India
South Africa
Yugoslavia
Greece
Denmark
Norway
Netherlands
Belgium
Luxembourg
Czechoslovakia
Brazil
Mexico
Panama
Costa Rica
El Salvador
Guatemala
Honduras
Nicaragua
Dominican Republic
Cuba |
Axis
Germany
Japan
Italy
Hungary
Romania
Bulgaria
Croatia
Slovakia
Finland
Thailand
Manchukuo
Mengjiang |
Allied victory |
Anastasio Somoza García |
Costa Rican Civil War (1948) |
Government of Costa Rica
Calderon forces
People's Vanguard Party
Nicaraguan National Guard |
National Liberation Army
Ulatista Forces
Caribbean Legion
Supported by:
Guatemala
United States
|
Rebel victory
|
Víctor Manuel Román |
Invasion of Costa Rica (1955) |
Calderón forces
Supported by:
Nicaragua
Venezuela Dominican Republic
Guatemala (Diplomatic Support)
|
Costa Rica
Supported by:
United States
Organization of American States
|
Costa Rican government victory |
Anastasio Somoza García |
Dominican Civil War (1965) |
Loyalist faction
United States
|
Constitutionalist faction
|
Loyalist victory
- Ceasefire declared
- Formation of the provisional government for new elections
- Deposition of Juan Bosch of the presidency ratified
- Organization of presidential elections in 1966 under international supervision
- Election of Joaquín Balaguer as the new president
- Establishment of the Fourth Dominican Republic on July 1, 1966
|
René Schick |
Nicaraguan Revolution (1961–1990) |
Somoza regime (1961–1979)
Contras (1981–1990)
Supported by:
United States
Honduras (from 1981)[6][7]
|
Supported by:
Cuba
Soviet Union[25]
|
Sandinista victory
- Anastasio Somoza Debayle resigns and flees to Miami in July 1979, relinquishing control of the government.
- A five-member provisional government takes its place.[41]
- The right-wing Contras begin an armed insurgency against the Sandinistas in 1981 which continues until 1990.
- The Tela Accord is signed in 1989 and the Sandinista party is defeated in the 1990 election, bringing the armed revolution to an end.
- Sandinistas led by Daniel Ortega are re-elected in 2006 and remain in power until today.
|
Anastasio Somoza Debayle
Daniel Ortega |
Miskito Conflict (1982–1987) |
Nicaragua |
Miskito Guerrillas |
Victory
|
Daniel Ortega |
Operation Golden Pheasant (1988) |
Nicaragua |
United States
Honduras |
Defeat
- Withdrawal of Nicaraguan forces from Honduran territory
|
Iraq War (2003–2004) |
Iraq
Iraqi Kurdistan
MNF–I
|
SCJL
Naqshbandi Army
ISI
al-Qaeda
FIA
Ansar al-Islam IAI
Mahdi Army
Special Groups
Badr Brigades
Kata'ib Hezbollah |
Victory
|
Enrique Bolaños |
| Isla Calero Conflict
(2010) |
Nicaragua |
Costa Rica |
Defeat
|
Daniel Ortega |