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Country DashboardAF / AFGState.gov advisory loaded
Afghanistan flag

Country Intelligence Dashboard

Afghanistan

Region pending

Level 4Do Not Travel
Generate Travel Brief
Official Advisory
Level 4
Do Not Travel
AEGIS Risk Index
92/100
Critical
Trajectory
Deteriorating
State.gov informed
Capital
Kabul
Reference data

State Level 1–4

Official Travel Advisory

Level 4Do Not Travel

Do not travel due to civil unrest , crime, terrorism , risk of wrongful detention , kidnapping , natural disasters , and limited health facilities . Do not travel to Afghanistan for any reason We urge American citizens in Afghanistan to leave immediately. U.S. citizens seeking U.S. government help to leave the country should email their complete biographic details, contact information (email and phone number), and U.S. passport number to AfghanistanACS@state.gov . The U.S. Embassy in Kabul suspended operations in 2021. The U.S. government cannot provide routine or emergency consular services to U.S. citizens in Afghanistan. The Taliban actively surveil and monitor travelers. U.S.-Afghan dual nationals and U.S. citizens linked to NGOs face higher risks of surveillance. The Taliban’s so-called General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI) and the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice and Complaints (PVPV) are responsible for enforcing directives and edicts issued by Taliban authorities. Multiple terrorist groups are active in Afghanistan. U.S. citizens are targets of kidnapping and hostage-taking, and may become targets for violence. There is a high risk of wrongful detention of U.S. nationals in Afghanistan. All American citizens, including tourists and U.S.-Afghan dual nationals, are targeted for detention. Lawful Permanent Residents who previously supported the United States in Afghanistan may also be targeted. For example, anyone who worked as an interpreter could be targeted. The Taliban have harassed and detained aid, faith-based organization, and humanitarian workers. Foreigners are often viewed with suspicion. Reasons for detention may be unclear or arbitrary. Even if you are registered with the appropriate authorities to conduct business, the risk of detention is high. Detention conditions are severe. The Taliban do not permit the United States to conduct welfare checks on U.S. citizens in detention, including by phone. Detention can be long. Even if a case is determined to be a wrongful detention, there is no guarantee of release. While in detention, American citizens have limited or no access to medical attention. They may face physical abuse. Natural disaster Afghanistan is a seismically active region, with frequent and devastating earthquakes. Earthquakes have caused mass casualties and critical damage to homes and infrastructure. In September 2025, a 6.0 magnitude earthquake struck the eastern region of Afghanistan, killing over 1,100 people. Aviation Safety Oversight The FAA has issued a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) and a Special Federal Aviation Regulation (SFAR) due to risks to civil aviation operating within or in the vicinity of Afghanistan. For more information, U.S. citizens should consult the Federal Aviation Administration’s Prohibitions, Restrictions and Notices . The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has not assessed Afghanistan's Civil Aviation Authority for compliance with international standards for aviation safety oversight. FAA’s website includes more information on its assessment program.

Source: U.S. Department of State

Published/Updated: Date pending

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AEGIS Assessment

Country Trajectory

Deteriorating

Trajectory compares official advisory posture, recent reporting, and category risk indicators to determine whether conditions appear stable, improving, concerning, or deteriorating.

30 Day
Deteriorating
90 Day
High Risk
12 Month
Sustained Level 4

AEGIS Threat Matrix

Operational Risk Categories

Official Level 1–4 is the fast read. The matrix breaks down why the country is risky and what threat categories matter most.

Crime
Critical
92

Street crime, organized crime, violent crime, theft, and personal security exposure.

Terrorism
Critical
100

Terrorist intent, capability, historic activity, and target attractiveness.

Civil Unrest
Critical
87

Protests, strikes, riots, political instability, and election-related disruption.

Health
High
82

Disease risk, healthcare access, medical evacuation complexity, and public health alerts.

Natural Hazard
Moderate
35

Storms, earthquakes, floods, wildfires, volcanos, and other environmental hazards.

Cyber
Critical
92

Device compromise, malicious WiFi, telecom exposure, surveillance, and data-theft risks.

Collection Risk
Critical
97

Targeting risk against travelers, officials, executives, NGOs, journalists, or exposed personnel.

Kidnapping
Critical
87

Kidnapping, wrongful detention, extortion, hostage taking, and ransom exposure.

Country Reference Data

Factbook-Style Profile

Baseline geography, population, language, economy-adjacent, and movement-reference fields for quick planning context.

Mode
cached
Official Name
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
Capital
Kabul
Population
43.8M
Area
652,230 km²
Region
Asia / Southern Asia
Currencies
Afghan afghani (؋)
Languages
Dari, Pashto, Turkmen
Time Zones
UTC+04:30
Movement Notes
Landlocked • Drives on right • UN member • Borders: IRN, PAK, TKM, UZB, TJK, CHN

Embassy & Consulate Layer

U.S. Mission Support

Official mission context is pulled from State Department country travel information when available, with directory fallback links for verification.

Mode
cached
Embassy

U.S. Embassy Kabul

Kabul

state-country-info
Phone
On August 31, 2021, the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan suspended all operations. Please read the Travel Advisory for Afghanistan, which advises U.S. citizens not to travel to Afghanistan for any reason due to terrorism, risk of wrongful detention, kidnapping and crime, and advises U.S. citizens currently in Afghani
Emergency
Criminal Penalties: U.S. citizens in Afghanistan are subject to Afghan laws. A U.S. passport will not help you avoid detention or prosecution and may result in heightened attention by police and prosecutors, some of whom may seek to exploit your status as a U.S. citizen for financial or political gain. Persons violating Afghan laws, even unknowingly, may be fined, detained, imprisoned, or possibly executed. Penalties in Afghanistan can be more severe than for similar offenses in the United State
Address
The security situation is extremely unstable and the threat to U.S. citizens remains critical. No province in Afghanistan should be considered immune from violence, and the potential exists throughout the country for hostile acts, either targeted or random, against U.S. and other foreign nationals at any time. U.S. citizens who do decide to go to Afghanistan should maintain a low profile and exercise extreme discretion in disclosing their movement plans and personal information. Terrorism: Terro

Traffic Safety and Road Conditions: Road conditions in Afghanistan are generally poor. Many urban streets in Afghanistan have large potholes and are not well lit, and rural roads are frequently not paved. There have also been reports of cave-ins and erosion on the Ring Road (the Kabul-Kandahar-Herat-Mazar highway). Vehicles are often poorly maintained and overloaded. Traffic laws are often not enforced, and roadside assistance is non-existent. Vehicular traffic is chaotic, and drivers must contend with numerous pedestrians, bicyclists, and animals. With congested roads, non-standard traffic patterns, and abundant pedestrian traffic, vehicle accidents are a serious concern and can escalate into violent confrontations . All drivers are urged to drive defensively, drive only in the daylight, and pay close attention to their surroundings. Owners of vehicles with tinted windows can be detaine

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OSINT Feed

Recent Events

Country-relevant and global events from the AEGIS current-events layer. These support trajectory assessment and generated travel briefs.

Active

SOURCE

Official advisory and global ticker context will populate when the AEGIS event feed refreshes.

25

Source layer: AEGIS

AEGIS Data Layer

Data Fusion Notes

The country dashboard now fuses official advisory, embassy/consulate context, and baseline reference data before generating a travel brief.

AEGIS Analyst

Travel Brief Generator

Generates a traveler-friendly intelligence brief using official advisory context, current reporting, threat categories, embassy considerations, trajectory, and source-backed recommendations.

Cost control: generated country briefs are cached server-side for several hours. Use Refresh Brief only when you intentionally want a fresh AEGIS render.
Select Generate Travel Brief to render a current, source-backed brief for Afghanistan. The Save Brief button appears after a brief is generated.