Rare Earths and Easy Narratives: CNN’s Gloss on a Hard Problem

Oct 12, 2025

Highlights

  • CNN's article on rare earth minerals presents a simplified narrative of US-China tensions, missing nuanced geopolitical complexities.
  • China's rare earth mineral dominance is a strategic long-term policy, not a sudden weaponization of trade.
  • Global diversification efforts are slowly emerging to challenge China's monopoly on critical minerals processing.

CNN’s “What are rare earth minerals, and why are they central to Trump’s threats against China (opens in a new tab)?” arrives dressed in authority — part explainer, part geopolitical dispatch. It ticks the boxes: the 17 elements, the smartphones, the magnets, the missiles. But like much of mainstream coverage on critical minerals, it trades nuance for narrative. The piece is less an analysis than a reheat of well-worn talking points: China bad, Trump loud, markets scared. The complexity of the rare earth supply chain — the decades-long structural asymmetry that has made China indispensable — is flattened into a convenient morality play.

The Facts: Mostly Solid, Conveniently Selective

To its credit, the article’s statistics are sound. Yes, China mines roughly 60% of the world’s rare earths and refines over 90%. Yes, the U.S. remains reliant on Chinese processors despite operating the Mountain Pass mine. And yes, Beijing’s latest export restrictions — adding six more rare earth elements and related technologies to its control list — represent an escalation.

But facts, stripped of proportion, can still mislead. The story presents China’s export tightening as a reaction to Trump’s tariff threats, when in truth it’s the continuation of a long-running industrial doctrine — one written not in outrage, but in strategy. China’s rare earth dominance was never an accident; it was policy. CNN’s framing of “weaponization” suggests a sudden aggression rather than the culmination of a forty-year manufacturing moat. And this is just not the case.

 The Omissions: What’s Not Said Screams Loudest

Where the CNN lens narrows, reality widens. Nowhere does it mention the global diversification underway — from Australia’s Lynas and Arafura to Energy Fuels and Lynas USA’s Texas refinery, quietly chipping away at China’s monopoly with Pentagon support. Nor does it note that the U.S.-EU critical minerals pact and Japan’s recycling initiatives have begun to shift the balance.  Yes, of course, it’s early days—but movement is happening. CNN’s narrative implies helpless dependence when, in fact, redundancy is slowly emerging, albeit nowhere near as fast as it needs to be.

And while the piece dutifully cites the Center for Strategic and International Studies, it stops short of examining the deeper malaise — that Western policy paralysis, not merely Chinese strategy, cemented this asymmetry. The real scandal isn’t Beijing’s control but Washington’s complacency. Since the launch of Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) in  October 2024, at least in this media, the question has echoed through every boardroom and hearing room we’ve covered: how did those entrusted with America’s industrial future allow such a profound imbalance of power to take root — and why, even now, does accountability remain absent?

The Theater of Simplification

The great American pastime of the 21st century is turning complexity into combat. In CNN’s hands, rare earths become another battlefield in the endless Trump-versus-China drama. The tragedy is that this framing sells — fear always does — while obscuring the far more consequential story: how the physics of extraction, the chemistry of separation, and the geopolitics of patience intersect to shape the material world beneath our devices and defenses.

The problem isn’t misinformation. It’s incuriosity — and incuriosity, in the rare earth realm, is a strategic liability.

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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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