(TibetanReview.net, May30’26) – The Trump administration has revoked the US visa of a Chinese journalist employed by the state-run news agency Xinhua in what is seen as a retaliatory move to Beijing’s expulsion of New York Times correspondent Vivian Wang in February.
The action marks a rare instances in which Washington has directly answered Beijing’s removal of an American journalist with reciprocal measures, noted nationalheraldindia.com May 30.
The dispute unfolds against a backdrop of sharply reduced US media presence in China, where repeated clashes over journalist visas and accreditation have already left several American news organisations operating with limited staff, the report noted.
“The number of correspondents from American media outlets allowed to work in China has now fallen to an alarmingly low level, at a time when the need for people everywhere to understand China is greater than ever,” the newspaper’s executive editor Joseph Kahn has said in a statement.
The New York Times, which first reported the US decision, has said it does not support government interference in journalists’ work or press credentials. The newspaper issued a statement on May 29, calling for Wang’s reinstatement and urging both countries to restore journalistic access.
“The Chinese government’s decision to expel Vivian Wang is wrong,” Kahn has said in a statement published on the newspaper’s corporate website. He has argued that the move would further limit independent reporting on China at a time of heightened global importance.
Vivian Wang, a New York Times correspondent based in China since 2020, was expelled in a case widely linked to the newspaper’s DealBook Summit 2025 event which featured Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te, despite the fact that Wang had no involvement in the programme.
The event featured a recorded conversation with Lai conducted by host Andrew Ross Sorkin. During the interview, Sorkin referred to Taiwan as a country, while Lai criticised Beijing’s actions in the Taiwan Strait and said Taiwan would take all necessary steps to defend itself.
Foreign journalists working in China must obtain accreditation from the Chinese foreign ministry, and Beijing has repeatedly used visa and accreditation policies to bar, remove or restrict reporters whose coverage it considers hostile, inaccurate or politically objectionable.
In 2020, China expelled three Wall Street Journal journalists after the newspaper published an opinion article titled ‘China Is the Real Sick Man of Asia’ in the early stages of the Covid-19 outbreak.
That same year, as relations between Washington and Beijing deteriorated, the US State Department designated several major Chinese media organisations as “foreign missions”. Xinhua, which functions as an official news arm of the Chinese Communist Party and state, was among the organisations covered by the designation. China responded by sharply tightening visa limits for American journalists.
According to the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China, at least 18 journalists from the Washington Post, New York Times and Wall Street Journal were expelled from China in the first half of 2020 alone. Others received visas valid for only brief periods ranging from one to three months.
The two governments later reached a limited arrangement allowing a small number of American correspondents to return to mainland China. Wang was among those permitted under that understanding, the report noted.
China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has long opposed international treatment of the self-governed island as a sovereign state. Taiwan has governed itself since 1949, when Mao Zedong’s Communist forces won China’s civil war and the defeated Nationalists retreated to the island.
The Taiwan issue remains among the most contentious points in US-China relations. During a summit with President Donald Trump in Beijing earlier this month, Chinese President Xi Jinping warned that mishandling the Taiwan question could cause China and the United States to “collide or even clash”.
Meanwhile, the expulsion of Wang has also unsettled other Western media organisations that may seek to interview Taiwanese leaders or cover Taiwan-related issues while maintaining reporting access inside China, the report said.