Pak, Bhutan, Myanmar in 43 Country
Hit List on US Travel Ban
·
Draft List
for New Travel Ban Proposes Trump Target 43 Countries
A draft circulating
inside the administration lists three tiers of countries whose citizens may face
restrictions on entering the United States.
·
A draft list
of recommendations developed by diplomatic and security officials suggests a “red”
list of 11 countries whose citizens would be flatly barred from entering the United
States. They are Afghanistan, Bhutan, Cuba, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan,
Syria, Venezuela and Yemen, the officials said.
·
Citizens on
Orange list would also be subjected to mandatory in-person interviews in order to
receive a visa. It included Belarus, Eritrea, Haiti, Laos, Myanmar, Pakistan, Russia,
Sierra Leone, South Sudan and Turkmenistan.
·
Trump
gave the department 60 days to finish a report for the White House with that list,
meaning it is due next week.
·
The
Trump administration this past week said it had cancelled the green card of a Syrian-born former Columbia University
graduate student of Palestinian descent, Mahmoud Khalil, because he had led high-profile campus protests
against Israel’s war in Gaza.
·
Bhutan, for
example, was proposed for an absolute ban on entry. The small Buddhist and Hindu
country is sandwiched between China and India, neither of which were on any of the
draft lists.
·
A draft “yellow”
list of 22 countries that would be given 60 days to clear up perceived deficiencies,
with the threat of being moved onto one of the other lists if they did not comply.
·
That list,
the officials said, included Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cambodia,
Cameroon, Cape Verde, Chad, the Republic of Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo,
Dominica, Equatorial Guinea, Gambia, Liberia, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, St. Kitts
and Nevis, St. Lucia, São Tomé and Príncipe, Vanuatu and Zimbabwe.
·
Joseph R. Biden
Jr. issued a proclamation revoking Mr. Trump’s travel bans, calling them “a stain on our national conscience”
and “inconsistent with our long history of welcoming people of all faiths and no
faith at all.
[ABS News Service/15.03.2025]
The Trump administration
is considering targeting the citizens of as many as 43 countries as part of a new
ban on travel to the United States that would be broader than the restrictions imposed
during President Trump’s first term, according to officials familiar with the matter.
The officials,
who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive internal deliberations,
cautioned that the list had been developed by the State Department several weeks
ago, and that changes were likely by the time it reached the White House.
Officials at
embassies and in regional bureaus at the State Department, and security specialists
at other departments and intelligence agencies, have been reviewing the draft. They
are providing comment about whether descriptions of deficiencies in particular countries
are accurate or whether there are policy reasons — like not risking disruption to
cooperation on some other priority — to reconsider including some.
The draft proposal
also included an “orange” list of 10 countries for which travel would be restricted
but not cut off. In those cases, affluent business travelers
might be allowed to enter, but not people traveling on immigrant or tourist visas.
When he took
office on Jan. 20, Mr. Trump issued an executive order requiring the State Department to identify
countries “for which vetting and screening information is so deficient as to warrant
a partial or full suspension on the admission of nationals from those countries.”
Trump
gave the department 60 days to finish a report for the White House with that list,
meaning it is due next week. The
State Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs has taken the lead, and the order
said the Justice and Homeland Security Departments and the Office of the Director
of National Intelligence were to assist with the effort.
Spokespeople
at several agencies declined to comment or did not respond to a request for comment.
But the State Department previously said it was following Mr. Trump’s order and
was “committed to protecting our nation and its citizens by upholding the highest
standards of national security and public safety through our visa process,” while
declining to specifically discuss internal deliberations.
The
Times and other news outlets reported this month that Afghanistan, which was not part of Mr.
Trump’s first-term travel bans but fell to the Taliban when the U.S. withdrew its
forces in 2021, was likely to be part of the second-term ban. But the other countries
under consideration had been unclear.
It is also
not clear whether people with existing visas would be exempted from the ban, or
if their visas would be canceled. Nor is it clear whether
the administration intends to exempt existing green card holders, who are already
approved for lawful permanent residency.
The
Trump administration this past week said it had canceled the green card of a Syrian-born former
Columbia University graduate student of Palestinian descent, Mahmoud
Khalil, because he had led high-profile campus protests against Israel’s war in
Gaza that the government says
were antisemitic, setting off a court fight over the
legality of that move.
Some of the
countries on the draft red and orange lists were sanctioned by Mr. Trump in his
first-term travel bans, but many are new. Some share characteristics with the earlier
lists — they are generally Muslim-majority or otherwise nonwhite,
poor and have governments that are considered weak or corrupt.
But the reason
several others were included was not immediately clear. Bhutan,
for example, was proposed for an absolute ban on entry. The small Buddhist and Hindu
country is sandwiched between China and India, neither of which were on any of the
draft lists.
The proposal
to sharply restrict, if not outright ban, visitors from Russia raises a different
issue. While the Russian government has a reputation for corruption, Mr. Trump has
been trying to reorient U.S. foreign policy in a more Russia-friendly direction.
A decision
to include Venezuela could also disrupt a nascent thaw in relations that has been
useful to Mr. Trump’s separate efforts to deport undocumented migrants.
The proposal
also includes a draft “yellow” list of 22 countries that
would be given 60 days to clear up perceived deficiencies, with the threat of being
moved onto one of the other lists if they did not comply.
Such issues
could include failing to share with the United States information about incoming
travelers, purportedly inadequate security practices for
issuing passports, or the selling of citizenship to people from banned countries,
which could serve as a loophole around the restrictions.
During Mr.
Trump’s first term, courts blocked the government from enforcing the first two versions
of his travel ban, but the Supreme
Court eventually permitted
a rewritten ban — one that banned citizens from eight nations, six of them predominantly
Muslim — to take effect. The list later evolved.
Soon after
he became president in January 2021, Joseph R. Biden Jr.
issued a proclamation revoking
Mr. Trump’s travel bans, calling them “a stain on our national conscience”
and “inconsistent with our long history of welcoming people of all faiths and no
faith at all.”
Mr. Trump’s
executive order in January said he would revive the bans in order to protect American
citizens “from aliens who intend to commit terrorist attacks, threaten our national
security, espouse hateful ideology or otherwise exploit the immigration laws for
malevolent purposes.”