The 5 countries that are most impossible to conquer

It's a lot more than the size or strength of their armed forces.
countries impossible to conquer

Historically, all empires either fall or morph into some other empire… and then fall. While we don’t use the term “empire” to describe nation-states that much anymore, some countries are still able to project power outside their borders. They project power globally (like the United States) or regionally (like Iran). But when it comes to having to defend their home turf, some countries are just not going to roll over for any reason.

These are those countries.


1. The United States of America

We all saw this one coming, so let’s get it out of the way early and start with what I know many are thinking: any invader of the United States isn’t facing just the U.S. military; they’re facing all 330 million Americans.

Yes, there are more weapons than people in the U.S. (and that’s just considering the guns we know about). Americans are even allowed to design and build their own weapons in many states, without ever having to register them. So who knows what they’re packing? This also means every American with an arsenal can recruit and train their own band of Wolverines in every city and state in the Union.

countries impossible to conquer
This is America. (MGM/United Artists)

Albuquerque, Houston, Oklahoma City, Detroit, Baltimore, New York City — whether the invasion moves from east to west or west to east, there are a lot of pressure points invaders need to secure before moving on. Which brings up another point: America is huge.

Our four mainland time zones contain seven different climate regions, including everything from high mountains to marshland, swamps to deserts, and in some places, a lot of flat nothing. Just going across the mighty Mississippi River without a bridge is enough to kill off a good chunk of an army, while the residents of East St. Louis are using it as target practice.

When the invaders get out of the actual geographical features of the United States (where the aforementioned roving bands of armed American militias are waiting in ambush), the invaders will enter some of the largest cities in the world, three of which are in the top 100 in terms of population, and many are full of gangs and violent extremist groups.

countries impossible to conquer
This is just Los Angeles County. (LAPD)

That being said, have you ever looked up at New York City buildings and just imagined what it would be like to have to invade, conquer, and keep a city so populous and enormous in scale?

countries impossible to conquer
Me either. But you feel free to fight the next Stalingrad if you want.

2. Russia

This one goes well beyond the myth of “General Winter” (although that would definitely be a factor for most invading countries). Russia projects power regionally, but its armed forces (as I mentioned before in other articles) are not as great as Putin is hyping them up to be lately.

If invaded, however, Russia doesn’t have to project anything and its legendary toughness can really bloom, even in the middle of the freezing Russian winter. Invading Russia, as any student of history knows, is a terribly difficult task. When Napoleon invaded in 1812, the Russian people took casualties, to be sure, but what really suffered was Russia’s towns, cities, farms, and other infrastructure — all of it destroyed by Russians.

countries impossible to conquer

That’s right, Russians would rather destroy their own country than leave it for any invader. And if you’re thinking that was a long time ago and how modern Russians might have different sensibilities, remember they did it again when the Nazis invaded during World War II. From there, the fighting only got more brutal. So any invader has to remember that they’re likely fighting every single Russian across 11 time zones.

Did you catch that? Russia, the largest country by land mass, has 11 time zones. If that wasn’t bad enough, Russia also contains every single climate type there is (yes, Russia has a rain forest. Look it up). If that wasn’t enough, they will likely have to fight every ex-Soviet client state around Russia’s borders, too. Many of them are still very loyal to Russia and would take up arms to fight for their Russian friends. This only extends the range and variety of people, climate, and geography to conquer. It means everything from the deserts of Kazakhstan to the mountains and forests of the Caucasus region and the frozen shores of the Black and Caspian Seas.

The steppes and tundras of Central Asia are not a forgiving place, and just like the Americans who would take up arms against an invader, the Russians and pro-Russian people living in these areas will too. These are hardy, gun-toting, skilled hunters who have no compulsion about killing an invader, having grown up with their parents’ and grandparents’ stories about fighting the Great Patriotic War against the Nazis.

Fighting, which included the deadliest combat in the history of human warfare (which the Russians won) at Stalingrad.

countries impossible to conquer
Which is called Volgograd now. And invaders will have to take this city, too. Good luck with that.

3. Afghanistan

Despite what every successive American general would have had you believe for the past 20-plus years, victory in Afghanistan is not just around the corner.

Every invading empire that thought victory was just around the corner in Afghanistan really just helped contribute to Afghanistan’s legacy as “The Graveyard of Empires.” This includes the current sole superpower in the world, the United States, the only other superpower ever to exist, the Soviet Union, and the largest empire ever assembled by any state in the world, the British Empire at its height.

countries impossible to conquer
“Come at me, bro.”

What makes Afghanistan so difficult to capture and keep is, first and foremost, its terrain. It’s a giant bowl of desert surrounded by some of the highest peaks in the world. Any Afghan army that an invader can’t destroy could just fade away into the mountains and lick their wounds until the next fighting season came. In modern times, the high peaks negate the advantage of armor, helicopters, and tanks, just as it negated the advantage of heavy cavalry in earlier times.

The United States was a formidable fighting force in Afghanistan due to its logistical advantage. While the U.S. could get supplies and troops in and out relatively easily, the attacking British in 1839 had a much less reliable system. That’s why only one man of 16,000 soldiers and camp followers returned.

That’s why it’s remembered as the “Disaster in Afghanistan.”

countries impossible to conquer
The original Brexit.

The most crucial reason no one can conquer Afghanistan is because any invader has to subdue the population completely. The whole population. And these people are as diverse as it gets. Pashtun, Turkmen, Baloch, Palaw, Tajik, and Uzbek are just a few of the ethnic groups in the country. Even after 20 years in the country, many Americans wouldn’t pick up on the fact that one of those ethnic groups I just mentioned is actually a rice dish.

countries impossible to conquer
Just Palaw me.

Put aside Taliban or Mujahideen loyalty for a moment and imagine the life of a regular Afghan man. they have a lot of loyalties to tend to: Their clan, their tribe, their unit, their sheikh, their ethnicity, their religion, maybe their provincial or central government? And when you do take into account their loyalties to extremist groups, you have to factor in the group, that unit, and the shadow government. That’s 12 potential loyalties right there. Imagine trying to subdue 34 million of them, because you will have to if you invade Afghanistan.

Defeating those people in pitched battles didn’t work, ask the British. Massacring them also didn’t work, ask the Soviets. The American nation-building strategy never came along either.

4. China

Did your invading army plan on fighting one billion people? Because that is what is likely to happen when invading China. The most populous country in the world now boasts 1.3 billion-plus people (or more… who knows when you’re reading this).

For the uninitiated or bad at math (or both), that means they have almost the entire population of the United States plus a billion. Having written these wargaming posts for a few years now, I know that many will tell me to consider that this doesn’t mean China has a skilled or fearsome force of ground troops and that all they’ve ever tactically perfected on a modern battlefield is human wave attacks.

So imagine a billion people running at your unit.

While these one billion Chinese people likely don’t have their own weapons, it wouldn’t take long for the planned central bureaucracy to start handing out weapons to form a unified front against an invader. There’s an old U.S. military saying: if it’s stupid and it works, it isn’t stupid. So it may sound like throwing a few million soldiers at an invader is stupid, but it’s quite the human wave, and it will likely work.

So even if the numbers of the Battle of the Chosin Reservoir are repeated and it takes ten Chinese divisions to repel one Marine Division, the Marines will need to send 25 divisions just to establish a beachhead.

countries impossible to conquer
And China didn’t even try to equip its soldiers back then. Today, they would have rifles and shoes — and maybe food.

The fun doesn’t stop just because the invader made it ashore. China is as massive as the United States, with a diverse climate and diverse geographical features. It’s surrounded by extreme weather and oceans on all sides, so invaders will have to be prepared for the impassable Gobi Desert and the jungles of Southeast Asia, not to mention the mountainous, snowy Himalayan regions, which will make air support difficult.

If invading troops aren’t massacred along the way by bands of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, then they still get to contend with a variety of tropical diseases, along with the diseases that come from overpopulation and pollution.

This is just in fighting a conventional war. The Chinese are the masters of ripping off foreign technology, so an invading army would have to assume that the country they’re invading will also have all the technological prowess of the United States – and with its massive manpower (assuming they didn’t die in a human wave) and relatively strong economy, they’re ready to grind on for a long time.

countries impossible to conquer
Enjoy that iPhone.

5. India

This is probably the only entry on the list that many readers didn’t predict. But on its own, India is a formidable place to invade.

countries impossible to conquer
Ask Pakistan.

To the north and east lie harsh Himalayan mountain passes and arid deserts, which make up roughly half of India’s northwest regions. In the southwest, India is wet and tropical, limiting the best places to land an ocean-born invasion force. That is, if you ever get to land an invasion force on the subcontinent.

Part of India’s primary naval strategy is to flood her territorial waters with enough submarines to sink both enemy warships and enemy landing craft while strangling sea lanes of enemy shipping. This tactic has been in place for a long time, dating back to before China’s foreign policy shifted from “peaceful rise” to “crouching tiger.”

Since the British left India in 1947, the Indians have had to deal with Pakistan on a few occasions and even went to war with China once. Ever since, China and Pakistan have only grown closer, so India’s entire defense strategy has to be predicated on the idea of fighting a war on two fronts — and they’re ready for it.

Fighting in India is not a small matter, as any Indian general will probably tell you. The height of the Himalayan mountains makes air support very difficult, and at times, even impossible. India can’t rely exclusively on one benefactor, meaning it can’t just choose to be closer to the USA or Russia. India cares about Pakistan and China and will accept any tech or gear that helps them win against Pakistan or China.

As such, their near-limitless manpower, religious fervor, and billion-plus population would make them a formidable opponent on any front.

countries impossible to conquer
And Gurkhas. They have Gurkhas.
Blake Stilwell Avatar

Blake Stilwell

Editor-In-Chief, Air Force Veteran

Blake Stilwell is a former combat cameraman and writer with degrees in Graphic Design, Television & Film, Journalism, Public Relations, International Relations, and Business Administration. His work has been featured on ABC News, HBO Sports, NBC, Military.com, Military Times, Recoil Magazine, Together We Served, and more. He is based in Ohio, but is often found elsewhere.


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