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        U.S. Department of State Background Note: Italy  
 
  GeographyArea: 301,225 sq. km. (116,303 sq. mi.); about the size of   Georgia and Florida combined.
 Cities: Capital--Rome (pop. 2.8   million, 3.7 million metro). Other cities--Milan (1.3 million, 3.9   metro), Naples (975,000, 3 million metro), Turin (900,000, 2.1 million   metro).
 Terrain: Mostly rugged and mountainous.
 Climate: Generally mild   Mediterranean; cold northern winters.
 
 People
 Nationality: Noun and adjective--Italian(s).
 Population (November 2009 est.): 60.3 million.
 Annual population growth   rate (2008 est.): 0.07%, mostly due to immigration.
 Ethnic groups: Primarily   Italian, but there are small groups of German-, French-, Slovene-, and   Albanian-Italians.
 Religion: Roman Catholic (majority).
 Language:   Italian (official).
 Education: Years   compulsory--16. Literacy--98%.
 Health: Infant mortality   rate--3.7/1,000 live births. Life   expectancy--78.8 years for men; 84.1 years for women.
 Work force (24.97   million, 2009): Services--67%; industry and commerce--29%; agriculture--4%. Unemployment rate is   7.8%.
 
 Government
 Type: Republic since June 2,   1946.
 Constitution: January 1, 1948.
 Branches: Executive--president (chief of state), Council of Ministers (cabinet)   headed by the president of the council (prime minister). Legislative--bicameral parliament: 630-member Chamber of Deputies,   315-member Senate (plus a varying number of "life" Senators). Judicial--independent constitutional court and lower magistracy.
 Subdivisions: 94 provinces, 20 regions.
 Political parties: People of   Liberty, Democratic Party, Northern League, Italy of Values, Union of the   Center, Movement for Autonomy.
 Suffrage: Vote for House is universal over   18; vote for Senate is universal over 25.
 
 Economy
 GDP   (purchasing power parity, 2009): $1.8 trillion.
 GDP per capita (purchasing   power parity, 2009): $29,500.
 GDP growth: -5.0% (2009); -1.0% (2008); 1.5%   (2007); 1.8% (2006); 0.5% (2005); 1.5% (2004), 0.0% (2003 est.); 0.5% (2002);   1.8% (2001).
 Natural resources: Fish and natural gas.
 Agriculture: Products--wheat, rice, grapes, olives,   citrus fruits, potatoes, sugar beets, soybeans beef, dairy products.
 Industry: Types--tourism,   machinery, iron and steel, chemicals, food processing, textiles, motor vehicles,   clothing, footwear, ceramics.
 Trade: Exports (2009)--$402.9 billion f.o.b.:   mechanical products, textiles and apparel, transportation equipment, metal   products, chemical products, food and agricultural products. Partners (2008)--Germany 12.8%, France   11.8%, Spain 6.5%, U.S. 6.3%, U.K. 5.3%. Imports (2009)--$408.6 billion f.o.b.:   machinery and transport equipment, foodstuffs, ferrous and nonferrous metals,   wool, cotton, energy products. Partners (2008)--Germany 16.0%, France   8.6%, China 6.3%, Netherlands 5.4%, Russia 4.3%, Spain 3.9%, Belgium   3.8%.
 
 PEOPLE AND HISTORY Italy is largely homogeneous linguistically and religiously but is diverse   culturally, economically, and politically. Italy has the fifth-highest   population density in Europe--about 200 persons per square kilometer (about 500   per sq. mi.). Minority groups are small, the largest being the German-speaking   people of Bolzano Province and the Slovenes around Trieste. There are also small   communities of Albanian, Greek, Ladino, and French origin. Immigration has   increased in recent years, however, while the Italian population is declining   overall due to low birth rates. Although Roman Catholicism is the majority   religion--85% of native-born citizens are nominally Catholic--all religious   faiths are provided equal freedom before the law by the   constitution.
 
 Greeks settled in the southern tip of the Italian Peninsula   in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C.; Etruscans, Romans, and others   inhabited the central and northern mainland. The peninsula subsequently was   unified under the Roman Republic. The neighboring islands came under Roman   control by the third century B.C.; by the first century A.D., the Roman Empire   effectively dominated the Mediterranean world. After the collapse of the Roman   Empire in the West in the fifth century A.D., the peninsula and islands were   subjected to a series of invasions, and political unity was lost. Italy became   an oft-changing succession of small states, principalities, and kingdoms, which   fought among themselves and were subject to ambitions of foreign powers. Popes   of Rome ruled central Italy; rivalries between the popes and the Holy
 
 Roman Emperors, who claimed Italy as their domain, often made the   peninsula a battleground. The commercial prosperity of northern and central   Italian cities, beginning in the 11th century, combined with the influence of   the Renaissance, mitigated somewhat the effects of these medieval political   rivalries. Although Italy declined after the 16th century, the Renaissance had   strengthened the idea of a single Italian nationality. By the early 19th   century, a nationalist movement developed and led to the reunification of   Italy--except for Rome--in the 1860s. In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II of the House   of Savoy was proclaimed King of Italy. Rome was incorporated in 1870. From 1870   until 1922, Italy was a constitutional monarchy with a parliament elected under   limited suffrage.
 
 20th-Century History
 During World War I,   Italy renounced its standing alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary and, in   1915, entered the war on the side of the Allies. Under the postwar settlement,   Italy received some former Austrian territory along the northeast frontier. In   1922, Benito Mussolini came to power and, over the next few years, eliminated   political parties, curtailed personal liberties, and installed a fascist   dictatorship termed the Corporate State. The king, with little or no effective   power, remained titular head of state.
 
 Italy allied with Germany and   declared war on the United Kingdom and France in 1940. In 1941, Italy--with the   other Axis powers, Germany and Japan--declared war on the United States and the   Soviet Union. Following the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943, the King   dismissed Mussolini and appointed Marshal Pietro Badoglio as Premier. The   Badoglio government declared war on Germany, which quickly occupied most of the   country and freed Mussolini, who led a brief-lived regime in the north. An   anti-fascist popular resistance movement grew during the last two years of the   war, harassing German forces before they were driven out in April 1945. A 1946   plebiscite ended the monarchy, and a constituent assembly was elected to draw up   plans for the republic.
 
 Under the 1947 peace treaty, minor adjustments   were made in Italy's frontier with France, the eastern border area was   transferred to Yugoslavia, and the area around the city of Trieste was   designated a free territory. In 1954, the free territory, which had remained   under the administration of U.S.-U.K. forces (Zone A, including the city of   Trieste) and Yugoslav forces (Zone B), was divided between Italy and Yugoslavia,   principally along the zonal boundary. This arrangement was made permanent by the   Italian-Yugoslav Treaty of Osimo, ratified in 1977 (currently being discussed by   Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia). Under the 1947 peace treaty, Italy relinquished   its overseas territories and certain Mediterranean islands.
 
 The Roman   Catholic Church's status in Italy has been determined, since its temporal powers   ended in 1870, by a series of accords with the Italian Government. Under the   Lateran Pacts of 1929, which were confirmed by the present constitution, Vatican   City is recognized by Italy as an independent, sovereign entity. While   preserving that recognition, in 1984, Italy and the Vatican updated several   provisions of the 1929 accords. Included was the end of Roman Catholicism as   Italy's formal state religion.
 
 Italy's Cultural   Contributions
 Europe's Renaissance period began in Italy during the 14th   and 15th centuries. Literary achievements--such as the poetry of Petrarch,   Tasso, and Ariosto and the prose of Boccaccio, Machiavelli, and   Castiglione--exerted a tremendous and lasting influence on the subsequent   development of Western civilization, as did the painting, sculpture, and   architecture contributed by giants such as da Vinci, Raphael, Botticelli, Fra   Angelico, and Michelangelo.
 
 The musical influence of Italian composers   Monteverdi, Palestrina, and Vivaldi proved epochal; in the 19th century, Italian   romantic opera flourished under composers Gioacchino Rossini, Giuseppe Verdi,   and Giacomo Puccini. Contemporary Italian artists, writers, filmmakers,   architects, composers, and designers contribute significantly to Western   culture.
 
 GOVERNMENTItaly has been a democratic   republic since June 2, 1946, when the monarchy was abolished by popular   referendum. The constitution was promulgated on January 1, 1948.
 
 The   Italian state is centralized. The prefect of each of the provinces is appointed   by and answerable to the central government. In addition to the provinces, the   constitution provides for 20 regions with limited governing powers. Five   regions--Sardinia, Sicily, Trentino-Alto Adige, Valle d'Aosta, and   Friuli-Venezia Giulia--function with special autonomy statutes. The other 15   regions were established in 1970 and vote for regional "councils." The   establishment of regional governments throughout Italy has brought some   decentralization to the national governmental machinery, and recent governments   have devolved further powers to the regions. Many regional governments,   particularly in the north of Italy, are seeking additional powers.
 
 The   1948 constitution established a bicameral parliament (Chamber of Deputies and   Senate), a separate judiciary, and an executive branch composed of a Council of   Ministers (cabinet), headed by the president of the council (prime minister).   The president of the republic is elected for seven years by the parliament   sitting jointly with a small number of regional delegates. The president   nominates the prime minister, who chooses the other ministers. The Council of   Ministers--in practice composed mostly of members of parliament--must retain the   confidence of both houses.
 
 The houses of parliament are popularly and   directly elected by a proportional representation system. Under 2005   legislation, the Chamber of Deputies has 630 members (12 of whom are elected by   Italians abroad). In addition to 315 elected members (six of whom are elected by   Italians abroad), the Senate includes former presidents and several other   persons appointed for life according to special constitutional provisions. Both   houses are elected for a maximum of five years, but either may be dissolved   before the expiration of its normal term. Legislative bills may originate in   either house and must be passed by a majority in both.
 
 The Italian   judicial system is based on Roman law modified by the Napoleonic code and   subsequent statutes. There is only partial judicial review of legislation in the   American sense. A constitutional court, which passes on the constitutionality of   laws, is a post-World War II innovation. Its powers and the volume and frequency   of its decisions are not as extensive as those of the U.S. Supreme   Court.
 
 Principal Government Officials
 President--Giorgio   Napolitano
 Prime Minister--Silvio Berlusconi
 Foreign Minister--Franco   Frattini
 Minister of Defense--Ignazio LaRussa
 Minister of Finance--Giulio   Tremonti
 Minister of Justice--Angelino Alfano
 Minister of the   Interior--Roberto Maroni
 Ambassador to the United States--Giulio Terzi di   Sant'Agata
 
 Italy maintains an embassy in   the United States at 3000 Whitehaven Street, NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel.   202-612-4400).
 
 POLITICAL CONDITIONSUntil   recently, there had been frequent government turnovers (more than 60 and   counting) since 1945. The dominance of the Christian Democratic (DC) party   during much of the postwar period lent continuity and comparative stability to   Italy's political situation.
 
 From 1992 to 1997, Italy faced significant   challenges as voters--disenchanted with past political paralysis, massive   government debt, extensive corruption, and organized crime's considerable   influence--demanded political, economic, and ethical reforms. In 1993   referendums, voters approved substantial changes, including moving from a   proportional to a largely majoritarian electoral system and the abolishment of   some ministries. However in 2005, parliament passed a new electoral law based on   full proportional assignment of seats.
 
 Major political parties, beset by   scandal and loss of voter confidence, underwent far-reaching changes. New   political forces and new alignments of power emerged in March 1994 national   elections. The election saw a major turnover in the new parliament, with 452 out   of 630 deputies and 213 out of 315 senators elected for the first time. The 1994   elections also swept media magnate Silvio Berlusconi--and his Freedom Pole   coalition--into office as Prime Minister. Berlusconi, however, was forced to   step down in January 1995 when one member of his coalition withdrew support. The   Berlusconi government was succeeded by a technical government headed by Prime   Minister Lamberto Dini, which fell in early 1996. New elections in 1996 brought   a center-left coalition to government for the first time after World War   II.
 
 A series of center-left coalitions dominated Italy's political   landscape between 1996 and 2001. In April 1996, national elections led to the   victory of a center-left coalition (the Olive Tree) under the leadership of   Romano Prodi. Prodi's government became the second-longest to stay in power   before he narrowly lost a vote of confidence (by three votes) in October 1998. A   new government was formed by Democratic Party of the Left leader and   former-communist Massimo D'Alema. In April 2000, following a poor showing by his   coalition in regional elections, D'Alema resigned. The succeeding center-left   government, including most of the same parties, was headed by Giuliano Amato,   who had previously served as Prime Minister in 1992-93.
 
 National   elections, held on May 13, 2001, returned Berlusconi to power at the head of the   five-party center-right Freedom House coalition, comprising the prime minister's   own party, Forza Italia, the National Alliance, the Northern League, the   Christian Democratic Center, and the United Christian Democrats. This Berlusconi   government served its entire term.
 
 In national elections held April 9-10,   2006, Romano Prodi's center-left Union coalition won a narrow victory over   Berlusconi's Freedom House coalition. The Union coalition included the   Democratic Party (born of the November 2007 fusion of the Democrats of the Left   and the Daisy Party), UDEUR (Union of Democrats for Europe), Rose in the Fist   (made up by Italian Social Democrats and Italian Radical Party), Communist   Renewal, the Italian Communist Party, Italy of Values, and the Greens.
 
 In   May 2006, the parliament elected Giorgio Napolitano as the Republic's President.   President Napolitano formerly served as a lifetime senator, Minister of the   Interior, and a member of the European Parliament as a member of center-left   parties. President Napolitano's term ends in May 2013. The Senate, lower house,   and regional representatives will vote to elect his successor.
 
 In January   2008, the Prodi government fell when small coalition partner UDEUR withdrew   support. In February, the President dissolved parliament and Silvio Berlusconi   returned to power after defeating former Rome Mayor Walter Veltroni by a   comfortable margin in elections on April 13-14, 2008. Berlusconi's winning   coalition was composed of the People of Liberty (a union of Forza Italia and   National Alliance), the Northern League, and the Movement for Autonomy.   Berlusconi was sworn in as Prime Minister on May 8. Veltroni resigned as leader   of the opposition in February 2009. His deputy, Dario Franceschini, was elected   new Democratic Party (PD) leader until party primary elections held in October   2009, when Pierluigi Bersani was elected PD national   secretary.
 
 Political Parties
 Italy's dramatic self-renewal   transformed the political landscape between 1992 and 1997. Scandal   investigations touched thousands of politicians, administrators, and   businessmen; the shift from a proportional to majoritarian voting system also   altered the political landscape.
 
 Party changes were sweeping. The   Christian Democratic Party dissolved; the Italian People's Party and the   Christian Democratic Center emerged. Other major parties, such as the   Socialists, saw support plummet. A new populist and free-market oriented   movement, Forza Italia, gained wide support among moderate voters. The National   Alliance broke from the neofascist Italian Social Movement. A trend toward two   large coalitions--one on the center-left and the other on the   center-right--emerged from the April 1995 regional elections. For the 1996   national elections, the center-left parties created the Olive Tree coalition   while the center right united again under the Freedom Pole. The May 2001   elections ushered into power a refashioned center-right coalition dominated by   Berlusconi's party, Forza Italia. The April 2006 elections returned the   center-left to power under the eight-party Union coalition, a successor to the   Olive Tree.
 
 In October 2007, the Democrats of the Left and the Daisy   parties officially merged to form the Democratic Party. Veltroni was chosen as   party leader and was the center-left's candidate in the April 2008 elections.   Silvio Berlusconi launched an alliance between his Forza Italia party and   Gianfranco Fini's National Alliance. The parties ran together under the People   of Liberty symbol in April 2008. The election greatly simplified parliament,   dramatically reducing the numbers of parties, and for the first time since World   War II, leaving communist parties out of parliament. People of Liberty (37.4%)   won the largest share of the vote and took power in coalition with a   strengthened Northern League (8.3%) and the tiny Movement for Autonomy (1.1%).   The Democratic Party scored 33.2% and ran in alliance with Italy of Values   (4.4%), while the Union of the Center (5.6%) ran alone.
 
 In March 2009,   Forza Italia and National Alliance changed the People of Liberty identification   from an alliance to a party. The new mass center-right party is Italy's largest   party and one of the largest in Europe. Party leaders define the party as   post-ideological, charismatic, and pragmatic. It is led by Berlusconi.
 
 ECONOMY
 The Italian economy has changed dramatically   since the end of World War II. From an agriculturally based economy, it has   developed into an industrial state ranked as the world's sixth-largest market   economy. Italy belongs to the Group of Eight (G-8) industrialized nations; it is   a member of the European Union and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and   Development (OECD).
 
 Italy has few natural resources. With much land   unsuited for farming, Italy is a net food importer. There are no substantial   deposits of iron, coal, or oil. Proven natural gas reserves, mainly in the Po   Valley and offshore in the Adriatic, constitute the country's most important   mineral resource. Most raw materials needed for manufacturing and more than 80%   of the country's energy sources are imported. Italy's economic strength is in   the processing and the manufacturing of goods, primarily in small and   medium-sized family-owned firms. Its major industries are precision machinery,   motor vehicles, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, electric goods, and fashion and   clothing.
 
 Italy continues to grapple with budget deficits and high public   debt--2.6% and 105.9% of GDP for 2008, respectively. Italy joined the European   Monetary Union in 1998 by signing the Stability and Growth Pact, and as a   condition of this Euro zone membership, Italy must keep its budget deficit   beneath a 3% ceiling. The Italian Government has found it difficult to bring the   budget deficit down to a level that would allow a rapid decrease of that debt.   The worsening of the economic situation is expected to jeopardize this effort.   The deficit is expected to grow well above the 3% ceiling in 2009 and 2010.
 
 Italy's economic growth averaged only 0.8% in the period 2001-2008; 2008   GDP decreased 1.0%, largely due to the global economic crisis and its impact on   exports and domestic demand. GDP contracted further as the Euro zone and world   economies slowed; 2009 GDP decreased 5.0%.
 
 Italy's closest trade ties are   with the other countries of the European Union, with whom it conducts about   60.1% of its total trade (2007 data). Italy's largest European Union trade   partners, in order of market share, are Germany (12.9%), France (11.4%), and the   United Kingdom (5.8%). Italy continues to grapple with the effects of   globalization, where certain countries (notably China) have eroded the Italian   lower-end industrial product sector.
 
 The Italian economy is also affected   by a large underground economy--worth some 27% of Italy's GDP. This production   is not subject, of course, to taxation and thus remains a source of lost revenue   to the local and central government.
 
 U.S.-Italy Economic   Relations
 The United States and Italy cooperate closely on major economic   issues, including within the G-8. With a large population and a high per capita   income, Italy was the United States' twelfth-largest trading partner in 2008,   with total bilateral trade of $51.6 billion comprised of exports to Italy   totaling $15.5 billion and imports from Italy worth $36.1 billion. The U.S.'s   $20.7 billion deficit with Italy in 2008 was slightly below the $20.9 billion   deficit registered in 2007. Machinery and aircraft are becoming important U.S.   exports to Italy. U.S. foreign direct investment in Italy at the end of 2007   exceeded $28.4 billion.
 
 Labor
 Unemployment is a regional issue   in Italy--low in the north, high in the south. The overall national rate is at   its lowest level since 1992. Chronic problems of inadequate infrastructure,   corruption, and organized crime act as disincentives to investment and job   creation in the south. A significant underground economy absorbs substantial   numbers of people, but they work for low wages and without standard social   benefits and protections. Women and youth have significantly higher rates of   unemployment than do men.
 
 Unions claim to represent 40% of the work   force. Most Italian unions are grouped in four major confederations: the General   Italian Confederation of Labor (CGIL), the Italian Confederation of Workers'   Unions (CISL), the Italian Union of Labor (UIL), and the General Union of Labor   (UGL), which together claim 35% of the work force. These confederations formerly   were associated with important political parties or currents, but they have   evolved into fully autonomous, professional bodies. The CGIL, CISL, and UIL are   affiliated with the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) and   customarily coordinate their positions before confronting management or lobbying   the government. The confederations have had an important consultative role on   national social and economic issues.
 
 Agriculture
 Italy's   agriculture is typical of the division between the agricultures of the northern   and southern countries of the European Union. The northern part of Italy   produces primarily grains, sugar beets, soybeans, meat, and dairy products,   while the south specializes in fruits, vegetables, olive oil, wine, and durum   wheat. Even though much of its mountainous terrain is unsuitable for farming,   Italy has a large work force (1.4 million) employed in farming. Most farms are   small, with the average size being only seven hectares.
 
 For further   economic and commercial information, please refer to the Country Commercial Guide for Italy.
 
         FOREIGN RELATIONSItaly was a   founding member of the European Community--now the European Union (EU). Italy   was admitted to the United Nations in 1955 and is a member and strong supporter   of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the Organization for Economic   Cooperation and Development (OECD), the General Agreement on Tariffs and   Trade/World Trade Organization (GATT/WTO), the Organization for Security and   Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), and the Council of Europe. It chaired the CSCE   (the forerunner of the OSCE) in 1994, the EU from July to December 1990, January   to June 1996, and July to December 2003, and the G-8 in 2001 and in 2009. Italy   served a two-year term on the UN Security Council in 2007-2008.
 
 Italy   firmly supports the United Nations and its international security activities.   Italy led the UN mission in Lebanon (UNIFIL) and has actively participated in   and deployed troops in support of UN peacekeeping missions in Somalia,   Mozambique, and Timor-Leste. It has provided critical support for NATO and EU   operations in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, Albania, Georgia, and Chad. Italy,   under NATO's ISAF, maintains a Provincial Reconstruction Team in the western   Afghanistan province of Herat, commands RC-West, and maintains a Carabinieri   police training center. Italy supports reconstruction and development assistance   to the Iraqi people through humanitarian workers and other officials,   particularly in Dhi Qar Province, and is a leading contributor to the NATO   Training Mission-Iraq, with approximately 100 military personnel and Carabinieri   police trainers. Currently almost 9,000 Italian troops are deployed, including   2,100 in Kosovo, 2,350 in Lebanon as part of UNIFIL, and over 2,600 in   Afghanistan.
 
 The Italian Government seeks to obtain consensus with other   European countries on various defense and security issues within the EU as well   as NATO. European integration and the development of common defense and security   policies will continue to be of primary interest to Italy.
 
 U.S.-ITALY RELATIONS
 The United States enjoys warm   and friendly relations with Italy. Italy is a leading partner in   counterterrorism efforts. The two are NATO allies and cooperate in the United   Nations, in various regional organizations, and bilaterally for peace,   prosperity, and security. Italy has worked closely with the United States and   others on such issues as NATO and UN operations as well as on assistance to   Russia and the New Independent States; Lebanon; the Middle East peace process;   multilateral talks; Somalia and Mozambique peacekeeping; and combating drug   trafficking, trafficking in women and children, and terrorism.
 
 Under   longstanding bilateral agreements flowing from NATO membership, Italy hosts   important U.S. military forces at Vicenza and Livorno (army); Aviano (air   force); and Sigonella, Gaeta, and Naples--home port for the U.S. Navy Sixth   Fleet. The United States has about 13,000 military personnel stationed in Italy.   Italy hosts the NATO Defense College in Rome.
 
 Italy remains a strong and   active transatlantic partner which, along with the United States, has sought to   foster democratic ideals and international cooperation in areas of strife and   civil conflict. Toward this end, the Italian Government has cooperated with the   United States in the formulation of defense, security, and peacekeeping   policies.
 
 Principal U.S. Officials
 Ambassador--David Thorne
 Deputy   Chief of Mission--Elizabeth Dibble
 Economic Affairs--George White
 Political Affairs--Barbara Leaf
 Consular Affairs--Philip Egger
 Public   Affairs--Benjamin Ziff
 Commercial Affairs--Thomas Moore
 Regional Security   Affairs--Nace Crawford
 Agricultural Section--James Dever
 Defense   Attache--CAPT Michael James
 
 Consular Posts
 Consul General,   Florence--Mary Ellen Countryman
 Consul General, Milan--Carol Perez
 Consul   General, Naples--Patrick Truhn
 
 The U.S. Embassy in Italy is located   at Via Veneto 119, Rome (tel. (39)(06) 46741.
 
 TRAVEL AND BUSINESS INFORMATION
 The U.S. Department of   State's Consular Information Program advises Americans traveling and residing   abroad through Country Specific Information, Travel Alerts, and Travel Warnings. Country Specific Information exists for all countries and includes   information on entry and exit requirements, currency regulations, health   conditions, safety and security, crime, political disturbances, and the   addresses of the U.S. embassies and consulates abroad. Travel Alerts are   issued to disseminate information quickly about terrorist threats and other   relatively short-term conditions overseas that pose significant risks to the   security of American travelers. Travel Warnings are issued when the State   Department recommends that Americans avoid travel to a certain country because   the situation is dangerous or unstable.
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