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North Korean travel ban marks return to Cold War-era restrictions on US citizens abroad

July 22, 2017 by  
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American student Otto Warmbier in Pyongyang, North Korea, on March 16, 2016. (Jon Chol Jin/AP)

U.S. citizens have long been able to visit North Korea as tourists, but that will soon change. On Friday, the Trump administration announced that it was planning to bar U.S. tourists from traveling to North Korea next month.

The move coincides with increasing tension between the Trump administration and Pyongyang about North Korea’s nuclear weapons program. It also comes after Otto Warmbier, an American student, was detained while on a trip to North Korea and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor.

Warmbier later died, just six days after being released, in a comatose state, and flown to Ohio.

The decision to ban travel by U.S. citizens to a foreign country marks an unusual policy shift for the State Department, harking back to restrictions on travel not widely used since the Cold War era.

Though the State Department routinely issues alerts and warnings about travel to certain countries (a warning is currently in place for North Korea), these serve only as recommendations and do not bar travel. And while U.S. nationals may in some cases find themselves barred from certain countries, that is generally the decision of a foreign government rather than the State Department.

“The safety and security of U.S. citizens overseas is one of our highest priorities,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said late Friday morning as the ban was announced. “Due to mounting concerns over the serious risk of arrest and long-term detention under North Korea’s system of law enforcement, [Secretary of State Rex Tillerson] has authorized a Geographical Travel Restriction on all U.S. citizen nationals’ use of a passport to travel in, through, or to North Korea.”

Peter Spiro, the Charles Weiner chair in international law at Temple University, said such a policy would be a revival of “area restrictions” that were common during the mid-20th century.

“At various points, Americans were barred from traveling to various communist countries during the Cold War,” Spiro said in an email, noting that the practice went back as far as the 1920s.

These restrictions were noted explicitly on the passports themselves. A passport issued in 1954 to Jacqueline Kennedy, later the first lady, shows a page noting that the passport was not to be used for travel to “Albania, Bulgaria, China, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Romania or the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,” for example.

The logic behind these bans was varied. Sometimes they were used to restrict travel to a country after U.S. citizens were captured or detained there, such as after the Iran hostage crisis between 1979 and 1981 or the kidnappings of Americans in Lebanon during the late 1980s.

Such restrictions were last implemented against countries in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and none of those bans remain in place. The U.S. government appears to have moved away from State Department-ordered travel bans and instead used the Treasury Department to restrict tourism-related transactions in foreign countries (most notably Cuba).

Spiro argued that a return to the use of travel bans would have legal standing, however. “The Supreme Court found the secretary of state to have the power to impose these restrictions in its 1965 decision in Zemel v. Rusk,” Spiro wrote. “In that case, the court rejected a First Amendment challenge to an area restriction (a ban on travel to Cuba) and also rejected the assertion of a constitutional right to international travel.”

Though Spiro said he expected any ban on U.S. travel to North Korea to face legal challenges, he said he thought the legal precedent would allow the ban to stick.

What was less clear, however, was how the law would work practically. Even when area restrictions were more widely used, legal experts argued that they were very difficult to enforce. State Department area restrictions on Iran were undermined when Ramsey Clark, a former attorney general, traveled to Tehran in 1980 in a bid to help defuse the ongoing hostage crisis. The Justice Department ultimately decided not to prosecute Clark, in part because of legal uncertainty about the outcome.

There are no direct connections between the United States and North Korea, with most travelers instead going through China to reach the country. Matthew Bradley, regional security director for the Americas at the travel safety firm International SOS and Control Risks, said he imagined that tourists who went to China or other neighboring countries would have their passports flagged before they reached U.S. immigration officers.

“They’ll be looking for indications that you were in the country you said you were in,” Bradley said in a phone call, adding that he would expect “pretty strict enforcement for the first six months to a year” after the new rules took effect. Even considering the threat of  prosecution, he said it was likely that U.S. citizens would still try to visit North Korea. “It’s very difficult to remove the incentive,” Bradley said. “There will still be people who risk it.”

Instead, Bradley said, it would probably be the companies that organize trips to North Korea for foreigners that respond. Two of these companies, Koryo Tours and Young Pioneer Tours, have issued statements acknowledging the new rules. (Young Pioneer Tours had already announced that it would no longer take Americans to North Korea after Warmbier’s death.)

Bradley added that, ultimately, the biggest responsibility lies with tourists — and his company has long advised against U.S. citizens traveling to North Korea.

“The risk is that the government will seize you. And the reasons that they might seize you are arbitrary,” he said. “And when the risk cannot be mitigated through conventional means, it has to be avoided.”

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During ‘Made in America Week,’ President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club applies to hire 70 foreign workers

July 21, 2017 by  
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President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla. (Alex Brandon/Associated Press)

President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida has asked permission to hire 70 foreign workers this fall, attesting — in the middle of the White House’s “Made in America Week” — that it cannot find qualified Americans to serve as cooks, waiters and housekeepers.

Those requests were made to the Department of Labor in recent days and posted online Thursday. The for-profit club, where Trump spent numerous weekends this spring, asked permission to hire 15 housekeepers, 20 cooks and 35 waiters.

In addition, Trump’s golf club in nearby Jupiter, Fla. asked permission to hire six foreign workers as cooks. The applications to the Department of Labor are a first step in the process of applying for H-2B visas, which would allow the clubs to bring in foreigners for temporary work between October and next May.

The applications were first reported Thursday by BuzzFeed News.

Earlier this week, the Trump administration said it would expand the number of H-2B visas available nationwide this year by 15,000, using power granted by Congress to go beyond the statutory cap of 66,000 per year. This category of visas are given to foreign workers filling temporary jobs outside the agriculture industry, in fields like construction, fishing and tourism.

Mar-a-Lago is open only during Palm Beach’s ritzy winter “season,” when the club’s wealthy members arrive from colder climes and the ballrooms are used for charity galas. It has applied for H-2B visas in past years, although this year’s request is slightly larger than the one in 2016. That year, Trump’s club asked for 64 workers: This year, he is asking for one more cook and five more waiters.

Now, the Labor Department — which reports to Trump — must make decisions that will affect two for-profit business that the president still owns.

The next step, a Department of Labor spokesman said, is that the two clubs must take steps to try to recruit American workers for these jobs. That often involves placing help-wanted ads in local newspapers and contacting former workers. If those efforts are unsuccessful, then Trump’s clubs can ask for the Department of Labor to certify that it has tried and failed to hire Americans. After that, the Trump clubs can ask the Department of Homeland Security to issue visas for workers it has found in other countries.

The Department of Labor did not respond to a question about how it would avoid a conflict of interest in considering these requests from the president’s businesses.

Trump built his campaign last year in part on an appeal to American workers angry that their jobs had been taken by immigrants or laborers overseas. In his inaugural address, Trump said that under his leadership the country would “follow two simple rules: buy American, and hire American.”

And this week, Trump has celebrated American companies and American labor, including an event at the White House where the president climbed into the cab of an American-made firetruck. In a proclamation Monday, Trump said he called “upon Americans to pay special tribute to the builders, to the ranchers, to the crafters, and to all those who work every day to make America great.”

Earlier this year, the Trump Winery near Charlottesville, Va., applied for visas to hire 23 foreign workers under a different visa program meant for farm workers.

The Trump Organization did not respond to questions sent by email on Thursday afternoon, asking why American workers could not be found to fill these jobs — and if the company had made any extra efforts this year, in light of Trump’s calls to hire American workers.

The Secret Service did not respond to a query asking whether it would have a role in vetting any foreign laborers hired to work in a club that serves, at times, as the president’s home.

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