Trump administration will expand travel ban to more than 30 countries,
Noem says
[December 06, 2025]
By REBECCA SANTANA
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration will be expanding its ban on
travel for citizens of certain countries to more than 30, Homeland
Security Secretary Kristi Noem said, in the latest restriction to come
since a man from Afghanistan was accused of shooting two National Guard
members.
The expansion would build on a travel ban already announced in June by
the Republican administration, which barred travel to the U.S. for
citizens from 12 countries and restricted access to the U.S. for people
from seven others. In a social media post earlier this week, Noem had
suggested more countries would be included.
Noem, who spoke late Thursday in an interview with Fox News Channel host
Laura Ingraham, would not provide further details, saying President
Donald Trump was considering which countries would be included.
In the wake of the National Guard shooting, the administration already
ratcheted up restrictions on the 19 countries included in the initial
travel ban, which include Afghanistan, Somalia, Iran and Haiti, among
others.
Ingraham asked Noem whether the travel ban was expanding to 32 countries
and asked which countries would be added to the 19 announced earlier
this year.
“I won't be specific on the number, but it's over 30. And the president
is continuing to evaluate countries,” Noem said.

“If they don't have a stable government there, if they don't have a
country that can sustain itself and tell us who those individuals are
and help us vet them, why should we allow people from that country to
come here to the United States?” Noem said.
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The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for
comment about when an updated travel ban might go into effect and
which countries would be included in it.
Additions to the June travel ban are the latest in what has been a
rapidly unfolding series of immigration actions since the shooting
Thanksgiving week of two National Guard troops in Washington.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, who emigrated to the U.S. from Afghanistan
after the U.S. withdrawal, has been charged with first-degree murder
after one of the two victims, West Virginia National Guard
Specialist Sarah Beckstrom, died of wounds sustained in the Nov. 26
shooting. The second victim, Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, was critically
wounded. Lakanwal has pleaded not guilty.
The Trump administration has argued that more vetting is needed to
make sure people entering or already in the U.S. aren't a threat.
Critics say the administration is traumatizing people who've already
gone through extensive vetting to get to the U.S. and say the new
measures amount to collective punishment.
Over the course of a little more than a week, the administration has
halted asylum decisions, paused processing of immigration-related
benefits for people in the U.S. from the 19 travel ban countries and
halted visas for Afghans who assisted the U.S. war effort.
On Thursday, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced it
was reducing the time period that work permits are valid for certain
applicants such as refugees and people with asylum so they have to
reapply more often and go through vetting more frequently.
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