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Trump's war on academia: How US is driving out world's brightest minds

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The Trump administration’s sweeping move to screen immigrants and visa applicants for "antisemitic" activity on social media has triggered outrage among rights groups, universities, and legal experts. Effective immediately, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will now consider online speech critical of Israel—or construed as support for groups like Hamas or Hezbollah—as grounds to deny visas, green cards, and other immigration benefits.

“There is no room in the United States for the rest of the world’s terrorist sympathizers,” said DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin.


This initiative comes amid a broader Trump-era campaign to silence pro-Palestinian dissent, punish elite universities, and remake higher education through government pressure, funding cuts, and deportations.


Why it matters

At stake is far more than immigration vetting. Trump’s crackdown signals a redefinition of what kind of speech—and what kind of people—are welcome in America. For the nearly 1 million international students in the US, especially those from Muslim-majority countries or involved in campus activism, it marks a chilling new era.

The policy has already led to:

  • Visa revocations without warning
  • Deportations of student protest leaders, even green card holders
  • Federal funding threats to universities perceived as insufficiently supportive of the administration’s narrative

“By surveilling visa and green card holders and targeting them based on nothing more than their protected expression, the administration trades America's commitment to free and open discourse for fear and silence,” said FIRE (Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression).

The big picture: Academia in the crosshairs

President Donald Trump ’s actions are not just about immigration. They reflect a deeper ambition: To dismantle the existing academic order, particularly elite universities like Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia, which the right increasingly sees as ideological adversaries.

“This is an economic revolution and we will win,” Trump has said, drawing parallels to revolutionary strategies of the past.

This “campus counter-revolution,” as described by the Economist, seeks to punish universities for perceived liberal bias and reshuffle the cultural institutions that mold American elites. Over $1 billion in federal grants have already been canceled or frozen for schools like Princeton and Cornell following public criticisms of the administration.

The campaign’s methods include:

  • Arresting foreign students involved in pro-Palestinian protests
  • Threatening to raise taxes on university endowments from 1.4% to 35% (proposed by JD Vance)
  • Revoking SEVIS records and cancelling F-1 visas without due process

This isn't just cultural backlash—it’s systemic. And it’s working. Columbia University has gone through three presidents in one year. Harvard is quietly overhauling its Middle East studies leadership. The message to universities: Fall in line or face financial extinction.

The big picture

The crackdown is part of a broader campaign under President Donald Trump to reshape US immigration and foreign policy through a national security lens. Since early March, the administration has:

  • Revoked over 300 visas—often without clear explanations.
  • Detained international students, including permanent residents, for political expression.
  • Issued warnings to universities over federal funding linked to campus protests.
  • Reinstated mass surveillance measures, including tracking social media activity.

Among the high-profile cases:

Mahmoud Khalil, a permanent resident and Columbia University graduate, was detained in Louisiana ahead of deportation for his role in Gaza-related protests.

Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish PhD student at Tufts University, had her visa canceled after co-authoring a pro-Palestinian op-ed.

Xiaotian Liu, a Dartmouth student, won a temporary legal victory when a federal court restored his F-1 status after it was revoked without due process.

“This administration is targeting immigrants in the name of fighting antisemitism, treating it as an imported problem,” said the Nexus Project, a group that combats antisemitism.

Defund and discipline: The Trump playbook

As per an Economist report, every university president in America dreads “the letter.” The first shot came on March 13th, when the government withheld $400 million in grants from Columbia University and issued a list of demands: expel certain student protesters, overhaul admissions, and hand over the Middle Eastern studies department. Columbia folded quickly. The interim president resigned within a week. Chris Rufo, a leading conservative activist, called it “almost unbelievable how weak, feckless, and pathetic these folks have been.”

More universities are being squeezed. On March 19th, Princeton’s president warned that the administration’s actions were “the greatest threat to the American universities since the Red Scare of the 1950s.” That might understate the pressure: Princeton soon had $210 million in research grants suspended. Harvard received a letter threatening $9 billion in funding unless it dismantled its DEI programs and restructured departments tied to “antisemitic harassment.” This week, $1 billion was frozen for Cornell, and $790 million for Northwestern, the Economist report said.

Indian students rethink the American dream

India sends more students to the US than any other country—over 531,000 in 2024 alone, per the US Consulate in Mumbai. But Trump’s immigration policies are increasingly turning that dream into a nightmare.

Cases of arbitrary visa revocations and deportation orders are rising:

  • One Hyderabad student is under threat for a two-year-old traffic violation
  • Another is being stripped of status for an alleged shoplifting offense.

According to global education platform StudyPortals, interest in US graduate programs has plummeted 42% in 2025. Students are instead eyeing Canada, the UK, and Australia—countries perceived as more stable and welcoming.

And the timing couldn’t be worse. US universities rely on international students not just for tuition, but also as a vital workforce in research and STEM fields. Nearly 70% of STEM PhD graduates stay in the US, contributing to innovation and economic growth.

What they’re saying

Universities are beginning to fight back—cautiously. A coalition led by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and supported by 80+ institutions including Rutgers and Georgetown, filed an amicus brief warning that Trump’s policies threaten the very foundation of American academia.

“The government’s actions have disrupted lives, threatened institutional safety, and compromised academic freedom,” said Miriam Feldblum, president of the Presidents’ Alliance.

But they face a paradox: Resisting the administration’s pressure may mean sacrificing federal funding. Harvard, with its endowment rivaling the sovereign wealth fund of Oman, might survive. Others won’t.

“If even the Ivies cannot stand up to bullying, there is not much hope for elite public universities,” the Economist notes.

The deeper danger is that the compact between academia and government—the deal that enabled the internet, mRNA vaccines, and artificial intelligence—could unravel. That deal has long rested on the understanding that free inquiry, not political loyalty, fuels American innovation.

“The free university,” warned Dwight Eisenhower in 1961, “has been the fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery.” Today, that foundation is cracking.

Zoom out

The US’s struggle to balance open academic exchange with national security isn’t new—but it’s reaching a breaking point.

Since 9/11, international students have increasingly been seen through a lens of suspicion. Trump’s first term saw the “Muslim ban,” mass visa cancellations for Chinese STEM students, and attempts to cancel post-graduation work permits. Even under President Biden, anti-espionage efforts targeting Chinese students continued until civil liberties groups pushed back.

What makes the current crackdown especially controversial is its intensity—and its vagueness.

The Trump administration justifies its actions under the guise of fighting antisemitism. But critics argue it applies a selective lens—suppressing criticism of Israeli policy while tolerating or amplifying other forms of radical expression.

“You can complain about cancel culture and then cheer the deportation of a student for writing an op-ed,” noted the Economist. “This isn’t about speech—it’s about control.”


What’s next

The backlash is growing. Legal battles are spreading across federal courts. The ACLU recently won a temporary injunction reinstating Dartmouth student Xiaotian Liu’s F-1 visa. More lawsuits are expected, with potential class actions on the horizon.

Yet the administration is doubling down. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said visa cancellations will continue “on a daily basis.” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has declared that First Amendment protections won’t apply to foreign nationals who “support terrorist violence.”

The consequence? A slow but measurable erosion of US academic stature. Universities are losing talent. Campuses are silencing themselves. The world's brightest minds are turning away.

(With inputs from agencies)

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