The State Departmentannounceda “significant expansion” of itsvisa restriction policyto target “those working on behalf of U.S. adversaries to undermine” the country’s interests in theWestern Hemisphere.
The department also said it has already “taken steps” to impose restrictions on 26 individuals as part of the expansion. A list of the individuals’ identities and their specific activities that warranted the visa restriction has not been made public. The policy will generally render the individuals and their family members ineligible for entry into the country.
Activities that could warrant the restriction, according to the announcement, include but aren’t limited to: “enabling adversarial powers to acquire or control key assets and strategic resources in our hemisphere; destabilizing regional security efforts; undermining American economic interests; and conducting influence operations designed to undermine the sovereignty and stability of nations in our region.”
The State Department’s policy aligns with the Trump Administration’s desire to exert more influence over the Americas. President Donald Trump has embraced the term “Donroe Doctrine,” a contemporary reinterpretation of an 1823 foreign policy vision by former President James Monroe that focuses on U.S. dominance in the Western hemisphere. Trump has pushed for this foreign policy maxim asChina, a U.S. geopolitical competitor, hasincreasingly influencedthe region.
Trump cited the doctrine when the U.S. conducted an extraordinarymilitary operationto depose Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier this year. The U.S. military has alsocontinuedto strikealleged drug-trafficking boatsas part of what it described as a campaign against narco-terrorism, though public evidence supporting the narco-terrorism claims is scant.
Immigration policy as foreign policy
The State Department’s visa expansion policy announcement cited the Trump Administration’s authority under theImmigration and Nationality Act, which says the entry of foreign nationals can be restricted if the Secretary of State has reasonable ground to believe it “would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences” for the U.S.
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The President has, since his return to the White House, implemented a harsh anti-immigrant agenda, but he has wielded immigration tools as a foreign and domestic policy lever.
Amid the U.S. war on Iran, the State Department has recentlyterminated the legal statusesofat least seven Iranian nationalswith ties to the Iranian regime.
In July, the Administrationrevoked the visasof Brazilian judge Alexandre de Moraes and his allies, whom it accused of conducting a “political witch hunt” against Trump allyJair Bolsonaro.
And in September, the State Departmentsaidit will revoke the visa of Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro, who commonly clashes with Trump, after he urged U.S. soldiers to disobey Trump’s orders, in protest of the U.S.’s role in the war in Gaza. Petro visited Washington earlier this year using a special visa, though the Colombian leaderclaimedhis visa was “reinstated” until the end of his term in August.
At thestart of the year, nationals of 39 countries, and individuals traveling on Palestinian Authority-issued travel documents, were either fully or partially restricted from entering the U.S., expanding aJune 2025 travel ban. In January, the Administration alsopaused visa processingfor nationals of 75 countries deemed to have a high risk of using public benefits.
The Trump Administration hasrevoked visasfor speech it deems divisive, and it has revoked thousands ofstudent visasfor overstays and other alleged violations, such as what it claims to be support for “terrorism” that included participation in pro-Palestinian protests. Legal and undocumented immigrants have beentargetsfordetention and deportation, andtourists, visitors, andinternational studentshave been placed under heightened scrutiny. The Administration also hastightened its criteriafor U.S. citizenship applicants to “root out anti-Americanism.”