Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said not enough
Americans were studying science, technology, engineering and
mathematics. He said the U.S. needed to recruit more
international students for those fields, but from India - an
increasingly important U.S. security partner - not China.
For years, Chinese students have made up the largest foreign
student body in the U.S. and totaled nearly 290,000 in the
2022/23 academic year. But some in academia and civil society
argue that deteriorating U.S.-China relations and concerns about
theft of U.S. expertise, have derailed scientific cooperation
and subjected Chinese students to unwarranted suspicion.
"I would like to see more Chinese students coming to the United
States to study humanities and social sciences, not particle
physics," Campbell told the Council on Foreign Relations
think-tank.
Campbell was asked about the China Initiative introduced by the
Trump administration, intended to combat Chinese espionage and
intellectual property theft, which ended under the Biden
administration after critics said it spurred racial profiling of
Asian Americans.
Campbell said U.S. universities had made "careful attempts" to
support continuing higher education for Chinese students, but
had also been "careful about the labs, some of the activities of
Chinese students."
"I do think it is possible to curtail and to limit certain kinds
of access, and we have seen that generally, particularly in
technological programs across the United States," he said.
Campbell said some had suggested that China was the only source
to make up the shortage of science students.
"I believe that the largest increase that we need to see going
forward would be much larger numbers of Indian students that
come to study in American universities on a range of technology
and other fields."
Campbell said the U.S. had to be careful to not eliminate links
between China and the U.S., but officials in Beijing were
largely to blame for any withering in academic, business or
non-profit sector ties.
"It really has been China that has made it difficult for the
kinds of activities that we would like to see sustaining,"
Campbell said, adding that foreign executives and
philanthropists were wary about long-term stays in China due to
concerns about personal security.
(Reporting by Michael Martina and David Brunnstrom; Editing by
Rod Nickel)
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