logo
Trump's Harvard ban, military parade stir global concern

Trump's Harvard ban, military parade stir global concern

The Sun5 days ago

TWO developments – one unfolding and the other about to take place – are emblematic of President Donald Trump's effect on US politics and policy-making.
They also have ramifications for America's soft and hard power standing in international relations. The first relates to the Trump administration's action to block Harvard University from enrolling international students.
'I am writing to inform you that, effective immediately, Harvard University's Student and Exchange Visitor Programme certification is revoked,' US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a letter shared on X.
Noem, despite providing no evidence, asserted that the Trump administration is holding Harvard accountable for 'fostering violence, antisemitism and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus'.
Quite surprisingly, this latest pro-Israel and anti-China target of the Trump administration has drawn Trump supporters in the Western media outlets to join the almost unanimous condemnation of the move.
Conservative columnists have described it as a disastrous and unnecessary politically motivated attack on higher education and a damaging blow to America's soft power standing.
For now, a federal judge has temporarily blocked the order but the announcement and ongoing legal battle is continuing to generate media coverage around the world.
Reaction to charges against Harvard
Amid the reports of the widespread anxiety and confusion among Harvard's international student body and incoming cohort, including those from Asia and Malaysia, critics argue that the ban will undermine Harvard's and the broader US higher education system's appeal as a top destination for international talent.
Concerned American educationists have noted how international students contribute significantly to their university revenue and research, and they point out that the ban
will have severe economic and academic consequences, especially if extended to other universities and colleges with international student enrolments.
Whether opponents of this unprecedented action undermining the independence and autonomy of academic institutions will succeed or not, it is clear they are battling an administration that sees this policy development as necessary and consistent with the 'Make America Great Again' (Maga) electoral platform that propelled Trump to power.
Apart from its foreign policy components aimed at the retention of American hegemony, a key aspect of this agenda is its broad hardline domestic stance on immigration. This has included attempts by the highly influential Zionist lobby to exert control over universities for permitting pro-Palestine demonstrations condemning the genocidal activities in Gaza.
Apparently, Homeland Security authorities view the targeting of student visas, along with the increased scrutiny and deportation of international students involved in the demonstrations, as insufficient punishment, hence the decision to go after Harvard.
At the same time, critics of this latest
hard-line policy are concerned that it could lead to a waning of US soft power, which has sustained the status and dominant position that the country has in global geopolitics.
Others view it as another example of the hypocrisy of American policy in failing to align with the values and image it espouses as human rights champion, liberal democracy model and academic freedom advocate.
This concern has been heightened by the free fall in the country's reputation, especially since the beginning of Trump's tariff war against the rest of the world.
Reinforcing and parading American hard power
To make up for the decline in American soft power, its hard power is being reinforced. On May 20, Trump announced plans that could result in US$540 billion (RM2.30 trillion) being spent over 20 years on the 'Golden Dome' missile defence system to protect the US from ground- and space-based weapon strikes.
The project has now received an initial US$25 billion from the 'big beautiful bill', a comprehensive piece of tax-and-spending legislation passed by the House of Representatives. Intended to be more flashy and striking in its public relations impact is an unprecedented US army parade through the streets of Washington DC to commemorate the force's 250th birthday on June 10.
Trump had tried unsuccessfully to hold a similar military parade during his first term. This time he has succeeded in organising it on a day to coincide with his 79th birthday.
The parade featuring cutting-edge military assets and equipment is intended to show off American hard power and to reflect the Maga agenda aimed at strengthening the US military's superiority and destructive capability.
It also ties up with the 'America First' philosophy – the belief that a strong America can project its might and will without relying on international bodies or alliances.
The parade can also be seen as an effort to restore the prestige and public image of the American military after its retreat from Afghanistan – a subject that Trump repeatedly brings up in his denunciation of the Joe Biden administration – and its diminished standing in the country and abroad.
Though viewed by some as an unnecessary expense and unprecedented politicisation of the military – critics have described it as a display befitting authoritarian regimes – the looming grand display of military strength is also intended to play up to the patriotism of Americans as well as send a message to the world of the alignment of US hard power with Maga.
Geopolitical ramifications
The Trump-era convergence of declining US soft power with the assertion and reinforcement of hard power is already evident in today's shifting geopolitical landscape.
We are seeing the steady erosion of the soft power appeal that America once relied on to lead and sustain strong alliances.
Increasingly perceived as an untrustworthy and unreliable bully by Western and Asian allies, the US is making itself isolated in the global system, besides breeding resentment and resistance.
Countries such as Canada, Mexico, Denmark and the European Union countries subjected to the soft and hard power tactics of the Trump administration are being incentivised to look for more reliable and beneficial partnerships to the current one with the US.
It is entirely possible that they will retaliate by adopting the same transactional approach to international relations that Trump is using against them.
Ironically, Trump's blend of hard and soft power policies may be providing advocates of a multipolar global system with the ideological foundation and solidarity necessary for a new international order to emerge more quickly
and strongly.
Lim Teck Ghee's Another Take is aimed at demystifying social orthodoxy. Comments: letters@thesundaily.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Asian shares dither, dollar falls as trade angst persists
Asian shares dither, dollar falls as trade angst persists

Free Malaysia Today

timean hour ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Asian shares dither, dollar falls as trade angst persists

China's factory activity shrank in May for the first time in 8 months, signaling US tariffs are impacting manufacturers. (EPA Images pic) SINGAPORE : Asia shares edged cautiously higher on Tuesday while the dollar fell to a six-week low as erratic US trade policies clouded over markets and investors turned defensive ahead of key developments later in the week. US President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping will likely speak this week, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday, days after Trump accused China of violating an agreement to roll back tariffs and trade restrictions. The call between the two leaders will be closely watched by markets to see if the tariff-induced blow to global stocks and the dollar this year could get some reprieve or ratchet up, as trade tensions between the world's two largest economies simmer. Data on Monday showed US manufacturing contracted for a third straight month in May and suppliers took the longest time in nearly three years to deliver inputs amid tariffs. 'The May ISM showed tariff pressure is beginning to bite for manufacturers who are seeing slowing activity, longer lead times and declining inventories,' said economists at Wells Fargo. China's factory activity in May also shrank for the first time in eight months, a private-sector survey showed on Tuesday, indicating US tariffs are starting to hurt manufacturers. The gloomy global trade situation left US futures falling early in the Asian session, failing to sustain the slight gains made during the cash session on Wall Street overnight. Nasdaq futures and S&P 500 futures were both down 0.2% each. In Europe, EUROSTOXX 50 futures advanced 0.28% and FTSE futures added 0.15%. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan reversed early losses to last trade 0.6% higher, while Japan's Nikkei rose 0.66%. 'Trump really does have sentiment in the palm of his hands once again,' said Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at City Index. 'I suspect we'll hear about 'a really great call' or words to the effect,' he said, referring to the expected call between Trump and Xi. 'But we'll need to wait for confirmation from China, who tends to take their time on these matters. Until we get concrete confirmation, price action could be shaky and vulnerable to false breaks…we also have the June 4 deadline for 'best trade deals' from US trading partners to factor in.' In China, mainland markets returned from an extended break on a muted note, with the CSI300 blue-chip index up 0.23% while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.3%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index jumped more than 1%, rebounding from Monday's one-month low. Payrolls on deck The dollar fell to a six-week low against a basket of currencies to 98.58 on Tuesday, ahead of Friday's US nonfarm payrolls data, which will offer a timely reading on the pulse of activity in the world's largest economy. A rise in unemployment is one of the few developments that could get the Federal Reserve to start thinking of easing policy again, with investors having largely given up on a cut this month or next. The euro scaled a six-week top earlier in the session before paring some of its gains to last trade at US$1.1426, while sterling dipped 0.09% to US$1.3532. A softer US jobs report would be a relief for the Treasury market, where 30-year yields continue to flirt with the 5% barrier as investors demand a higher premium to offset the ever-expanding supply of debt. The senate this week will start considering a tax-and-spending bill that will add an estimated US$3.8 trillion to the federal government's US$36.2 trillion in debt. 'The evidence suggests term premium being re-priced considerably higher to account for US fiscal, trade, credit, and geoeconomic risks alongside some hedge against (US dollar) debasement,' said Vishnu Varathan, head of macro research for Asia ex-Japan at Mizuho. The dollar was up 0.35% against the yen at 143.20, reversing some of its 0.9% decline from the previous session. Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said on Tuesday it is important to make policy judgements without any preset ideas as uncertainty over global tariff policies remains extremely high. In commodities, oil prices rose on concerns about supply, with Brent crude futures climbing 0.88% to US$65.20 a barrel, while US crude surged 1% to US$63.13 per barrel.

Elon Musk returns to his tech empire, facing questions of inattention
Elon Musk returns to his tech empire, facing questions of inattention

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Elon Musk returns to his tech empire, facing questions of inattention

Elon Musk recently swapped his Dark MAGA hat and government 'Tech Support' garb for his old 'Occupy Mars' T-shirt, a reference to his rocket company SpaceX's mission to colonize the red planet. He embarked on a media blitz, granting interviews to news outlets he had previously avoided and saying he was focused on SpaceX and discussing his electric automaker Tesla. And on social media, he posted that he was again spending '24/7 at work' and sleeping in his companies' factories and server rooms. As Musk steps away from Washington and his Department of Government Efficiency, President Donald Trump's 'first buddy' is shifting back to his role as a business titan. But that move is not likely to come easy after Musk spent months backing Trump's presidential campaign and dismantling parts of the federal government, raising concerns that he had become an absentee leader at his various enterprises, including SpaceX, Tesla, artificial intelligence company xAI and the social media platform X. Musk's time in government has been a decidedly mixed bag for his business empire. Tesla is particularly vulnerable after Musk's popularity nose-dived when he slashed government jobs. Tesla dealerships became the target of protests as sales and profit fell. What's more, the Republican budget bill now before the Senate would gut subsidies and policies that promote electric vehicles. Tesla's stock has dropped about 14% this year, wiping around US$180bil off its market value. Some of Musk's companies have benefited from his proximity to the White House, with Trump at one point promoting Tesla cars on the White House lawn and SpaceX harvesting more government tie-ups with Starlink, its satellite internet service. X remains a powerful megaphone for Musk's and Trump's supporters. And Trump is a valuable ally with policy power who oversees agencies that regulate Musk's businesses. But Musk is the face of his companies, and his protracted time in Washington has raised alarms over how committed he is to his businesses. Some former workers at SpaceX and elsewhere have questioned his absence from the companies. Overall, it's unclear if the tech billionaire's Washington maneuvers will lead to long-term advantages for them. 'It became a mission critical thing to get the CEO back in the office,' said Eric Talley, a professor at Columbia Law School. 'It's not a moment too soon, quite frankly.' How much time Musk will spend with his companies and outside Washington remains unclear. At a news conference in the Oval Office with Trump on Friday, Musk called his departure from the government 'not the end of DOGE but really the beginning' and said he would continue to visit 'and be a friend and an adviser to the president.' 'Elon's really not leaving,' Trump said. 'He's going to be back and forth.' Musk did not address how he would spend his time or how the change would affect his companies. He did not respond to an emailed request for comment. Tesla and SpaceX also did not respond to requests for comment. X and xAI declined to comment. At SpaceX, Musk's absence had been felt in recent months. In May, Dylan Small, a former mechanic at the rocket company, posted on X that 'morale is low' and 'people are burned out.' 'Your presence used to drive a fire in the team,' Small wrote to Musk. 'Please come back and walk the floor.' In a message to The New York Times, Small said SpaceX's work was largely the result of employees feeling 'inspired,' with Musk playing 'a huge role in that.' Since the start of Trump's term, Musk has posted almost 1,000 times on X about SpaceX, which was half of the nearly 2,000 times he posted about DOGE, according to a tally by the Times. In that time, SpaceX has held two test launches of Starship, the rocket that Musk hopes will get humans to Mars, including one Tuesday. Last week, Musk gave an interview to The Washington Post – a news outlet he has typically shunned – and emphasized that he was 'physically here' for SpaceX before the Starship test launch from the company's Starbase rocket facility in South Texas. The launch ended in an explosion, but Musk still made a point to declare his presence. He reshared videos of himself in the SpaceX control center, as well as interviews with reporters and influencers talking about space travel. At Tesla, Musk's level of disengagement from the business became clear in April. He had seldom visited Tesla's offices or factories since Trump's inauguration but showed up at one of the company's offices in Palo Alto, California, a few days ahead of an earnings call that month, according to two people familiar with his travel. During the visit, Musk asked about the impact of Trump's tariffs on Tesla and was briefed on the effects and the company's supply chain vulnerabilities, two people familiar with the meeting said. The timing of his question raised concerns from some attendees, since Trump had begun announcing tariffs two months earlier in February. Days after Musk's visit, Tesla reported that its vehicle sales fell 13% in the first quarter from a year earlier, as profit plunged to its lowest level in four years. New tariffs on imported auto parts have added to the financial pressures facing the company. Musk's political activities alienated buyers, said Matthew LaBrot, who worked in sales at Tesla in California. It became 'a grind every day to sell a car when that did not used to be the case,' said LaBrot, who was fired after he set up a website critical of Musk. 'A lot of it was Elon.' Tesla executives have told people in recent months that Musk was not as involved in day-to-day details of the operations and was dialing in remotely for meetings more frequently than before his stint at DOGE, two people with knowledge of the conversations said. A Tesla board member has sometimes stepped in to help fill in the gaps for Musk, one of them said. Tesla, which faces stiff competition from Chinese electric carmakers such as BYD, has tried to diversify more into AI and robotics. Musk has said the company would launch a ride-hailing service this month in Austin, Texas, with fully autonomous vehicles. The company has also aimed to start making a less expensive car, though it is unclear how different it will be from Tesla's existing vehicles. During his time in government, Musk appeared to keep an eye on the fast-evolving field of AI. He talked up xAI, his startup, and posted hundreds of times on X about Grok, the chatbot made by the startup. He also continued waging a legal battle against Sam Altman, who leads OpenAI and is a key rival in the AI industry. In March, Musk sold X to xAI, merging the two companies. Last month, the combined company announced a tender offer, which allows employees to cash out some of their equity by selling the shares back to the company at a prearranged price, according to internal documents seen by the Times. The tender offer is tentatively scheduled for this month and valued the combined company at about US$113bil, according to the documents. On Wednesday, Linda Yaccarino, X's CEO, held an employee meeting to rally workers around the idea that merging with xAI had led to the best teams and technology, two people familiar with the discussion said. That day, she posted on X to celebrate a partnership to integrate Grok into the messaging service Telegram. Pavel Durov, Telegram's founder, also posted about the deal. 'Elon Musk and I have agreed to a 1-year partnership to bring xAI's chatbot Grok to our billion+ users and integrate it across all Telegram apps,' he wrote. A few hours later, Musk made clear he was still the boss. 'No deal has been signed,' he posted on X. – ©2025 The New York Times Company This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Asian shares post modest gain, dollar holds drop
Asian shares post modest gain, dollar holds drop

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Asian shares post modest gain, dollar holds drop

NEW YORK: Asian shares edged up at the open as investors awaited news on trade negotiations between the US and China before taking on risky bets. A regional stock index climbed 0.4 per cent while equity-index futures for the US dipped 0.2 per cent. Shares in mainland China fluctuated at the open on their return from a holiday Monday (June 2). Hong Kong shares advanced, erasing yesterday's losses. Treasuries were steady in Asian trading on Tuesday and the dollar was little changed after hitting its lowest since 2023 in the last session. Oil extended its gains. Investors are keeping a close eye on the latest twists in the trade war after a slew of headlines Monday. The main focus is whether US President Donald Trump and China's Xi Jinping will hold a conversation to dial down the tensions, after the two countries accused each other of violating a trade agreement reached in May. China hasn't confirmed any decision for talks between the two presidents even as the US pushes for a dialogue. "We're clearly seeing a lot of volatility and investors want more visibility,' Massimiliano Bondurri, founder and chief executive officer of SGMC Capital in Singapore, said on Bloomberg TV. "It's normal that markets are actually going to be flip-flopping. You're going to see actually even intraday swings. Could this be something that stays with us? Yes, it could.' Trump has long said that direct talks with Xi were the only way to resolve differences between the nations, but the Chinese leader has been reluctant to get on the phone with his American counterpart - preferring that advisers negotiate key issues. The last known conversation between Trump and Xi took place in January before the US president's inauguration. Top Trump economic adviser Kevin Hassett signaled Sunday the White House was anticipating a call this week with the Chinese leader. Meanwhile, Japan's top trade negotiator Ryosei Akazawa is considering returning to the US for another round of trade negotiations this week as expectations mount for a deal as early as this month. "We continue to expect market volatility as investors digest fresh tariff headlines and incoming US economic data,' said Ulrike Hoffmann-Burchardi at UBS Global Wealth Management. "Fiscal worries remain, and geopolitical tensions are heating up.' Trump worked the phones Monday and took to social media to try to sway Republican holdouts on his multi-trillion dollar tax bill, encountering conflicting demands from GOP senators even as he urged them to move swiftly. The legislation, which last month passed the House by one vote, faces opposition from both moderates and ultra-conservatives in the Senate, where Trump can afford to lose no more than three votes. In Japan, attention will once again shift to a debt market sale Tuesday that may ramp up pressure on the government to adjust its borrowing plans and calm investor nerves. Hot on the heels of auctions last month that exposed a lack of demand, the finance ministry will sell ¥2.6 trillion (US$18 billion) of ten-year notes. In geopolitics, Russia and Ukraine wrapped up a second round of talks in Istanbul that failed to bring the two sides closer to ending the war, but laid the groundwork for a new exchange of prisoners. - Bloomberg

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store