Rare Earths or Red Herrings? Parsing The Conversation’s Claims on Trump, Myanmar & Strategic Minerals

Aug 6, 2025

Highlights

  • Myanmar's rare earth reserves are strategically important, with complex control dynamics involving the military junta and ethnic armed groups.
  • Trump administration's sanctions rollback raises questions about potential resource access motivations.
  • The upcoming Myanmar elections are viewed skeptically by UN officials and regional observers due to ongoing martial law and political instability.

In The Conversation’s August 6 article (opens in a new tab), academic Adam Simpson delivers a sharply critical take on the Trump administration’s recent easing of sanctions against Myanmar’s military-linked elites. He frames the policy shift as a possible gambit to access Myanmar’s rare earth reserves—linking geopolitics, resource extraction, and the optics of democracy in a war-torn nation. But while the headline intrigues, much of the article trades in speculation and activism masquerading as predictive analysis.

After all, Myanmar’s rare earth resources rank number one on the Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) HREE Project/Deposit Rankings Database.  Reuters has been in touch with REEx to discuss Myanmar, and based on traffic source analysis, REEx is receiving a lot of visitors from Washington, DC lately.

What Holds Up: Hard Data, Hard Truths

Several verifiable points lend credibility to the article’s foundation. First, Myanmar is indeed the world’s third-largest producer of rare earth elements, with extraction concentrated in northern Kachin State. Much of this territory lies outside the control of the ruling military junta and remains heavily dependent on exports to China, which dominates global rare earth refining.

Second, reports confirm that the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO), an ethnic armed group opposed to the junta, has seized key rare earth mining areas and negotiated taxation rights on exports with Chinese partners—effectively asserting economic as well as territorial control. Finally, the article’s claims about the legitimacy of Myanmar’s upcoming elections are well supported. The junta’s recent actions—lifting a nationwide state of emergency only to reimpose martial law in contested regions—undermine the possibility of any credible democratic process. UN officials and regional observers have echoed this skepticism, casting further doubt on the regime’s intentions.

Speculative Slip?

The claim that Trump lifted sanctions specifically to gain access to rare earths is asserted but not evidenced. The article cites no primary documents, briefings, or administration statements tying the sanctions rollback directly to mineral strategy. Instead, it strings together temporal proximity, whispers of proposals, and Trump’s prior hawkishness toward China to imply intent.

Likewise, the supposed twin-track approach—dealing either with the junta or with KIO rebels—has not been corroborated by diplomatic sources. While plausible, these are speculative scenarios, not confirmed policy pathways.

Bias and Blurred Lines

Simpson’s analysis slides into polemic by concluding there is “no justification, on any grounds” for easing sanctions—effectively rejecting any realpolitik rationale. He labels Myanmar’s potential elections a “charade” and urges Washington to denounce them, but leaves little room for nuance in how diplomacy, trade, and security intersect. For an academic outlet, the tone is surprisingly strident.

Conclusion: Thin Evidence, Thick Implications

The article effectively highlights Myanmar’s murky resource politics and its centrality in China's rare earth supply. But its central thesis—that Trump’s rare earth ambitions drove sanctions policy—is more conjecture than confirmed fact. For Rare Earth Exchanges readers, the takeaway is this: Myanmar’s REEs are real, but the political motives surrounding them remain opaque, with further investigation and discovery.

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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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