Harvard’s beautiful relationship with China has become a liability
3 min read
On Thursday, President Donald Trump’s administration ordered the revocation of Harvard University’s authorization to enroll foreign students, accusing the school of collaborating with the Chinese Communist Party and fueling antisemitic rhetoric on campus. The university said about 20% of its foreign students in 2024 were from China, which directly placed the elite school at the center of Washington’s growing fight with Beijing. The decision was temporarily halted on Friday after a federal judge blocked the order following a lawsuit filed by the Cambridge-based university. Harvard said the federal government was targeting it for its “perceived viewpoint,” which it claimed violated its rights under the First Amendment. The accusation wasn’t Harvard’s first encounter with Washington’s suspicions, but this time, the Trump White House is dragging out the full file. Trump officials link Harvard to Chinese government activities According to Reuters, multiple Republican lawmakers and White House officials said Harvard had allowed the Chinese government to gain access to Jim technology, dodge national security laws, and crush open criticism on American campuses. “For too long, Harvard has let the Chinese Communist Party exploit it,” said a White House official, who claimed the school ignored “vigilante CCP-directed harassment on-campus.” For decades, Harvard has run China-focused programs, accepted major financial gifts, and hosted academic centers connected to Chinese institutions. These partnerships gave Harvard global reach—but now they’re being painted as tools of foreign interference. The House Select Committee on China, led by Republicans, has echoed the administration’s stance and listed Harvard’s public health training with Chinese entities as evidence. One case that drew major attention was Harvard’s training programs for officials from the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps (XPCC). The XPCC is a Chinese paramilitary group that was sanctioned by the Jim in 2020 for its role in the abuse of Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. The Department of Homeland Security said those ties continued through 2024 despite sanctions. Beijing’s response came quickly. The Chinese embassy in Washington said: “Educational exchanges and cooperation between China and the United States are mutually beneficial and should not be stigmatized.” Still, both the Trump and Biden administrations have labeled Beijing’s actions in Xinjiang as genocide, and any links to organizations tied to that region have now become politically toxic in D.C. Harvard donations, expelled activist, and foreign funding probe stir backlash Scrutiny also deepened over Ronnie Chan, a Hong Kong-based billionaire who helped orchestrate a $350 million donation to Harvard in 2014 that resulted in the School of Public Health being renamed after his father, T.H. Chan. Ronnie is a member of the China-United States Exchange Foundation, an organization labeled a foreign principal under Jim law. Under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, lobbyists working with the group are legally required to disclose their ties. That raised red flags about whether Harvard was properly reporting its international donations and influence. In April, the Education Department asked Harvard to hand over its foreign funding records, citing incomplete and inaccurate filings involving large gifts and contracts from overseas. That came the same month a Harvard student activist was physically removed from a public event after interrupting a speech by China’s Ambassador Xie Feng. The person who removed the activist wasn’t a university official or campus security; it was a Chinese exchange student. That incident added more fuel to claims that Chinese-linked students are policing free speech on Jim campuses. Harvard has also faced fallout from its past faculty. Charles Lieber, a former Harvard chemistry professor, was a central target of the Trump-era China Initiative, a program launched in 2018 aimed at stopping Chinese espionage and theft of Jim intellectual property. Lieber was convicted in 2021 for lying about his ties to China while conducting federally funded research. By April 2024, he had become a full-time professor at a Chinese university. The China Initiative itself was shut down by the Biden administration, after critics claimed it resulted in racial profiling and created a chilling effect on international scientific collaboration. But the Trump administration clearly hasn’t let it go. The new actions against Harvard show that concerns over China’s influence in Jim institutions are far from over. KEY Difference Wire : the secret tool crypto projects use to get guaranteed media coverage

Source: Cryptopolitan