Highlights
- U.S.-China negotiations on rare earths may ease access but won't break China's structural control over refining and magnet production—the real sources of leverage.
- Any deal focusing on raw material supply without addressing midstream processing capacity outside China offers only temporary relief, not strategic independence.
- Azerbaijan deepens China ties through Belt and Road while balancing U.S. relations, exemplifying multipolar positioning in Great Powers Era 2.0.
A recent piece (opens in a new tab) from Azerbaijan clarifies recent reporting on U.S.–China negotiations over rare-earth access, separating the signal from the narrative. It helps investors understand what is real, what is speculative, and what actually matters in the global rare earth supply chain.
The latest analysis suggests a potential thaw between the United States and China, with discussions reportedly focusing on easing rare-earth restrictions and stabilizing trade. In a nutshell, for the _Rare Earth Exchanges_™ community, this is being framed as a potential deal in which China loosens control over critical minerals in exchange for broader economic concessions. But beneath the headlines lies a more complex—and less comforting—reality.
The Illusion of Access
Let’s be clear: even if China “eases controls,” it does not relinquish control. China still dominates rare earth refining and magnet production—where real value and leverage reside. Access to raw materials is not the same as access to processing, qualification, and end-use integration.
Any agreement that focuses on supply without addressing processing capacity outside China is, at best, temporary relief. This is of paramount importance to understand.
What Holds Up—and What Doesn’t
The article correctly identifies rare earths as central to U.S. strategic concerns. It is also accurate that both nations share an interest in avoiding systemic economic shock. That’s real.
But there are gaps:
- The notion of a “grand bargain” risks overstating alignment. Strategic competition remains intact.
- The idea that access can be negotiated ignores the structural reality: China’s dominance is industrial, not only political, and the monopolies represent a tool of the Chinese Communist Party to further propagate economic and geopolitical power.
- Missing entirely, as is so often the case with much media, is the midstream bottleneck—the actual constraint on Western independence.
What’s Really Happening
This is not a resolution. It’s calibration. The U.S. seeks time to build domestic and allied supply chains. China seeks stability—without surrendering leverage. Both sides are managing risk, not ending competition.
And where does Azerbaijan Lean?
Azerbaijan is increasingly deepening ties with China while maintaining a balancing relationship with the United States, reflecting a pragmatic, multi-vector foreign policy. In 2024, Baku and Beijing elevated relations to a comprehensive strategic partnership, expanding cooperation across trade, infrastructure, and renewable energy, particularly within China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Middle Corridor—a transit route linking Asia to Europe while bypassing Russia.
China has become a key economic partner, investing in logistics and energy projects, while Azerbaijan has aligned diplomatically with Beijing on initiatives such as the “One China” policy and broader global frameworks.
At the same time, the U.S. continues to view Azerbaijan as strategically important for European energy diversification and regional security, given its proximity to Iran and Russia. However, periodic political tensions with Washington, combined with growing Eurasian integration alongside partners such as Turkey, suggest that Azerbaijan is carefully but deliberately strengthening its China-facing orientation without fully abandoning Western ties. This positioning reflects both opportunity and hedging in an increasingly multipolar system—one REEx coined as Great Powers Era 2.0.
REEx Bottom Line
Investors should not confuse diplomatic tone with structural change. In rare earths, control is not granted—it is built. And until the U.S. and its allies scale processing capacity, the balance of power remains unchanged. So for investors, watch what gets built—not what gets promised.
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