News

The Trump administration finalized a plan Monday to help Argentina reinstate visa-free travel for its citizens through the ...
The VWP allows visitors to the U.S., including those traveling for business, to spend up to 90 days in the country without needing to apply for a visitor visa, with some caveats. There are currently ...
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem admitted Argentina back into the Department of Homeland Security’s visa waiver ...
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is taking steps to bring Argentina back into its visa waiver program in the ...
The president received DHS Secretary Kristi Noem in Buenos Aires, illustrating the improving relations between both countries ...
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has signed a statement of intent to work towards Argentina reentering the visa ...
Argentina seems set to regain its participation in the US Visa Waiver Program, allowing holders of Argentine passports to ...
Argentina was booted from the U.S. Visa Waiver Program in 2002. Its reentry would halt tedious delays and steep fees for Argentinians hoping to head north for business and pleasure.
The Visa Waiver Program’s information-sharing requirements harness intelligence to make the U.S. safer, while making it easier for upstanding visitors to experience this great nation.
The Visa Waiver Program Enhanced Security and Reform Act would take action on both of these fronts, employing both visa refusal rates and overstay rates as eligibility criteria and reinstating the ...
The Visa Waiver Program countries in violation of the new overstay measurement are Greece, Hungary, Portugal and San Marino. They could be required to pay for public education campaigns to inform ...
Under the visa waiver program, or VWP, residents of 38 countries can visit the U.S. without a visa. Some 20 million people visited the U.S. in 2014 under the program, according to the Department ...