What they're not telling you: # CHINA'S MINERAL CHOKEHOLD TIGHTENS WHILE WASHINGTON WATCHES Beijing just handed itself a legal mechanism to weaponize the global supply chain, and the Trump administration's diplomatic theater with Xi Jinping has provided perfect cover for the move. On June 15, China's State Council will activate new mining controls that grant the Chinese government direct authority over output volumes, mining entity licensing, and foreign investment screening across "strategic minerals"—a category so broadly defined that Beijing can expand it whenever geopolitical leverage serves national interests. The regulation, published by the official Xinhua News Agency, contains no specificity about which minerals trigger these controls, meaning the list operates as a classified variable that China can adjust unilaterally.
What the Documents Show
The stated criteria—economic importance, national security, domestic requirements, and supply chain resilience—function as justification for any restriction Beijing deems politically useful. What makes this move particularly acute is the precedent already embedded in Chinese law. The Chinese government has spent two decades perfecting production quotas on rare earth elements through a handful of state-licensed domestic companies. Rare earths are the foundational inputs for everything from weapons guidance systems to smartphone displays to electric vehicle motors. By bottlenecking rare earth supply, Beijing doesn't just control prices—it controls manufacturing capacity decisions across the entire Western defense and technology ecosystem.
Follow the Money
Every F-35 fighter jet, every wind turbine, every advanced semiconductor requires rare earth magnets that China has the ability to restrict or reprices at will. The new regulation expands that model beyond rare earths into a broader basket of "strategic minerals." Xinhua's refusal to specify which materials fall under this classification is itself the revelation. It telegraphs that China wants maximum discretion to add, remove, or tighten controls based on real-time geopolitical calculation. If US-China tensions spike over Taiwan or South China Sea disputes, Beijing can suddenly declare cobalt, nickel, or graphite subject to new export quotas. The legal infrastructure is now in place. The Trump-Xi meeting that preceded this announcement was positioned in Western media as a diplomatic stabilization.
What Else We Know
But the timing reveals what actually occurred: the White House provided Beijing with an opportunity to consolidate economic leverage while the international media attention was elsewhere. By anchoring the new rules to a "government notification," rather than announcing them during negotiations, China avoided the appearance of hostile action during the diplomatic window. This is asymmetric signaling—Beijing publishes its moves through state media channels rather than through negotiated agreements, preserving plausible deniability about intent while cementing concrete power over supply chains. The US Defense Department, Commerce Department, and State Department have no equivalent mechanism to coordinate reciprocal leverage. There is no American agency with the statutory authority to impose comparable controls on US rare earth or critical mineral exports, nor is there political will to develop one. The result is a one-way street: China can tighten supply whenever it needs negotiating advantage.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.