The new restrictions take aim at foreign nationals linked to radical organizations accused of supporting political violence in the United States.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio has announced a new visa restriction policy targeting members of “far-left terrorist” organizations and allied groups, expanding a broader effort to focus U.S. counterterrorism policy on addressing threats posed by what the administration considers left-wing extremist networks operating across national borders.
The new policy, unveiled in a July 16 statement from the State Department, would restrict entry into the United States for foreign nationals accused of supporting or encouraging acts of terrorism, financing violent activities, participating in economic sabotage, or providing logistical assistance to organizations that the Trump administration says seek to advance political goals through violence.
“Foreigners who finance, incite, or aid and abet Far-Left Terrorists are enemies of our civilization,” Rubio said in a post on X. “They are not welcome in the United States.”
Rubio said far-left terrorist organizations and aligned groups often leverage sophisticated networks to perpetrate violence as a political tool. He accused such groups of using bombings, assassinations, intimidation campaigns, and other forms of violence in order to undermine democratic processes and “implement an extreme political vision.”
The State Department said the measures are being implemented under Section 212(a)(3)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which allows the secretary of state to bar entry to foreign nationals whose presence is deemed potentially harmful to U.S. foreign policy interests.
No immediate details were provided on when the restrictions would take effect or which specific organizations or individuals would be targeted.
Broader Counterterrorism Push
The announcement came as Rubio hosted officials from more than 60 countries in Washington for a ministerial conference focused on counterterrorism and what the administration describes as the growing threat posed by violent left-wing groups.
Addressing representatives from Europe, Asia, and the Americas, Rubio said that international counterterrorism efforts have focused heavily on Islamist extremism—leaving them “severely diminished”—but left-wing political violence has been overlooked.
“We can—and we must—identify and map this threat and rebuild our counterterrorism architecture to defeat it,” Rubio said during the conference, according to prepared remarks.
He said that far-left groups had become a “blind spot” among governments, universities, media organizations, and other institutions, many of which he said have downplayed the threat as “partisan fiction,” a “right-wing fever dream,” or a “dangerous fascist conspiracy.”
Rubio pointed to historical and recent attacks, citing Weather Underground bombings in the 1970s targeting the Pentagon and the U.S. Capitol, sabotage of Berlin’s energy grid this year, and the recent beating to death of a French teenager by what he called a “group of far-left militant thugs.”
The State Department has already designated four Europe-based organizations as foreign terrorist organizations—including Antifa Ost and Armed Proletarian Justice—with Rubio signaling more designations would follow.
“It is time to crush this evil forever,” Rubio said. “It is time for the people of the civilized world to defend ourselves, to stand united against this encroaching darkness, and fight.”
By Tom Ozimek







