FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - Nonessential travel w/ family SFO>MUC>NCE on July 20 - problems with this itinerary?
Old Jun 3, 2021 | 1:57 pm
  #11  
wearble
10 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 39
Originally Posted by Phrastus
My understanding is that President Biden will be in Europe next week. I'd bet a dollar or two that there will be _something_ regarding international travel inserted into the joint press release that will be issued after the meetings conclude. If you and your family can wait until next week, at a minimum you can take the temperature of the joint statement and divine what travel will look like next month from that. Before that time, though, it's literally hope and guesswork. Not that there's anything wrong with having hope... it's better than the alternative!
Thanks! Hopefully so! It's still seems uncertain, as reflected in today's article from The Connexion:
For now, non-essential travel between France and the US is restricted, and a White House spokesman said late last month “there were no changes in [its] travel restrictions planned at the moment”, even for vaccinated Europeans.

It is hoped the US stance will change as the health situation across Europe improves. "I hope the US will soon reciprocate and open its borders safely to European travellers," the EU's ambassador to Washington, Stavros Lambrinidis tweeted recently.

For many Americans, the imminent reopening of Europe’s borders to vaccinated Americans is a “relief”, according to political scientist Célia Belin, a visiting fellow at the Center on the United States and Europe at Brookings.

“For Americans who have been banned from Europe for 15 months, this is a relief. Not only will the beaches of the Mediterranean be accessible to them, but they will also be able to freely find their loved ones,” Ms Brun told Le Monde this week.

The majority of travellers from the US have been banned from entering much of Europe since March 17, 2020, when EU leaders imposed strict travel restrictions to limit the spread of Covid. Those restrictions were extended until July 1, 2020, when the EU began welcoming back travellers from a short list of approved countries. The US was never put on the list.

When France reopens its borders to vaccinated travellers from the US, they will have to provide proof of vaccination.

The United States is studying "very carefully" the possibility of establishing a vaccination passport for international travel, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said.

And France is expected to demand reciprocity on border reopening, according to Clément Beaune, French junior minister for European Affairs.

"It is a question of fairness and common sense. Europeans would not understand that we allow American tourists or others to travel here and that we do not have the right to go there," he told France 2 in May.

But there is some mixed messaging. "We did not demand reciprocity when we declared our territory open to certain nationals. In general, all over the world, the health situation differs, so it is complicated to set up reciprocity,”France's junior minister for Tourism, Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne later said.



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