Internet top-level domain
Two-letter top-level domains are assigned to countries and dependencies by ICANN according to ISO country codes list ([1]).
As of 9.09.2015 249 IANA database contains 255 two-latin-letters country-code domains, including EU for Europe, SU for Soviet Union. 249 of them are online. Domains BL (Saint Barthélemy), BQ (Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba), EH (Western Sahara), MF (Saint Martin), SS (South Sudan) and UM (U.S. Minor Outlying Islands) are marked as Not assigned.
13 ISO codes are exceptionally reserved at requests of countries and organisations:
AC Ascension Island CP Clipperton Island DG Diego Garcia EA Ceuta and Melilla EU European Union EZ (European OTC derivatives) FX France, Metropolitan IC Canary Islands SU USSR TA Tristan da Cunha UK United Kingdom UN United Nations
Reserved codes AC, EU and SU are delegated as Internet TLDs. Domain UK is delegated instead of ISO code GB.
7 ISO codes are transitionally reserved for 50 years after renaming of territories or dissolution of federations:
BU Burma Reserved from 1989-12 to 2039-12. New country name: Myanmar MM NT Neutral Zone Reserved from 1993-07 to 2043-07. Divided between Iraq and Saudi Arabia IQ+SA ZR Zaire Reserved from 1997-07 to 2047-07. New country name: Congo (Kinshasa) CD TP East Timor Reserved from 2002-05 to 2052-05. New country name: Timor-Leste TL YU Yugoslavia Reserved from 2003-07 to 2053-07. New country name: Serbia and Montenegro CS CS Serbia and Montenegro Reserved from 2006-09 to 2056-09. Divided to Serbia and Montenegro RS+ME AN Netherlands Antilles Reserved from 2010-12 to 2060-12. Divided (see below) BQ+CW+SX
.AN deleted by ISO on 2010-12-15/2011-12-13 - and is still transitionally reserved to Netherlands Antilles from 2010-12 to 2060-12 (divided into: Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba - BQ - Curaçao - CW and Sint Maarten - SX).