The Middle East Institute said it has collected, verified and mapped information on over 1,200 Taliban leaders and officials. According to its findings, 67 individuals are currently subject to international sanctions.
Most cabinet members are sanctioned, highlighting the Taliban’s deep isolation within the international community.
These sanctions have been imposed by the United Nations, the United States, the United Kingdom, France, the European Union and other major actors.
Among the Taliban’s 33 cabinet members, between 13 and 14 are listed under UN sanctions, according to the latest updates by the UN Security Council’s 1988 Sanctions Committee in March and April 2026.
Those listed include Prime Minister Mohammad Hassan Akhund, Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs Abdul Ghani Baradar, deputy prime minister for administrative affairs Abdul Salam Hanafi, Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani, Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, and several other ministers overseeing energy, mines, economy, justice and transport.
UN sanctions against the Taliban stem from Security Council resolutions 1267 (1999) and 1988 (2011), and include asset freezes, travel bans and arms embargoes.
The current UN sanctions list includes 135 individuals and five entities linked to the Taliban.
The main criterion for listing is association with the Taliban and posing a threat to peace, stability and security in Afghanistan. The sanctions committee regularly updates entries, with information on 26 Taliban officials revised in recent months.
The European Union and the United Kingdom largely align their sanctions with the UN list, with the EU also targeting 135 individuals and five entities under its restrictive measures.
The UK enforces the same UN-based sanctions and coordinates travel exemptions for certain officials with the 1988 Committee.
The United States has imposed broader and stricter sanctions, designating the Taliban under its Specially Designated Global Terrorist programme and listing the Haqqani network as a Foreign Terrorist Organization.
Reports indicate that more than half of the Taliban cabinet is subject to US terrorism-related sanctions.
US measures include asset freezes, bans on transactions involving US citizens and companies, and the risk of secondary sanctions for foreign banks and firms.
Other countries, including Canada, Australia, France and several European states, have also imposed coordinated or independent sanctions on the Taliban and its officials.
For example, Australia sanctioned four senior Taliban officials in December 2025 over violations of women’s rights and broader human rights abuses.
Canada has also implemented additional human rights sanctions against Taliban officials alongside its UN-aligned measures.