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Trump adds 20 countries to US travel ban

The Trump administration announced yesterday (December 16) it would expand its travel ban to an additional 20 nations and the Palestinian Authority, with international students and exchange visitors included in both full and partial bans. 

In a White House statement, Trump said the policy would protect US citizens from foreign nationals “who intend to commit terrorist attacks, threaten our national security and public safety, incite hate crimes, or otherwise exploit the immigration laws for malevolent purposes”. 

The expansion more than doubles the existing ban on 19 nations and will take effect from January 1, 2026. Existing visa holders, lawful permanent residents and certain special visa categories will be exempted.  

Notably, the ban ends study visa issuance to students from Nigeria, who currently make up the eighth largest cohort of international students in the US.  

Contrary to the administration’s framing of the ban as a matter of protecting national security, critics have said the legislation is “misguided” and that it will weaken America’s global standing.  

“Blanket travel bans based on entire nationalities or visa categories do not make the United States safer. In fact, they do the opposite. They make us weaker,” said NAFSA in a statement.  

“Relying on travel bans to act as a shield rather than relying on the strength of US vetting protocols is essentially a retreat from global engagement. Our isolationism will create a vacuum that other enterprising nations will gladly fill.” 

In June, Trump announced a travel ban blocking the citizens of 12 nations from entering the US and placing a further seven under partial restrictions.  

At the time, the ban included Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen and heightened restrictions on visitors from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. 

Our isolationism will create a vacuum that other enterprising nations will gladly fill

NAFSA

The countries added to the full ban yesterday were Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, South Sudan and Syria, as well as full restrictions on people from the Palestinian Authority, which the US does not recognise as a country.  

Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Benin, Ivory Coast, Dominica, Gabon, Gambia, Malawi, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Tonga, Zambia and Zimbabwe will face partial restrictions, including halting the issuing of student and exchange visas to citizens of these countries.  

The White House said the impacted countries have “widespread corruption and fraud”, deficient civil documentation and that their citizens have high overstay rates.  

However, sector leaders have said the policy’s rationale is based in part on unreliable federal data, highlighting that Homeland Security (DHS) systems do not always sync properly, leading to inflated overstay rates and the mistaken flagging of students who are in full compliance with their visa. 

They warned of the dangers of using misleading data to justify a policy with such far-reaching consequences for US global engagement. 

The White House did not immediately respond to The PIE’s request for comment.

The proclamation has been met with sector-wide criticism, though it was largely anticipated after the shooting of two National Guards by a suspected Afghan national in November reignited discussions around the travel ban, which DHS announced last week would be expanded.  

Responding to the news, NAFSA doubled down on the international educators’ commitment to upholding national security, as the administration has ramped up social media vetting of prospective students and revoked over 8,000 student visas this year. 

The association emphasised the damaging repercussions of the ban for US research, science and innovation, calling the policy “yet another grave misstep that will have long-lasting consequences on US global competitiveness”. 

“This travel ban sends the message that the United States is better off without [international students’] contributions.” 

Meanwhile, the impact of prolonged visa challenges and hostile policies are already taking effect across the country, with new international enrolments to the US declining by 17% this fall and students increasingly applying to multiple “backup” destinations to safeguard their study decisions.  

What’s more, the expansion of the ban comes as other countries are actively stepping up recruitment of international talent, such as Canada which has set out plans for an “accelerated pathway” to attract H1-B visa holders from the US.  

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