This is a list of notable guerrilla movements. It gives their English name, common acronym, and main country of operation.
Latin America
Argentina
Bolivia
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Cuba
El Salvador
Mexico
Paraguay
Peru
Venezuela
Other Countries
North America
Historical
Europe
Cyprus
Germany
Ireland
Spain
France
Other
Other
- Lisowczycy (Polish)
- Snapphane Movement â Sweden, pro-Danish partisans that fought against the Swedes in the 17th century.
- Guerrilla warfare in the Peninsular War (Spain, Portugal)
- Briganti (Italy)
- Combat Organization of the Polish Socialist Party (Congress Poland, particularly active during the Polish events of the 1905 Russian Revolution)
- Irish Republican Army â Ireland (prior to the establishment of an independent state of Ireland)
- Kuva-yi Milliye during Turkish War of Independence â Turkey
- Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization â Macedonia (region)*
- World War II Resistance movements in various countries, many sponsored by the Allied governments:
- Soviet partisans in the Axis-occupied territories during World War II
- Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) â Greece
- Freies Deutschland â German-occupied territories of the Soviet Union and Germany (East Prussia, Cologne)
- Polish resistance movement in World War II (many of these groups were a part of the Polish Underground State, the large guerrilla movement that initiated the Warsaw Uprising, as well as some other anti-Nazi partisan-warfare-based actions like the ZamoÃ
ÂÃÂ Uprising, the Battle of Osuchy, the Raid on Mittenheide, Operation Tempest, or Operation Heads).
- Henryk DobrzaÃ
Âski (Polish â the first guerrilla commander of the Second World War in Europe)
- Armia Krajowa (Home Army) (Polish)
- LeÃ
Âni
- Silent Unseen
- Battalion ZoÃ
Âka
- Uderzeniowe Bataliony Kadrowe
- National Armed Forces
- Bataliony ChÃ
Âopskie (Polish)
- Armia Ludowa (communist-ruled Poland)
- Bielski partisans (Jewish)
- Parczew partisans (Jewish)
- Yugoslav Partisans â Yugoslavia
- Chetniks â Yugoslavia
- Anti-Soviet partisans and pro-Axis partisans
- Forest Brothers â Estonia/Latvia/Lithuania (World War IIâÂÂ1952 approx.)
- Werwolf â Germany
- Anti-communist resistance in Poland (1944âÂÂ1953) â Poland
- Cursed soldiers
- Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) â Ukraine
Africa
Asia
Historical
Middle East
Iran
Iraq
Palestine
Oceania
See also
Further reading
- Kreiman, Guillermo (2024). "". Journal of Peace Research.
References
External links