A State Department spokesperson delivers a rare direct-to-camera appeal to Iranians, praising its people and culture while arguing Iran's leadership — not its citizens— is responsible for holding the nation back. (Credit: U.S. Department of State)
The Trump administration is using visa enforcement to target "birth tourism," an alleged scheme utilized by foreign nationals to obtain visitor visas for the primary purpose of giving birth in the U.S. and securing American citizenship for their children.
The Trump administration recently announced that it disrupted "a sophisticated birth tourism network" in West Africa involving more than 100 foreign nationals utilizing false documents and, what the State Department described as "fixers," to get themselves visas to go to the United States to give birth so their children would be born on U.S. soil and treated as American citizens.
But that was just one of the networks the State Department indicated it had uncovered. The agency's announcement said U.S. officials identified more than 400 suspected birth tourism cases emanating from Europe since 2024, and tied to at least six companies that helped coach applicants on what to say during their visa interview, arranged housing and set-up delivery plans.
"We shut it down, revoked these foreign nationals’ visas, and are coordinating with local authorities to systematically identify and cut off any similar operations," the State Department said in its announcement. "A U.S. visa is a privilege, not a right. The State Department is taking action around the world to stop this abuse, dismantle birth tourism networks, and hold accountable those who try to scam our system."
SEN. BLACKBURN TARGETS BIRTH TOURISM, 'BUYING AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP' IN SUPPORT OF TRUMP'S IMMIGRATION AGENDA
Secretary of State Marco Rubio boards his plane at Joint Base Andrews, Md., Wednesday, April 2,
