A years-old dispute over whether to impose restrictions on three Middle Eastern airlines that fly into the United States has reached a new extreme: criminal allegations.
A coalition of U.S.-based airlines and their pilot and flight attendants unions have been calling for restrictions on flights to the United States by Emirates, Etihad and Qatar airlines, saying the carriers have taken subsidies from their oil-rich governments and therefore have an unfair advantage when competing with U.S. airlines.
The Middle Eastern carriers dispute the allegations.
President Barack Obama did not show interest in putting restrictions on the Middle Eastern airlines, and neither has President Donald Trump.
Now the coalition, including United, American and Delta airlines, are taking shots at the U.S. Travel Association, the nation's largest travel trade group, which has opposed restrictions on the Middle Eastern carriers.
The coalition accused the trade group this past week of not registering to register as a lobbyist for a foreign agent because Emirates and Etihad became two of the travel association's 1,200 members this year and paid a combined $330,000 in membership fees.
"Despite claiming to represent the American travel industry, the U.S. Travel Association is promoting the interests of the United Arab Emirates by lobbying on behalf of Emirates and Etihad Airways," said Jill Zuckman, a spokeswoman for the Partnership for Open & Fair Skies, the coalition that has been critical of the Middle Eastern carriers.
A violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act, which was enacted in 1938, is punishable by a fine of up to $10,000 or by imprisonment of up to five years.
The travel group dismissed the accusation, nothing that it began opposing restrictions on the Middle Eastern carriers two years before Etihad and Emirates joined the association. The organization also said the membership fees from the two carriers represent less than 1 percent of its $33 million annual revenue.
"Their narrative doesn't add up in any way at all," travel association spokesman Jonathan Grella said.