China on Tuesday banned exports of goods that could be used for military purposes to Japan, a move that escalates tensions between Beijing and a key U.S. ally as disputes intensify over Taiwan. (Oliver Bunic/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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In his New Year’s address, Chinese President Xi Jinping called the "reunification" of China and Taiwan "unstoppable." His remarks came days after China concluded live-fire drills to simulate a blockade of the island.
The export crackdown echoes a 2010 episode when China halted rare-earth exports to Japan for nearly two months during a territorial dispute.
The rare earths dispute became an early example of China’s willingness to weaponize trade, prompting U.S. and allied defense planners to reassess how deeply military supply chains depended on Beijing. The episode accelerated efforts to diversify sourcing, though China remains a dominant player in several critical sectors.
The export crackdown echoes a 2010 episode when China halted rare-earth exports to Japan for nearly two months during a territorial dispute. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)
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China controls roughly two-thirds of global rare-earth mining and the vast majority of processing capacity, a dominance that prompted the Trump administration to push to diversify supply chains and revive domestic production as a national security priority.
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For years, Washington largely had left rare earths to the market, even as U.S. mines closed and production migrated to China.
The Trump administration broke with decades of hands-off policy by using Pentagon funding and emergency authorities to support MP Materials at California’s Mountain Pass mine, one of the first direct US government interventions to restore rare earth processing capacity seen as critical to modern weapons systems.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/china-bans-military-use-exports-key-us-ally-taiwan-tensions-rise