... Since you are going to Israel, then check with them, not the U.S. embassy.....
And such would be the "logical" answer, right? I mean, who better to ask, than the country themselves..... RIGHT?
Such was the case of Fisher Co, when they did just that for a certain country. When they fielded a question in their monthly periodical, long ago, along those lines: "Is metal detecting allowed in Mexico?" When they got his question in their Q&A column, they did just as you logically suggested ..... : Asked. And who better to ask, than a lawyer. consulate, bureaucrat representing Mexico
themselves? And the answer they got back? No. And it went on to site antiquity laws, export laws, etc... You know, like federal raiding mexican pyramaids things, exporting gold bars..... etc... I mean, afterall, you asked.
So Fisher published the answer to the inquirer. But readers in the
next issue wrote in and objected. Saying things like "
since when?" and "
where did you get this info?" and "
we go down there all the time with no problems?". Turns out, detectors are a common site on tourist beaches down there. There are dealers in the bigger cities down there (including fisher dealers, doh!). So Fisher, in their defense, explained that when they'd received the earlier inquiry, .... they ....
asked! Well I suppose that would be no different than if you were to ask enough USA bureaucrats and archies "can I detect in the USA?", you might also be told "no". Thus was my answer, comparing it to USA's ARPA (in case you were wondering).
Now, don't get "lost in the example" (yes I know that's a different country, etc...). But just saying, when someone gets such an answer (or reads that someone else got it, therefore it must be "gospel truth"), just keep in mind the "because you asked" psychology of answers that can result.