The European Union on Monday recommended that its member states re-impose travel restrictions on US tourists over rising covid-19 infections in the country.
The European Council, which represents the bloc’s 27 governments, said it was taking six territories off its list of locations exempted from restrictions on non-essential travel during the coronavirus pandemic.
“Israel, Kosovo, Lebanon, Montenegro, the Republic of North Macedonia and the United States of America were removed from the list,” a statement said.
The move is not binding on national capitals, which may yet choose to allow fully vaccinated US travellers to visit despite concerns about rising numbers of Covid cases in the country.
But most EU members have followed Brussels’ travel advice during the crisis so far.
Non-essential travel into the bloc from outside the EU and eight associated countries Iceland, Lichtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican has been restricted.
Some countries and territories, however, have been exempted from this list, but their number has been shrinking in recent months and now includes only 17 members, plus China if Beijing reciprocates.
The EU recommended its member states lift restrictions on non-essential travel from the US in June ahead of the peak of the summer tourist season.
That decision came as the US was making major strides with its vaccination programme.
Case numbers in the country have since surged as the more infectious Delta variant has spread and large swathes of the population have refused to get vaccinated.
The American airline industry condemned the latest move from Brussels, insisting it would keep talking to member states to “prioritize the safety and well-being of all travelers.