The Government
Accountability Office's (GAO) September 7 report, "Stronger Action
Needed to Access and Mitigate Risks in the Visa Waiver Program,"
makes the case that the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) is essential to
facilitating legitimate travel and commerce and combating
terrorism, immigration violations, and other criminal activity. The
Bush Administration should move quickly to implement the report's
recommendations. In addition, the Administration and Congress
should expand the program to bring more like-minded nations into a
secure regime that makes traveling between free nations faster and
easier and helps impede the travel of terrorists and criminals.
A Timely Report
The VWP allows
most visitors from 27 partner nations participating in the
program to enter the United States for up to 90 days without a visa
if they have valid passports from their countries. The program can
be an effective way of both facilitating travel and frustrating the
efforts of terrorists seeking to enter the United States.
House Judiciary
Committee Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner, Jr. (R-Wis.), who
requested the GAO study, concluded in a press release, "While I'm
generally pleased with the high standard the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) has applied to VWP countries' compliance, this
report highlights actions necessary to mitigate security risks for
travelers entering the U.S. under the program." He also pointed out
why the program is essential. According to Sensenbrenner, "The VWP
has numerous benefits, including allowing resources to be better
utilized and saving U.S. taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars
a year by avoiding the costs of visa processing for roughly 15
million people. The VWP also enhances our economy and U.S. jobs by
encouraging travel and tourism to the U.S."
The GAO report
argues for providing more resources to the office responsible for
monitoring the VWP and strengthening reporting requirements of lost
and stolen passports for other countries. DHS should prioritize
these initiatives.
Expanding Visa
Program
Congress and the
Administration should also work to expand the VWP. Indeed,
expansion could be an important tool for prompting security
advances, such as the improvement of lost and stolen passport
reporting. Countries wishing to join the VWP should have to agree
to
- More stringent
procedures for reporting lost and stolen passports;
- Robust agreements
for the sharing of information on travelers, without
restrictions on the use of shared information for legitimate
anti-terrorism purposes;
- Cooperation in
investigations and return of immigration law violators;
and
- Acceptance of
U.S. "safe harbor" privacy principles as the basis for sharing
counterterrorism-related information with law enforcement and
intelligence agencies.
If a country
wishing to join the VWP agrees to these provisions, participating
nations would have to accept them or risk losing their VWP status.
Expanding the program would encourage all nations in the program to
adapt better security practices.
James Jay Carafano,
Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow for National Security and
Homeland Security in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for
Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom
Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage
Foundation.