Highlights
- Xi Jinping's call to Trump over Japan's Taiwan stance reveals how China leverages rare earth supply chain dominance.
- China controls 70% of mining and 85-90% of refining of rare earth materials.
- This control allows China to influence U.S. diplomatic decisions without explicit threats.
- America's defense systems, electric vehicles (EVs), and electronics depend on Chinese-processed rare earths.
- This creates a structural dependence that gives Beijing leverage in trade and geopolitical negotiations.
- U.S. mine-to-magnet infrastructure is still years away from being fully operational.
- Projects like Lynas Texas are facing delays.
- China's monopoly on high-performance magnets and heavy rare earth separation remains a silent force multiplier in diplomacy.
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) recounts (opens in a new tab) a telling episode: Xi Jinping berates Trump over Japanโs Taiwan stance; hours later Trump calls Tokyo urging everyone to โkeep things peacefulโโand keep Chinese purchases of U.S. soybeans flowing. On the surface, this is about diplomacy and agriculture. Beneath it, the rare earth shadow looms. Beijing knows exactly where Americaโs supply-chain weaknesses lie, and it uses those pressure points quietly, consistently, andโwhen neededโeffectively.
Table of Contents
From tactical export licenses to whispered threats to tighten magnet shipments, China has long understood that the U.S. cannot field jets, missiles, EVs, or even many consumer electronics without materials processed overwhelmingly in Chinese hands. Political theatre plays out aboveground; leverage is mined, refined, and separated below it.
Where the Article Reflects Reality: The Power of Dependencies
What the WSJ piece implicitly revealsโbut does not state outrightโis this:
U.S.โChina dรฉtente is shaped as much by minerals as by missiles.
Rare earth leverage is not fictional. China controls:
- ~70% of global REE mining
- ~85โ90% of global refining and separation
- 90% of high-performance magnet manufacturing
- nearly all heavy rare earth separation at scale
This is not abstract. It is the backbone of U.S. defense readiness, EV manufacturing, wind turbines, sonar arrays, smart weapons, and satellite systems. When Xi talks, everyone listensโnot only because of geopolitics, but because supply chains remain overwhelmingly Chinese.
The WSJ reporting correctly captures that Taiwan policy, U.S. farm exports, and trade stability are tightly interlinked. It is also accurate that Xiโs call came with implicit expectations: maintain the dรฉtente, restrain Japan, and keep trade peaceful.
Where Speculation Creeps In: Rare Earths as a Puppet String
The article never invokes rare earths directly, yet some readers jump to the conclusion that China is actively โusingโ rare earth monopoly to influence U.S. policy. That goes too far. Beijing rarely makes explicit threatsโit doesnโt have to. Its power lies in structural dependence, not overt coercion.
The WSJโs underlying suggestion that Trump softened toward Xi to protect farm exports is plausible. But linking that directly to rare earth leverage is inference, not evidence. Chinaโs mineral dominance is a silent force multiplier, not the stated basis for the phone call.
The Real Investor Signal: Quiet Leverage Is Still Leverage
Even without overt threats, China benefits from the fact that Washington cannot risk disrupting REE supplies during a diplomatic flare-up. With the U.S. still years away from building a viable mine-to-magnet systemโand Lynasโ Texas plant facing delaysโBeijingโs hand remains stronger than many would like to admit. The power isnโt theatrical. Itโs structural. And it shows.
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