Marco Rubio Must Confront Lazy, Outdated State Department Travel Warnings

Overwrought Warnings Do Harm

President Donald Trump recognizes that American investment is key to peace. But dire warnings increase insurance rates and dissuade businessmen who may not realize the warnings are decades out of date. Image: Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaking to reporters outside the Oval Office at the White House; March 20, 2026.

President Donald Trump recognizes that American investment is key to peace. But dire warnings increase insurance rates and dissuade businessmen who may not realize the warnings are decades out of date. Image: Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaking to reporters outside the Oval Office at the White House; March 20, 2026.

Shutterstock

BENGHAZI, Libya — The State Department declares it has “no higher priority than the safety and security of U.S. citizens” and says it issues travel warnings to describe “the risks and recommended precautions for U.S. citizens.” The lack of granularity to the warnings, though, reflects diplomatic laziness, increasingly undermines U.S. policy, and may even cross the line into fraud.

The lack of granularity to the warnings, though, reflects diplomatic laziness, increasingly undermines U.S. policy, and may even cross the line into fraud.

Consider Somaliland. Out of deference to Mogadishu, the State Department refuses to treat Somaliland as separate from Somalia. Hence, the travel advisory warns people not to travel due to risk of crime, kidnapping, terrorism, unrest, mistreatment of women, and piracy, among other ills. Likewise, consider Libya. The State Department warns, “Do not travel to Libya for any reason due to crime, terrorism, unexploded landmines, civil unrest, kidnapping, and armed conflict.” Then there is Lebanon, where the State Department warns, “Do not travel … for any reason due to the risk of crime, terrorism, unrest, kidnapping, landmines, and armed conflict.” The Iraq warning is even more strident: “Do not travel to Iraq due to terrorism, kidnapping, armed conflict, civil unrest, and the U.S. government’s limited ability to provide emergency services to U.S. citizens in Iraq. Do not travel to Iraq for any reason. Leave now if you are there.”

The security situation in each of these countries is nuanced. Somaliland has not suffered a terrorist attack since 2008. Crime is so low that money changers leave stacks of money unattended while they take their lunch, and women serve as ministers. There was never any piracy in Somaliland. That was always a Puntland (Somalia) problem. By such standards, Somaliland is far safer than Paris, London, or New York. Likewise, the broad warning misrepresents Libya. Just as with Somalia’s president, Libyan Prime Minister Abd al Hamid Dbeibeh was appointed in a U.N. process recognized by the State Department but unelected by the people he claims to represent. Dbeibeh’s government today controls less than 19% of the country, with Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan Arab Armed Forces controlling the rest. While Americans remember Benghazi for the 2012 murder of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens, today Haftar’s home city is reborn with little if any crime, where men, women, and children, Libyans and foreigners both, move around at all hours with neither security nor fear.

Three hundred fifty miles to the west, Sirte — the birthplace of Muammar Qadhafi, site of his last stand, and then capital of the Islamic State’s brief North African emirate — has zero crime, but a bustling university, new football stadium, and a corniche dotted with trendy restaurants. Similarly, despite the dire warning about Lebanon, the chance of stepping on a land mine in Beirut is zero. A bigger danger would be stepping on sea urchins off its beach. Armed conflict, meanwhile, is so localized that Lebanese gather on rooftops to watch. Beirut’s Hezbollah-populated southern suburb, Dahieh, is as different from the upscale western Beirut neighborhood of Hamra as the Bronx is from the Upper West Side of Manhattan. In Iraq, visitors in the new Movenpick Hotel, let alone the resorts of Iraqi Kurdistan, laugh at warnings that appear 20 years out of date.

Many diplomats say the State Department acts from an abundance of caution, but exaggerating danger also plays into claims for hardship and danger pay, which can add 70 percent to their pay.

Overwrought warnings do harm. President Donald Trump recognizes that American investment is key to peace. But dire warnings increase insurance rates and dissuade businessmen who may not realize the warnings are decades out of date. While the State Department criticizes Russian and Chinese investment, Benghazi authorities beg for American businesses to invest, but, with few exceptions in the construction sector, find Americans reluctant to come. America’s loss is Russia, China, and Turkey’s gain.

The warnings also undermine Trump’s immigration policy. Courts deny repatriation of criminal aliens based on warnings, with American Civil Liberties Union lawyers citing the State Department to suggest imminent torture or death to any returnee. The ACLU’s description of Middle Eastern and African countries is racist and wrong, but judges do not know that.

Many diplomats say the State Department acts from an abundance of caution, but exaggerating danger also plays into claims for hardship and danger pay, which can add 70% to their pay. American taxpayers are fleeced because of a convenient fiction. Secretary of State Marco Rubio needs to act.

Published originally on July 15, 2026.

Michael Rubin specializes in Iran, Turkey and the Horn of Africa. His career includes time as a Pentagon official, with field experiences in Iran, Yemen, and Iraq, as well as engagements with the Taliban prior to 9/11. Mr. Rubin has also contributed to military education, teaching U.S. Navy and Marine units about regional conflicts and terrorism. His scholarly work includes several key publications, such as “Dancing with the Devil” and “Eternal Iran.” Rubin earned his Ph.D. and M.A. in history and a B.S. in biology from Yale University.
See more from this Author
Libyans Want Unity, but They Do Not Want Unity to Absolve Failure and Corruption
Halfway Between Tripoli and Benghazi, Sirte Is Also the Gateway to Sebha, the Regional Capital of Libya’s South
See more on this Topic
The Assumption by the U.S. and Israel That Saudi Accession to the Abraham Accords Remained a Matter of Timing and Terms Has Been Significantly Undermined by Events
Tehran Is Showing That It Is Certainly Willing to Push the Envelope