Rare Earths as a Diplomatic Bargaining Chip – Fact or Fiction?

Aug 14, 2025

Highlights

  • The Telegraph's unsubstantiated report suggests a potential rare earth minerals deal between the U.S. and Russia involving Alaska.
  • Alaska's Bokan Mountain project has early-stage rare earth deposits, but no operational capacity for immediate foreign development.
  • The claim lacks official confirmation and faces significant geopolitical, legal, and economic barriers to implementation.

The Telegraph’s reported claim (opens in a new tab) that the U.S. is preparing to offer Russia access to Alaska’s rare earth minerals in exchange for ending the Ukraine war is as sensational as it is thinly sourced. If true, it would mark an unprecedented fusion of resource policy and high-stakes diplomacy. But investors should read this one with their critical lenses firmly in place.

Grounded Facts: What We Can Confirm

The article cites The Telegraph via Ukraine’s UNN, describing President Trump’s planned meeting with President Putin in Anchorage, with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reportedly exploring economic incentives for a ceasefire. The inclusion of rare earth minerals in Alaska as part of these incentives is attributed to unnamed sources. Trump’s own quoted remarks—on wanting a second meeting with Putin and Zelenskyy, and warning of “serious consequences” if the war continues—are plausible as public statements, though unrelated to any confirmed rare earth deal.

Alaska does possess rare earth deposits, including the Bokan Mountain project (opens in a new tab) in the state’s southeast, but there is no public record of operational capacity that could be “offered” quickly, nor precedent for granting foreign adversaries development rights on U.S. soil.

REEx Assessment of Local Deposit

Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) reviewed a presentation titled “Bokan Mountain Heavy Rare Earths (opens in a new tab)” authored originally by the State of Alaska and presented by Ucore Rare Metals.

According to the presentation, the Bokan Mountain Heavy Rare Earth Elements (HREE) project, located on Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, is an early-stage Ucore Rare Metals Inc. initiative targeting one of North America’s highest HREE-to-total rare earth oxide ratios (about 40% HREO/TREO).

A 2012 Preliminary Economic Assessment (PEA) outlined an underground mine producing 1,500 tonnes per day, with ore sorting and magnetic separation reducing mill feed by ~75%, and a proprietary Solid Phase Extraction (SPE) process enabling rapid, low-capital-cost separation of individual REEs while removing thorium, uranium, and iron for underground backfill. The 11-year mine life scenario projected annual production of 2,250 tonnes REOs, including key magnet metals dysprosium, terbium, and yttrium, with robust modeled economics—$221M pre-production capital (including a separation plant), 43% IRR, $577M pre-tax NPV (10% discount rate), and a 2.3-year payback.

The concept emphasizes a small environmental footprint (no surface tailings at closure) and potential for local job creation (~170 employees), but the company cautions that results are preliminary, mineralization and economics require more work to confirm, and forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties.

Thin Ice: Where Speculation Creeps In

However, looking into the details of The Telegraph piece, no U.S. government official has yet gone on record confirming that rare earth mineral access is on the table. The “proposal” is framed entirely through The Telegraph’s anonymous sourcing and repeated without independent corroboration. This leaves the claim in speculative territory—especially given the political and legal hurdles that such a move would trigger, from national security reviews (CFIUS) to congressional oversight.

The economic feasibility is also suspect. Alaska’s rare earth resources remain in early development stages; any Russian involvement would require massive capital investment, technology sharing, and regulatory approvals—all improbable under current geopolitical conditions.

Biased Views?

The repeated use of “Russian dictator” in the British piece signals an editorial slant rather than neutral reporting. The framing casts the potential offer as a concession bordering on appeasement, reinforcing a narrative of Trump making risky deals with adversaries. The piece offers no counterbalance—no input from mining industry experts, no U.S. strategic minerals policy context, and no consideration of whether the claim may be a political trial balloon or a media misinterpretation.

Investor Takeaway

Until substantiated by on-the-record confirmation, the notion of the U.S. opening Alaska’s rare earth sector to Russia belongs in the “speculative headline” bucket, not the “market-moving fact” category. For investors, the real signal is the growing recognition—by allies and adversaries alike—of rare earths as strategic leverage. That’s worth watching, but this specific story remains unverified and highly unlikely under current law.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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