Blog
Harvard, Visas, and China: A Coordinated Crackdown
Last Updated:
June 2, 2025
Last Updated:
August 5, 2025
Blog
Last Updated:
June 2, 2025
Last Updated:
August 5, 2025
The Trump administration’s war on international students is escalating fast, and Harvard is caught at the center of it.
In the last two weeks, we’ve seen three major developments:
Let’s break it down.
DHS pulled Harvard’s ability to sponsor international students. If you’re an F-1 student on OPT or STEM OPT through Harvard, that puts your status at serious risk.
A federal judge stepped in with a temporary restraining order, blocking DHS from enforcing the SEVIS termination — for now. That pause is important, but it’s not permanent.
If you’re on OPT through Harvard, this still matters:
The State Department sent a cable ordering consular officers to apply extra scrutiny to anyone applying for a U.S. visa tied to Harvard. Not just students. Faculty, contractors, guest speakers, tourists, which means if you're connected to Harvard, you're flagged.
Consular officers were told to:
This isn’t routine vetting. It’s ideological screening that’s being floated as a pilot for broader use across other schools.
Secretary Marco Rubio announced the government will start “aggressively”” revoking the visas of Chinese students, especially those studying in “critical fields” or with ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Harvard currently enrolls more than 1,200 students from China. Their visas are now at risk, along with over 277,000 Chinese students across the U.S.
The message from the current government is very clear: if you're from China and studying in the U.S., your status is on thin ice.
Targeting a single university with visa restrictions is not standard immigration policy. Ordering social media checks on faculty and tourists is not about public safety. Revoking thousands of student visas is not a sign of strength.
This is coordinated, political, and dangerous. It's an attempt to turn U.S. immigration law into an ideological test.
If you're a student, scholar, or university administrator, we urge you to stay alert. And if you need help figuring out what this means for your visa or your future, reach out. We're watching this closely and we’re here to support you.