Highlights
- Joe Kent resigned from the National Counterterrorism Center over Iran war policy, marking the first senior Trump-era break—though his rationale focused on political disagreement, not munitions constraints.
- The Strait of Hormuz operates under selective control rather than full closure, with China-linked vessels continuing transit while U.S. interceptor stockpiles face replenishment pressure from finite rare earth supplies.
- Modern defense systems depend on rare earths like neodymium and dysprosium, where China controls ~90% of magnet manufacturing—making mineral supply chains a strategic chokepoint that may outlast visible conflict zones.
Joe Kent, head of the National Counterterrorism Center, (opens in a new tab) resigned in opposition to the Iran war—marking the first senior break framed as a policy and conscience divide with Donald Trump. His stated rationale is political: no imminent threat, disagreement over strategic justification. There is no evidence in his letter that logistics, munitions, or supply constraints drove the decision.
But timing matters. Wars are not lost in speeches—they are lost in endurance.
Joe Kent

Hormuz: Not Closed—Controlled
In the Strait of Hormuz, the reality is neither open nor shut. Traffic has collapsed from normal levels—but not to zero.
Evidence suggests a selective corridor:
- Some vessels continue to transit
- Iran continues exporting oil—primarily to China
- Ships are signaling “China-linked” ownership or crew to reduce risk
This aligns with a “non-belligerent passage” model: access appears to be conditioned by perceived alignment rather than by formal rules.
What about yuan-based access?
There are credible reports of discussions, but no confirmed system in operation. Even Chinese analysts caution such a mechanism would be difficult to enforce during active conflict.
Bottom line: control is being exercised physically, not financially—at least for now.
The Interceptor Question: Not Empty, But Not Infinite
There is no verified evidence that U.S. interceptor inventories are “running out.”
However, credible open-source reporting confirms:
- Finite stockpiles (hundreds, not thousands, of high-end interceptors like SM-3 and THAAD)
- High replacement costs and long production timelines
- Growing concern about burn rates in multi-theater conflict scenarios
Industry behavior reinforces this:
- Lockheed Martin is scaling Patriot PAC-3 production from ~600 to ~2,000 annually
- Pentagon engagement with defense firms signals replenishment pressure, not surplus confidence
This is not depletion—it is constraint under stress.
The Hidden Constraint: Elements and Minerals, Not Missiles
Here is where the story turns—and where Rare Earth Exchanges™ readers should focus.
Modern interceptors depend on:
- NdFeB magnets (neodymium-praseodymium)
- Samarium-cobalt magnets (high-temperature resilience)
- Heavy rare earths like dysprosium and terbium for performance stability
The U.S. Government Accountability Office and defense policy frameworks have already identified these materials as critical vulnerabilities. This creates a hard truth:
Missile capacity is downstream of mineral capacity.
Two Markets Emerging—But One Still Dominates
The West is responding:
- U.S. and allies are building an ex-China supply chain
- Contracts—not spot markets—are driving supply
- Price floors (~$110/kg NdPr via MP Materials and Lynas Rare Earths frameworks) are underwriting production, at least for a couple of important companies
But this system is:
- Early-stage
- Capacity-constrained
- Not yet liquid
Meanwhile, China still controls:
- The majority of the separation capacity
- ~90% of magnet manufacturing
Which means:
Even in war, China’s price signals and physical output still anchor the global system.
The Real Question Kent Didn’t Ask
Did Joe Kent resign because the U.S. is running out of interceptors?
No overt evidence supports that.
But should policymakers be asking whether:
- High-intensity conflict is colliding with finite munitions
- And whether those munitions are ultimately constrained by minerals controlled elsewhere?
Absolutely.
Bottom Line: From Strait to Supply Chain
The Strait of Hormuz shows how physical chokepoints can be selectively controlled.
Rare earths show how industrial chokepoints already are.
One is visible.
The other is structural.
And in a prolonged conflict, the second may matter more.
Disclosure and Verification Note
This analysis draws on open-source reporting, including major media outlets and defense industry disclosures. Some claims—particularly around yuan-linked shipping access and operational supply constraints—remain unverified or partially reported and should be confirmed through independent maritime, financial, and government sources.
The Great Powers Era 2.0: Where Supply Chains Define Power
Rare Earth Exchanges’™ “Great Powers Era 2.0” thesis is straightforward but disruptive: global competition is no longer defined primarily by territory or even technology—it is defined by control of supply chains, especially those anchored in rare earth elements and critical minerals. These materials sit at the base of everything that matters—advanced weapons systems, semiconductors, energy infrastructure, electric mobility, and AI hardware. In this new era, nations that control extraction, processing, and downstream manufacturing—particularly in separation, metals, and magnet production—hold disproportionate leverage over those that merely design end products.
The shift is from “who invents” to “who can build, scale, and sustain.” And because rare earths are not easily substituted and are highly concentrated geographically—most notably in China’s refining and magnet dominance—these supply chains have become strategic instruments of state power, shaping outcomes in both economic competition and military endurance.
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