Highlights
- Trump's team proposes Ukraine surrender 50% of its resource revenues in exchange for military aid and potential security guarantees.
- The deal faces significant challenges including war-damaged infrastructure, long mining development timelines, and geopolitical complexities.
- The agreement raises critical questions about the US commitment to Ukraine's sovereignty and potential economic exploitation during wartime.
The latest analysis (opens in a new tab) by Gracelin Baskaran and Meredith Schwartz of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) dissects the potential U.S.-Ukraine rare earth and critical mineral agreement. At its core, the proposed deal would see Ukraine ceding 50% of its rare earth revenues and natural resource wealthโincluding uranium, lithium, oil, gas, and even port revenuesโto the U.S. in exchange for past and potentially future military aid. Trumpโs team is pressing hard for the agreement, with National Security Advisor Mike Waltz calling it Ukraineโs โbest security guarantee.โ But President Volodymyr Zelensky refused to sign, citing the lack of concrete security assurances. A second, watered-down proposal has been floated. Still, tensions between Kyiv and Washington are escalating, with Trump openly threatening to cut a separate deal with Moscow if Ukraine doesnโt comply.
While Baskaran and Schwartz thoroughly assess the dealโs economic and logistical feasibility, they downplay the political implications of Trumpโs aggressive approach. They highlight key barriers to investment, including outdated geological surveys, war-ravaged infrastructure, and the long development timeline for rare earth miningโoften taking up to 18 years and requiring $500 million to $1 billion in capital.
The analysis rightly notes that half of Ukraineโs power infrastructure has been destroyedโa major issue for an energy-intensive industry like mining.
However, what they avoid discussing is the deeper political coercion at play. The U.S. is essentially leveraging Ukraineโs survival as collateral, forcing it to surrender half of its future resource wealth while Trump courts Russia. The authors mention Trumpโs tentative peace talks with Putin but fail to question whether this deal is more about exploiting Ukraineโs vulnerabilities than securing a long-term minerals strategy.
The report also sidesteps Chinaโs role in global rare earth dominance. While it draws a parallel to Chinaโs resource-for-aid swap in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), it doesnโt acknowledge that China already controls 70%+ of rare earth processing. Even if Ukraineโs deposits were viable, U.S. reliance on Chinaโs refining capacity wouldnโt change overnight. ย In fact, there is a good chance that such an outtake will be sent to China for processing if it is feasible in the short to intermediate run.
The analysis suggests the U.S. deal might shortchange Ukraine, like China did to the DRC, but fails to ask whether Ukraine has any real choice in the matter.ย This debate is about whether the U.S. is acting as Ukraineโs ally or its creditor. Trumpโs ultimatumโhand over your minerals or weโll make peace with Russiaโraises serious questions about U.S. commitment to Ukraineโs sovereignty. While the CSIS report offers a solid economic critique, it avoids the larger geopolitical reality: this isnโt a strategic minerals dealโitโs more than likely an offer Ukraine canโt refuse.
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