Monday, April 23, 2018

Frustrated Visa

From MSN:
"Frustrated at visa holdup, Russians turn their backs on America"

Russians wanting a glimpse of the American dream now have to wait. Or not go at all. Escalating tensions between Moscow and Washington are putting a damper on Russians’ vacation plans, catching ordinary people in diplomatic crosswires that have a distinct Cold War flavor. A year ago, obtaining a U.S. tourist visa could take under a week. Now, it comes with an eight-month delay.  “I am waiting for a miracle to happen. Maybe tomorrow Russia and the United States will decide they are friends, all staff will come back to the embassy, and I’ll get my visa,” said Mohamed Torky, who is the executive chef of a Holiday Inn in northern Moscow.  Torky had planned a July vacation to the United States, to see the fabled Las Vegas and eat steaks in Texas. He even thought of fulfilling his childhood dream of driving a Ford Mustang through America’s highways. But instead he’ll be vacationing in nearby Georgia, or Egypt. The 32-year-old is furious. “Putin doesn’t suffer,  Trump doesn’t suffer, but people like me suffer,” he said, referring to the Russian and American presidents. Since last month’s expulsion of 60 U.S. diplomats, and the closure of the U.S. consulate in St. Petersburg, part of the latest tit-for-tat in the standoff between Moscow and the West, the next available visa appointment at the U.S. embassy in Moscow is in 250 days’ time. The diplomats were kicked out after Britain and its allies expelled over 150 Russians from embassies for the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal, which Moscow denies. Last week, Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, described relations with the West as worse  than during the days of the Cold War.  The visa debacle has spilled into the public, leading Moscow and Washington to trade fresh barbs last week. The Kremlin accused the United States of denying visa appointments for crew members of Aeroflot, Russia’s flagship carrier and the only airline with direct flights to the United States. A State Department official dismissed the claims as “unhelpful and simply false. Two dancers from Moscow’s famed Bolshoi Theater, including a prima ballerina, had their visas rejected at the last minute, before a scheduled performance in New York. The Russian foreign ministry pointed the blame squarely at the United States on Saturday, for “trying to put up a visa wall,” making “our citizens’ visits to the U.S. virtually impossible… Such things did not happen even during the Cold War.” The U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services, which oversees performer visas, said it does not comment on specific cases, citing privacy concerns.  Avoiding the daunting 250-day wait, hundreds of Russians have been flooding neighboring, former Soviet countries such as Latvia in recent weeks, hoping to take advantage of U.S. embassies whose host country is not sparring with Washington. A cottage industry of  “wine and visa” tours has even sprung up in the Caucasus, where visa-seekers can wait out the processing time by sipping their way through Georgian vineyards.  But not all Russians have the time, or can afford, an additional holiday in a nearby country in their quest to get an American visa, and the actual numbers of Russians visiting the United States has plummeted. “Now the outflow of tourists is much lower, it’s practically none,” said Maya Lomidze, spokeswoman for Russia’s Association of Tour Operators. For Torky and others  who have applied for a visa but given up on the wait,  the $160 processing fee will not be returned.  Foreign travel, which was off limits during the Soviet era, is relished by ordinary Russians,  after decades of pent-up desire. Millions visit the beaches of Thailand and Mediterranean Europe each year. But the number of Russian tourists to the United States has never been high. According to official figures, the vast majority of the 240,000 Russians who visited last year were on business or study trips. For many, the United States feels elusive, and visiting the country conjures up Hollywood-inspired fantasies.  One particularly crestfallen Russian is 27-year-old Vladislav Kovalev, who is desperately trying to make true on his dream for a fairytale wedding on a West Coast beach. The Muscovite and his girlfriend of the same age, Nastya Klyueva, want an intimate ceremony with “the beautiful rocks and sunshine” of Los Angeles. “We thought, ‘Where can we have a wedding? What kind of special place?’” said Kovalev, who works in tech, as a user experience designer and product manager at Russia’s Alfa Bank. Sporting wide-rimmed glasses and an Apple watch, he could easily be mistaken for a hipster on the other side of the Atlantic. “For us L.A. is romantic. There’s the film industry, and you’re not far from Silicon Valley. You can do trips to the film studios, and see Google and Apple.” By California law, foreigners without residency can get married in the state, and the union is recognized once it is registered in Russia.  Kovalev is now wondering how easily the couple, who have never been to the United States, could fly to Kiev for their American visas. “A wedding in Russia,” he said, “would be easy and boring.”  The Kremlin may delight as fewer of its citizens are exposed to the  wiles of Western soft power. Riding on a wave of patriotism, Putin has encouraged Russians to vacation at home. Since annexing Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, Moscow has spent considerable energy and money on revamping the peninsula, attempting to restore its Soviet-era status as the ultimate vacation spot. In a quixotic bid last week, Russia urged its citizens studying in “unfriendly countries” to return to the motherland, and trade their coveted foreign education for  one from a top Russian school.  The name of the program, called “Highly Likely Welcome Back, or It’s Time to Come Home,” sarcastically takes aim at British Prime Minister Theresa May’s assertion that Russia was “highly likely” behind the Skripal poisoning.  “In the eyes of the world, Russia has become evil… and this situation looks like a sort of cartoon or James Bond film,” said Kovalev. Even still, the young Russian is fed up with the anti-Russian attitudes rippling through the West. “If you get beaten up enough, you will begin to defend yourself, and it doesn’t matter who started it.” 

^ Maybe if ordinary Russians like the ones in this article made their own Russian Government accountable for their actions around the world (Georgia, Ukraine, Crimea, Syria, the US, the UK, etc.) then the US and Russia can return to a Détente the same as we did in the 1970s-1980s. ^





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