The year that’s soon closing has been brutal. The death toll of Syria’s ongoing civil war likely eclipsed 200,000, while the hideous rise of the Islamic State spurred a U.S.-led bombing campaign. A separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine led to thousands of deaths and clouded relations between the West and Moscow, which is believed to be aiding the rebels. And an Israeli offensive against Hamas militants saw whole stretches of the Gaza Strip reduced to rubble.
Sadly, there was plenty of other mayhem and violence that didn’t make newspaper front pages as often. Here are seven awful conflicts that merited more attention.
• Libya.
Libya was supposed to be a success story. In 2011, the U.S. famously “led from behind,” as NATO air strikes helped a rebel alliance topple the long-ruling regime of dictator Moammar Gadhafi. But what followed has been a mess.
In 2014, Libya’s fragile democratic transition unraveled into open civil war between a hodgepodge of Islamist militias and tribal factions. It has drawn in rogue generals and foreign governments, and led to an absurd situation of two parallel governments claiming authority over the war-ravaged nation. Militants are battling over strategic oil towns. Just this weekend, Libyan jets pounded militant positions in the city of Misrata, once famed for its brave resistance to the Gadhafi regime.