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When Secretary of State Marco Rubio abruptly announced plans Wednesday to cancel the visas of all Chinese students in the U.S., the Trump administration was quick to cast it as a way to root out spies from the communist nation.

But behind the scenes, what really set off Rubio was the administration's realization that China was withholding precious rare-earth minerals and magnets as a tariff negotiating tool, sources tell Axios. Why it matters: The decision to target as many as 280,000 Chinese students — and throw another complication into the ongoing trade talks with China — reflects how crucial rare minerals are to the U.S. tech industry.

It also signaled how angry President Trump was after deciding China was operating in bad faith. . . .

>When Secretary of State Marco Rubio abruptly announced plans Wednesday to cancel the visas of all Chinese students in the U.S., the Trump administration was quick to cast it as a way to root out spies from the communist nation. >But behind the scenes, what really set off Rubio was the administration's realization that China was withholding precious rare-earth minerals and magnets as a tariff negotiating tool, sources tell Axios. Why it matters: The decision to target as many as 280,000 Chinese students — and throw another complication into the ongoing trade talks with China — reflects how crucial rare minerals are to the U.S. tech industry. >It also signaled how angry President Trump was after deciding China was operating in bad faith. . . . [Source](https://www.axios.com/2025/05/31/rubio-trump-china-students-tariffs-rare-minerals)

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[–] 1 pt

The action makes some sense if China is withholding REM. Out of the 280,000 students, the % of spies is probably over 50%. I don't mean spies in the traditional sense of the word, but spies who forward interesting and obscure things for information purposes.