Highlights
- Washington is preparing another major arms package for Taiwan, including Patriot and NASAMS systems, prompting China to warn the sales could jeopardize Trump's planned April visit to Beijing.
- China has notably avoided explicit rare earth threats, instead maintaining graduated pressure through licensing slowdowns and export controls, keeping leverage intact for diplomacy.
- The current calm in rare earth exports is a temporary pause, not a strategic retreat, as China retains dominance in processing and can use paperwork delays as soft embargoes.
The U.S. is preparing another major arms sale to Taiwan, China is warning it could derail a planned springtime Trump–Xi meeting, and yet—so far—rare earth exports are still flowing. That calm is misleading. What looks like restraint is better understood as a temporary reprieve, not a strategic climbdown, in a supply chain China still controls.
The Facts on the Table—No Fog Required
Washington is assembling a large arms package for Taiwan that includes Patriot missile systems and NASAMS air defense, following December’s $11.1bn sale. Beijing has warned—privately and publicly—that further sales could jeopardize President Trump’s planned April visit to China. These warnings are not new; what is notable is their unusually blunt tone and timing suggests the Financial Times (opens in a new tab).
Under the Taiwan Relations Act, U.S. arms sales are mandatory, not discretionary. The administration has time to notify Congress, but not to abandon deterrence without rewriting decades of policy. That legal reality matters more than the headlines.
Where Rare Earths Enter the Picture—Silently
Notably absent from China’s warning is an explicit rare earth threat. That omission should not be mistaken for goodwill. China has already demonstrated a preference for graduated pressure: licensing slowdowns, selective export controls, and temporary restraint rather than headline bans.
This fits the pattern. Rare earths are most effective as leverage when left implicit—especially ahead of high-level diplomacy. A pause preserves bargaining power. A ban would spend it.
The Calm Before the Clause?
Speculation that China is “bluffing” on canceling the Trump visit may be true. But the larger risk is misreading this moment as stability. Export controls on dual-use items to Japan, ongoing licensing discretion, and China’s dominance in processing, separation, and magnet-grade materials remain fully intact.
A paperwork delay can function like a soft embargo without triggering retaliation or WTO scrutiny. Investors should watch licenses, not speeches.
The REEx Read
Accurate core: arms sales are real; China’s warnings are standard—but sharper.
Speculation risk: assuming diplomacy equals supply-chain safety.
What’s notable is not what China said—but what it didn’t need to say. Rare earths remain the unspoken deterrent, quietly reinforcing China’s leverage while Washington pushes forward with price floors, stockpiles, and allied supply chains.
This is a pause, not a pivot.
Source: Financial Times reporting on U.S.–China–Taiwan tensions (Feb 2026).
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