May 13, 2013

Sen. Barbara Boxer’s bill would exempt Israeli visitors from visa restrictions.

(May 13, 2013 – Anaheim, CA)

The United States allows inhabitants of 37 countries to enter the United States without a visa, as long as they extend the same privilege to U.S. citizens. Sen. Barbara Boxer is proposing to add Israel to that list – but without requiring equal treatment for Americans traveling to Israel.

Instead, the legislation the California Democrat has introduced would exempt Israeli visitors from visa requirements as long as the U.S. government certifies that Israel “has made every reasonable effort, without jeopardizing the security of the state of Israel,” to admit Americans without a visa.

What that means, according to critics of the Israeli government, is that Israel can continue to exclude Americans who are either Arab or Muslim, or who belong to groups that oppose Israeli policies. Requiring a visa for visitors allows the government to bar them from entering, or to limit their activities or the length of their stay.

The legislation “would codify into American law discrimination against American citizens,” said Sydney Levy of Jewish Voice for Peace, a group that opposes Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

Read More: The San Francisco Chronicle