Last week, US educators were shocked by secretary of state Marco Rubio’s announcement that he would “aggressively revoke” visas for Chinese students and enhance scrutiny of future visa applications for students from China and Hong Kong.
Rubio’s statement – released on May 28 and comprising two sentences – said the revocations would include “those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party” and those studying in “critical fields”.
In a State Department briefing the next day, federal official Tammy Bruce stated that the US “will not tolerate the CCP’s exploitation of US universities or [the] theft of US research, intellectual property, or technologies to grow its military power”.
Framing the policy as a national security issue, Bruce said the department was “determined” to “counter the malign influence and actions of the CCP” but provided little detail about how the revocations would be determined or how many students could be targeted.
“I have no idea what the numbers would be,” said Bruce, at pains to convey that student visa vetting was not a “one-time process” but a continuous exercise.
And for the 277,000 Chinese students in the US? Bruce’s message was clear: “We are taking our national security very seriously”.
Rubio’s statement rightfully alarmed stakeholders, students and Chinese parents, with the move almost certain to have an impact on yield for the upcoming year, Sunrise International COO David Weeks told The PIE News at the NAFSA conference 2025.
According to BONARD’s China branch director Grace Zhu: “The recent wave of policies targeting international students, especially Chinese students, has heightened anxiety among current and prospective students, many are now considering transferring to other destinations”.
What’s more, the announcement comes at a time when families’ confidence in the US is spiralling amid trade tensions, attacks on Harvard and warnings from the Chinese government, said Mingze Sang, director of China’s association of education agencies, BOSSA.
According to BOSSA members, Chinese students are mitigating risks by applying to other countries alongside the US, worried about the political environment as well as increased costs.
As such, Rubio’s statement must be considered within the wider geopolitical context, with Zhu suggesting that restricting Chinese student visas – or so far only threatening to – could be a “tactic” to gain leverage in tariff negotiations.
The US policy of revoking visas for Chinese students is not an isolated incident, it is closely tied to the US-China tariff war and broader strategic competition
Grace Zhu, BONARD
“I look at the announcement, the level of detail and the verbiage, and I can’t help but come away from it with the idea that this is a press release flex seemingly tough on foreign influence,” said Weeks.
“The cynic in me thinks there’s going to be a lot of bark but not much bite,” he added.
What’s more, the timing of the announcement, coming just after a federal court temporarily blocked most of Trump’s China tariffs, lead NAFSA conference delegates to speculate that the statement could have been primarily intended for domestic political consumption.
“It’s fair to believe that the US policy of revoking visas for Chinese students is not an isolated incident, it is closely tied to the US-China tariff war and broader strategic competition,” said Zhu, adding that she was adopting a “wait-and-see” approach while maintaining close communication with industry and students.
While Beijing’s embassy in Washington called Rubio’s announcement a “politically motivated and discriminatory move” that “exposes US hypocrisy”, Weeks said it would go against China’s interest to issue an aggressive response.
“Chinese state media is controlled by the party and China is very interested in preserving the flow of international students from the US to China,” said Weeks.
“So, to talk in apocalyptic terms about the Rubio announcement would almost necessitate a reciprocal response that would undermine their own policy,” he continued, referring to President Xi’s goal of attracting 50,000 US students to China by 2030.
And yet, given the unpredictability of the current administration, the announcement’s vague language is causing concern in the US, with stakeholders speculating about what programs could be deemed “critical fields”.
When asked for further clarity at NAFSA conference 2025, State Department officials told The PIE they had been receiving updates at the same time as the media.
According to Zhu, many believe the policy will largely target Chinese students in STEM disciplines, who make up roughly 16% of US STEM graduates.
As for identifying students “with connections to the Chinese Communist Party” – whose stated membership totalled 99 million last year – the State Department has not detailed what the scope could be.
Furthermore, with Communist Youth League divisions in every department and every university across China, it is unclear whether there will be objective standards for affiliation with the CCP and what these could look like.
The cynic in me thinks there’s going to be a lot of bark but not much bite
David Weeks, Sunrise International
Amid the uncertainty, sector leaders are demanding greater government transparency. In a letter from the American Council on Education (ACE) and 38 co-signatories, the coalition urged Rubio to share additional information about the policy as soon as possible, adding it was “alarmed” by the proposal to revoke the visas od Chinese students who have already been vetted in the US.
Far from an isolated incident, Rubio’s announcement forms part of the administration’s broader attack on international higher education, typified in its feud with Harvard, where the university’s alleged “collaboration” with China has taken centre-stage.
Trump’s June 4 proclamation blocking visas for Harvard students accused the university of receiving $150m in funding from China, “repeatedly hosting and training members of a Chinese Communist Party paramilitary organisation” and collaborating with researchers connected to the military.
The order, which Harvard has called “illegal”, comes days after Yurong “Luanna” Jiang became the first Chinese woman selected to be the student speaker at a Harvard graduation ceremony.
During the speech – which has gone viral on social media – Jiang emphasised our “shared humanity”.
“If we still believe in a shared future, let us not forget: those we label as enemies – they, too, are human. In seeing their humanity, we find our own,” she said.
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