U.S. suspends student visa processing in fresh swipe at foreign applicants

U.S. President Donald Trump. (Photo courtesy: Alex Wroblewski / AFP)

By Agence France-Presse

The United States’ State Department has ordered the suspension of student visa processing in the latest escalation of the Trump administration crackdown on foreign students criticized by China.

President Donald Trump’s administration is seeking unprecedented control of the universities in the U.S., taking particular aim at foreign students by revoking visas and deporting some of those involved in protests against the war in Gaza.

A cable signed Tuesday by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and seen by Agence France-Presse (AFP) orders embassies and consulates not to allow “any additional student or exchange visa… appointment capacity until further guidance is issued.”

The government plans to ramp up vetting of the social media profiles of international applicants to U.S. universities, the cable said.

Rubio earlier rescinded hundreds of visas and the Trump administration has moved to bar Harvard University from admitting non-Americans.

China’s Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Mao Ning on Wednesday said Beijing urged Washington to “safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of international students, including those from China.”

Hundreds of thousands of Chinese students attend U.S. universities, long viewed by many in China as beacons of academic freedom and rigor.

The sweeping U.S. measures have resulted in foreign governments moving to snap up affected students, with Japan and Hong Kong urging local universities to take in more international applicants.

In Taiwan, a PhD student set to study at the University of California told AFP they were left “feeling uncertain” by the visa pause.

“I understand the process may be delayed but there is still some time before the semester begins in mid-August,” said the 27-year-old student who did not want to be identified. “All I can do now is wait and hope for the best.”

People hold up signs during the Harvard Students for Freedom rally in support of international students at the Harvard University campus in Boston, Massachusetts, on Tuesday (May 27, 2025). Harvard students protested after the US government said it intends to cancel all remaining financial contracts with the university, President Donald Trump’s latest attempt to force the prestigious institution to submit to unprecedented oversight. (Photo courtesy: Rick Friedman / AFP)

Protests at Harvard

The suspension of visa processing came as Harvard students protested on Tuesday after the government said it intended to cancel all remaining financial contracts, Trump’s latest attempt to force the institution to submit to unprecedented oversight.

Trump is furious at Harvard for rejecting his administration’s push for oversight on admissions and hiring, amid the President’s claims that the school is a hotbed of anti-Semitism and “woke” liberal ideology.

A judge issued a restraining order pending a hearing on the matter scheduled for Thursday, the same day as the university’s graduation ceremony for which thousands of students and their families had gathered in Cambridge, Massachusetts near Boston.

The White House, meanwhile, doubled down on its offensive, saying that public money should go to vocational schools that train electricians and plumbers.

“The President is more interested in giving that taxpayer money to trade schools and programs and state schools where they are promoting American values, but most importantly, educating the next generation based on skills that we need in our economy and our society,” spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a televised newscast Tuesday evening. “We need more of those in our country and less LGBTQ graduate majors from Harvard University.”

Some Harvard students were worried that the Trump administration’s policies would make U.S. universities less attractive to international students.

“I don’t know if I’d pursue a PhD here, six years is a long time,” said Jack, a history of medicine student from Britain who is graduating this week and gave one name.

Harvard itself has filed extensive legal challenges against Trump’s measures, which legal experts say are likely to be overturned by the courts.

Separately, alumni plan to file a lawsuit against Trump on June 9, filmmaker Anurima Bhargava told a virtual meeting staged by Crimson Courage, a grassroots alumni group.

The cutting of Harvard’s contracts—estimated by US media to be worth $100 million—would mark the slashing of business ties between the government and the country’s oldest university.

In the last few weeks, the elite educational and research powerhouse has seen billions of dollars in federal grants frozen and millions of dollars of federal contracts torn up.

The university has sued both to block the revocation of its right to recruit and sponsor foreign students, 27 percent of its total roll, as well as to overturn the withdrawal of federal funding.

On Monday, Trump vowed he would prevail in the increasingly public struggle with Harvard, claiming that foreign students there include “radicalized lunatics, troublemakers.”

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