The U.S. Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, has invited over 60 countries, including India, to a July 16 meeting at the U.S. State Department to address what the Trump administration calls the 'resurgence of transnational far-left terrorism.' This follows Trump's intensified campaign against Antifa, a decentralized anti-fascist movement he labels as a 'dangerous, radical left disaster' and has sought to designate as a terrorist organization. The meeting aims to foster international cooperation against perceived leftist extremism, but it has sparked internal concerns within the U.S. government and among allies. Some officials worry that expanding counterterrorism powers could lead to targeting political activists, potentially creating a precedent for future administrations to apply similar measures against different ideological groups. These concerns have led some officials to consider skipping the meeting.
Bias read (Conservative): The article frames the issue through the lens of the Trump administration's rhetoric and policies, emphasizing the threat posed by 'far-left terrorism' and linking it to the broader campaign against Antifa. The language used suggests a right-leaning perspective by highlighting the administration's '



