I visited Israel in August 2012 after having been in Iran in January that year.
The first immigration person I got was not happy about the Iranian visa and stamp, and seemed incredulous that I would ever want to go there. He actually said “There is nothing worth seeing in Iran”. He asked me a lot of pointed questions, and was slightly aggressive, then sent me to wait for secondary processing.
After a 30+ minute wait I was then shepherded into an office and grilled by a female IDF agent. They ask a lot of questions they don’t even know the answers to, such as where you went to school and where your grandparents were born – the point is they are looking for ‘tells’, not that they are checking the answers themselves.
If your story checks out, and they don’t think you are an activist (or terrorist!) it is highly likely that they will let you into the country. I was there for the wedding of a close friend, and they ended up calling him to verify that, and once they’d spoken that seemed to clinch it and they let me in.
The grilling was pretty full-on though – I was really freaking out, and tried to make the situation better with humor but they are too disciplined and have had their sense of humor trained out of them. At one point the girl (she was really only a girl, early 20s maybe) pointed down at my hands, which were shaking like I had Parkinsons and said, with deadpan face – “You are shaking. Why are you shaking? Are you nervous?”
To which I responded: “I guess I’m just intimidated by Israeli women”. She didn’t crack even a glimmer of a smile.
You should expect a longer and more serious security check before your departure and after your landing, including questioning about your whereabouts and activities in Iran or Kuwait. If you just visited there, this should be it – your entrance is very highly unlikely to be refused.
Unlike some other Middle Eastern countries, Israel does not ban or punish tourists who have visited certain countries in the past. This is a security measure, based on Predictive Profiling often used by Israeli air transportation security. This means that the passenger’s personal details are aggregated, and if they fit into a presumably dangerous profile, the passenger is thoroughly questioned prior to boarding. This method is based on hundreds of variables (age, nationality, purpose of travel, …), it’s arbitrary and unpredictable by nature, so nobody knows if an Iranian stamp will raise more questions than a Kuwait stamp.
Some countries (e.g. UK) will give you a second passport. This way you get all your stamps from one set of countries in one passport, and all your stamps from another set of countries in another.
I don’t think any stamps will be an issue for the Israeli authorities. They might ask about it, but don’t expect trouble if its obvious you were just visiting for holidays. It is obviously safest to check with your local Israeli embassy though.
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