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SOURCE / Global: Official advisory and global OSINT stream ready while current-events cache refreshes · AEGIS ATLAS | OSINT / Global: Security, conflict, unrest, health, weather, and economic stress indicators under watch · AEGIS ATLASSOURCE / Global: Official advisory and global OSINT stream ready while current-events cache refreshes · AEGIS ATLAS | OSINT / Global: Security, conflict, unrest, health, weather, and economic stress indicators under watch · AEGIS ATLAS
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Country Intelligence Dashboard

Russia

Region pending

Level 4Do Not Travel
Generate Travel Brief
Official Advisory
Level 4
Do Not Travel
AEGIS Risk Index
92/100
Critical
Trajectory
Rapidly Deteriorating
AEGIS assesses elevated near-term and structural risk. Treat movement and planning assumptions conservatively.
Capital
Moscow
Reference data

State Level 1–4

Official Travel Advisory

Level 4Do Not Travel

There were no changes to the advisory level or risk indicators. Advisory summary was updated. Advisory summary Do not travel to Russia due to: Danger associated with the continuing war between Russia and Ukraine. The risk of harassment or wrongful detention by Russian security officials. The arbitrary enforcement of local laws. The possibility of terrorism. U.S. citizens in Russia should leave immediately The U.S. government has limited ability to help U.S. citizens in Russia, especially outside of Moscow. The U.S. Embassy in Moscow has reduced its staff. The Russian government has also restricted travel for embassy personnel. All U.S. consulates in Russia have suspended operations, including consular services. Do not travel to Russia for any reason The U.S. Embassy in Moscow has limited ability to assist in the case of a detention of a U.S. citizen. There is no guarantee that the Russian government will grant the U.S. Embassy consular access to detained U.S. citizens. U.S. citizens may serve their entire prison sentence without release. The risk of wrongful detention of U.S. citizens remains high. Even if a case is determined wrongful, there is no guarantee of release. Russian officials often question and threaten U.S. citizens without reason. Russian security services have arrested U.S. citizens on false charges. They have denied them fair treatment and convicted them without credible evidence. Russian authorities have opened questionable investigations against U.S. citizens for their religious activities. There have been drone attacks and explosions near the border with Ukraine, and in Moscow, Kazan, St. Petersburg, and other large cities. In 2024, ISIS Khorasan claimed responsibility for the attack at Crocus Music Hall in Moscow. This attack killed 130 people. They also targeted places of worship in Dagestan. In an emergency, you should follow instructions from local authorities and seek shelter. Dual citizenship Russia will not recognize your U.S. citizenship if you are a dual U.S.-Russian citizen or have a claim to Russian citizenship. Russia has blocked U.S. consular officers from visiting detained dual U.S.-Russian citizens. The Russian government has forced dual citizens to join the military. They also have stopped them from leaving the country. In 2022, Russia started drafting citizens for the war in Ukraine. The military draft is ongoing. Failure to adhere to Russian laws and regulations on dual citizenship can result in arrest. Demonstrations In Russia, peaceful assembly and freedom of speech are not protected rights. U.S. citizens should avoid protests and taking photos of security staff at these events. Russian authorities have arrested U.S. citizens who have joined protests. Russians and U.S. citizens have been detained for posts on social media. Electronic devices Reconsider bringing electronic devices into Russia. U.S. citizens should assume all electronic communications and devices in Russia are monitored by Russian security services. Russian security services have arrested U.S. citizens and other foreign nationals based on information found on electronic devices. This includes information that was created, transmitted, or stored while in another country. Debit and credit cards U.S. credit and debit cards no longer work in Russia. Due to sanctions, sending electronic money transfers from the United States to Russia is nearly impossible. The U.S. Embassy cannot assist with transferring money to circumvent sanctions. Air travel There are few commercial air travel options available. It may not be easy to book flights on short notice. If you wish to leave Russia, you should make your own travel plans. The U.S. Embassy can only offer limited help to U.S. citizens trying to leave. Transportation options could become even more limited at any time. Visit our website for information for U.S. Citizens Seeking to Depart Russia . The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has downgraded Russia's air safety rating from Category 1 to Category 2 due to safety concerns . U.S. government personnel are generally not allowed to fly on Russian airlines due to safety concerns. Additionally, the FAA banned U.S. flights within certain areas of Russian airspace, by issuing a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM). This is due to risks to civil aviation operating within or in the vicinity of these certain areas. For more information U.S. citizens should consult the Federal Aviation Administration’s Prohibitions, Restrictions and Notices . Laws and special circumstances Russian officials have questioned, threatened, and detained U.S. citizens without reason. This includes both former and current U.S. government and military personnel, as well as private U.S. citizens. Russian authorities have a history of wrongfully detaining U.S. nationals and using them as bargaining chips. U.S. citizens may become victims of harassment, mistreatment, and extortion. Russian authorities do not always notify the U.S. embassy about the detention of a U.S. citizen. They may delay or deny U.S. consular help. Russian security services target foreign nationals and international organizations considered “undesirable.” Russian law allows authorities to punish foreigners for treason. This includes working for organizations that Russia perceives as acting against Russian interests. Former and current U.S. government employees and contractors should pay special attention to this part of Russian law. Security Drone attacks and explosions have taken place near the border with Ukraine and in Moscow, Kazan, St. Petersburg, and other large cities. In an emergency, you should follow instructions from local authorities and seek shelter. Russia's war in Ukraine has destabilized security in southwestern Russia. In October 2022, the Russian government declared martial law in the following border areas with Ukraine: Bryansk, Kursk, Belgorod, Voronezh, Rostov, and Krasnodar. Under martial law, authorities can: Set curfews Seize property Restrict movement Detain foreigners Forcibly relocate residents Limit public gatherings Russian authorities have questioned, detained, and arrested people for “acting against Russia's interests.” Local authorities have targeted people for posting on social media or supporting "anti-Russian" groups. They have punished people for criticizing the government or military. Gay and lesbian travelers The Russian government's "propaganda" law bans discussion of gay and lesbian topics. The community has been labeled as “extremist,” and it is considered a crime to support the human rights of gay and lesbian people in Russia. Displaying certain symbols, including the rainbow flag, is a crime. Foreigners found guilty of violating this law may be arrested and detained for up to 15 days and then deported. Terrorism Terrorists continue to plan and carry out attacks in Russia. The March 2024 Crocus City Hall attack in Moscow proved terrorists can strike without warning. U.S. government employees working in Russia are prohibited from traveling to the North Caucasus, including Chechnya and Mt. Elbrus. Russian annexation of territories The international community does not recognize Russia’s purported annexation of Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhya. Russia staged its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, in part, from occupied Crimea. There is a heavy Russian military presence in these areas and intense fighting across these regions. Russian authorities have abused foreigners and locals. In particular, they have targeted people who they see as opposing Russia’s authority. The U.S. Embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine offers consular services to U.S. citizens in Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhya. However, the ongoing war limits the embassy's ability to help U.S. citizens in these areas. If you choose to disregard the Travel Advisory and decide to travel to Russia: The Department has determined that the risk of wrongful detention of U.S. nationals is significant. Be ready for the possibility of detention for an unknown amount of time, possibly without a clear reason, and without the ability to contact your embassy or anyone else for help. Prepare a will and designate appropriate insurance beneficiaries or power of attorney. Share important documents, login information, and points of contact with loved ones so that they can manage your affairs if you are unable to return as planned to the United States. Review this list of documents to prepare for your trip. Discuss a plan with loved ones regarding care and custody of children, pets, property, belongings, non-liquid assets (collections, artwork, etc.), funeral wishes, etc. Leave DNA samples with your medical provider in case it is necessary for your family to access them. Develop a communication plan with family, your employer or host organization. List how and when you'll confirm you're safe (text or call). Specify how often you will do this. Have evacuation plans that do not rely on U.S. government assistance. Review our information on Crisis and Evacuations . Visit our website on Terrorism and Travel to High-Risk areas . Consider the risks involved in having dual U.S.-Russian nationality. Log out of all social media accounts and do not access your social media accounts while in Russia. Keep travel documents up-to-date and easily accessible. Stay aware of your surroundings. Stay alert in tourist spots. Follow the instructions of local authorities. Monitor local media for breaking news. Be prepared to adjust your plans. Enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) to get important updates and alerts from the U.S. embassy or consulate. Enrolling helps the U.S. embassy or consulate contact you or your emergency contact in an emergency. Review the Country Security Report for Russia. Visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website for the latest Travel Health Information for Russia. We highly recommend that you buy travel insurance before you travel. Check with your travel insurance provider about evacuation assistance, medical insurance, and trip cancelation coverage.

Source: U.S. Department of State

Published/Updated: Date pending

Open official State.gov advisory →

AEGIS Trajectory Engine

Rapidly Deteriorating

AEGIS assesses elevated near-term and structural risk. Treat movement and planning assumptions conservatively.

Trajectory Score
100
Confidence: High
30 Day
High-risk watch
Confidence: High
90 Day
Sustained deterioration risk
Confidence: High
12 Month
Structural stress likely to persist
Confidence: Moderate

Primary Drivers

  • Official advisory posture: Level 4.
  • Security pressure: 100/100 across crime, terrorism, unrest, and kidnapping indicators.
  • Systemic pressure: 82/100 across health, natural hazards, and economic stress.
  • Economic signal: Managed Economic Pressure.

Planning Implication

Build redundancy into communications, movement, medical, evacuation, and source-verification plans. Avoid assuming local institutions can absorb additional shocks.

Watch Indicators

  • State Department advisory level or summary changes.
  • Protest, strike, election, conflict, or major criminal-violence developments in the OSINT feed.
  • Inflation, unemployment, contraction, debt, food/fuel pressure, or currency volatility signals.
  • Embassy security alerts, movement restrictions, natural disasters, health outbreaks, or airport/port disruptions.

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
High
82

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

Civil Unrest
Critical
100

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.

Economic Risk Layer

Economic Indicators & Stability Pressure

Economic stress is treated as a driver for unrest, crime pressure, migration, corruption, institutional capacity, and PMESII-Economic analysis. Indicators are pulled from the World Bank layer when available and used as planning context, not as a replacement for official advisory guidance.

Economic Stress
42
Managed Economic Pressure

growth

GDP

2024
$2.17T

Current-dollar GDP gives the broad scale of the economy and state resource base.

Source →

growth

GDP Growth

2024
4.3%

Annual GDP growth helps identify contraction, recovery, or growth stress.

Source →

growth

GDP per Capita

2024
$14,889

GDP per capita provides a rough prosperity and capacity proxy.

Source →

stability

Inflation

2024
8.4%

Consumer inflation can signal food/fuel pressure, cost-of-living stress, and unrest potential.

Source →

labor

Unemployment

2025
2.1%

Unemployment is a pressure indicator for household stress, migration, crime, and unrest.

Source →

trade

Trade Exposure

2024
40%

Trade as a share of GDP can show exposure to border closures, sanctions, shocks, and supply-chain disruption.

Source →

debt

Government Debt

2024
18%

Government debt burden can constrain response capacity and increase austerity or instability pressure.

Source →

Key Economic Findings

  • Recent GDP growth is 4.3%, giving a baseline indication of economic direction.
  • Inflation is elevated at 8.4%, which can contribute to food/fuel pressure, demonstrations, labor action, or crime pressure.
  • Unemployment is below the primary AEGIS watch threshold in the latest indicator set.
  • Debt burden does not appear to be the primary economic stress driver based on the latest available indicator.

Trajectory Signal

Stable / Watch

Economic stress is treated as a driver for unrest, migration, corruption, criminal pressure, institutional capacity, and resiliency. It informs PMESII-Economic and trajectory analysis but does not replace official advisory guidance.

Source: World Bank Indicators APIView docs →

Country Reference Data

Factbook-Style Profile

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

Mode
reference
Official Name
Russian Federation
Capital
Moscow
Population
146M
Area
17,098,246 km²
Region
Europe / Eastern Europe
Currencies
Russian ruble (₽)
Languages
Russian
Time Zones
UTC+03:00, UTC+04:00, UTC+06:00, UTC+07:00, UTC+08:00, UTC+09:00
Movement Notes
Coastal access • Drives on right • UN member • Borders: AZE, BLR, CHN, EST, FIN, GEO, KAZ, PRK, LVA, LTU, MNG, NOR

Planner Mode

Professional ASCOPE / PMESII Planner

AEGIS Planner Mode answers the practical civil-considerations questions: what factors matter, why they matter, how they affect movement or objectives, which influences drive instability or stability, and what activities are realistic.

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
state
Embassy

U.S. Embassy Moscow

Moscow

directory-fallback
Phone
Verify on official mission site
Emergency
Verify after-hours procedures
Address
Open official mission site for current address

State Department country travel information was reached. Detailed post contact text is not always machine-readable, so verify current address, phone, and after-hours instructions through the official mission source before travel.

Open Mission Source →

OSINT Feed

Current Signals

AEGIS highlights current public-source signals that may affect travel posture, planning, or country trajectory.

Active

SOURCE

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

The country page remains usable with advisory, reference, and embassy layers while the current-events stream refreshes.

Low
Signal: Source standbyConfidence: ModerateSource: AEGIS ATLAS

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 Russia. The Save Brief button appears after a brief is generated.