![]() |
Base map by Koen Adams of onestopmap.com, with territorial control by Evan Centanni and Djordje Djukic.
All rights reserved. |
Timeline by Djordje Djukic
![]() |
Base map by Koen Adams of onestopmap.com, with territorial control by Evan Centanni and Djordje Djukic.
All rights reserved. |

![]() |
| Click to enlarge. By Evan Centanni, modified from public domain blank world map. |
![]() |
| A world political map published by the US government (public domain) |
The past month has seen major changes to control in Libya's interior, as rival governments face off there and in around the capital city of Tripoli. Meanwhile, the so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS/ISIL)
has reportedly re-emerged in rural areas near the coast.![]() |
Map by Evan Centanni. All rights reserved.
|
The past month has seen continued territorial losses for the so-called "Islamic State"
(IS; formerly, ISIS/ISIL), as government and rebel forces take vast swaths of desert and a Kurdish-led coalition closes in on the group's capital. Meanwhile, foreign countries have begun drawing up provisional ceasefire zones along hardened lines between rebel and government control.
![]() |
| Map by Evan Centanni. Contact for usage rights. |
After driving so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS/ISIL)
fighters out of their last stronghold in Libya, clashes have gradually increased between the country's two rival governments, even as the eastern government has continued its unilateral
campaign against religious hardliners, and a new "neutral" military
force has emerged with ties to the ousted leader of the previous western
government.
The so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS/ISIL) has continued to lose ground in Syria to the
Kurdish-led, US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in the north, and
to rebel groups in the southern desert. Meanwhile, the Assad government
has made some gains against rebels in Hama province, the Damascus area,
and elsewhere.
Advances against the so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS/ISIL)
have accelerated from all sides, with Kurdish-led forces nearing the doorstep of the group's capital city.
Meanwhile, months of defeats for anti-Assad rebels may have begun to reverse.![]() |
| Map of election results from the UK's "Brexit" referendum on leaving the European Union |
![]() |
| Syria in February 2016 |
![]() |
| Syria in December 2016 |
![]() |
| Free map of world time zones from Wikimedia Commons, up-to-date for the beginning of 2017. See the close-ups below for interactive, before-and-after illustrations of time zone changes during 2016. |
Since January, fighting has raged on for control of Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city. Iraqi government forces and allies have secured control of the city's eastern half from the so-called "Islamic State" (IS; formerly ISIS/ISIL), and have continued to gain ground both in the city and in the surrounding region.
In the past month, the so-called "Islamic State" (IS; formerly
ISIS/ISIL) has lost control of Al-Bab, the third-largest city in Aleppo
province, to Turkish-backed rebels, even as the
Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) approach the group's capital city of Raqqah in the east. And in
southwestern Syria, rebels have lost ground to both government and IS
forces.
![]() |
| Map by Evan Centanni, from blank map by Ssolbergj. License: CC BY-SA |
![]() |
| Map by Evan Centanni, from this blank map by Eric Gaba. License: CC BY-SA |
In the past month, Syria's Assad government has continued to consolidate its power after a major victory over the rebels in the city of Aleppo. Meanwhile, forces of the so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS/ISIL) have lost ground to Kurdish-led militias even while holding their own against the Syrian Army.
Over the past two months, a battle has raged for control of Mosul, the second-largest city in Iraq and the largest controlled by the so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS/ISIL). Government and allied forces have made slow but steady progress in the city and nearby areas, even while advancing in western Iraq's Anbar province at the same time.![]() |
Click to enlarge. Map by Louis Martin-Vézian, Evan Centanni, and Djordje Djukic. All rights reserved.
|