this post was submitted on 09 Mar 2026
7 points (100.0% liked)

China

534 readers
202 users here now

Genuine news and discussion about China

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/52029941

Archived

America’s February 28 missile strikes that leveled the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps headquarters ended more than a decade of nuclear stalemate.

[...]

As Washington navigates the aftermath, it is discovering that the "Resistance Economy" Khamenei spent years building was not merely an oil play. It was a calculated integration into a resource axis designed to withstand Western pressure.

And China is the silent partner in this axis.

Beijing’s interest in Iran is anchored by a $400 billion, 25-year strategic cooperation agreement.

That deal ensures 80% of Iran’s oil exports flow to Chinese "teapot" refiners. More importantly, it secures access to a mineral base developed with Chinese technical help.

[...]

The timing of the February 28 strikes is particularly difficult for Beijing because it threatens to derail a decade of "quiet" industrial colonization just as it was reaching maturity. Iran sits on the Alpine-Himalayan orogenic belt, a tectonic collision zone that created conditions for extreme mineralization.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, Iran shared the second rank globally in the production of direct reduced iron and strontium in 2022. It remains a top-ten producer of barite, feldspar, and molybdenum.

The rare earth potential in Central Iran and Yazd Province changes the strategic stakes.

[...]

Then there is the Hamadan discovery.

In 2023, Tehran claimed the discovery of 8.5 million tons of lithium-rich hectorite clay in Hamadan province. If the numbers are accurate, the deposit would rival the "Lithium Triangle" in South America. Western geologists have expressed skepticism regarding the economic viability of the clay, but the geopolitical value was immediate. By positioning itself as a future hub for the battery supply chain, Iran gave Beijing a reason to view the country as more than a sanctioned gas station.

The U.S. move against the regime is a direct threat to this resource axis.

China has established its dominance in critical materials through a long-term approach rather than military force. Between 2013 and 2022, China invested $679 billion in infrastructure across 150 countries to support its mining interests. Iran was the central piece of that strategy in West Asia.

But to extract these riches, Beijing needs more than just mines…it needs the logistical immunity that Tehran’s clandestine networks provide.

This is where the struggle for minerals meets the struggle for the sea.

[...]

Rare earth elements are the quiet necessity of modern warfare.

They are required for the guidance systems of the Tomahawk missiles used on February 28…

They are in the F-35 fighter jets patrolling the Gulf…

They are in the Predator drones and the Aegis missile defense systems…

China controls over 90% of global refined rare earth output and almost 90% of permanent magnet production.

If Beijing decides the U.S. strikes on Iran have crossed a line, they can stop the export of refined rare earth metals and alloys. This is the non-kinetic response option. If China stops the flow, the defense industry faces a crisis within months. This has triggered a race to rebuild a domestic supply chain that the U.S. abandoned three decades ago.

There is a misunderstanding in Washington about how this works. Politicians focus on mining more rock. They point to mines in California or Nevada as the solution.

They are wrong.

[...]

Mining is only a small part of the problem.

The real conflict is in metallization and alloying. This is the chemical process of turning rare earth oxides into high-performance metals. The Center for Strategic and International Studies identifies rare-earth metallization as the most difficult capability to rebuild outside China.

[...]

The U.S. can extract the material, but it currently lacks the capacity to turn it into something a defense contractor can use.

[...]

The front line of this arms race is not in the Gulf of Oman. It is in Euclid, Ohio, and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.

A "China-free" processing pathway is finally operational.

It is a functional bridge between raw material and finished magnets, designed to bypass the metallurgy that has kept the West dependent on Beijing.

In Saskatoon, the Saskatchewan Research Council has spent five years building a technological wall against Chinese influence. The facility is North America’s first integrated minerals-to-metals plant. Its primary tool is an industrial AI system designed to manage the complexity of rare earth separation, a process involving thousands of operations that were once the property of Chinese laboratories.

[...]

"We had to design most of our own technology because it was not available outside of China," says SRC CEO Mike Crabtree.

“If we just look at the solvent extraction, which is the central piece of the plant that separates of the 17 alloys, the AI takes in probably about 5000 data points on a millisecond basis.”

By removing human error, the SRC is producing metal ingots that meet defense specifications.

[...]

The partnership with REAlloys creates the final link.

REAlloys operates North America’s only facility, currently converting heavy rare earths into the metals required for defense systems.

The company has a strategic partnership to receive 80% of the SRC's heavy rare earth production, specifically dysprosium and terbium, starting in 2027. These elements are the thermal stabilizers for high-performance magnets. Without them, the motors in electric vehicles or guidance systems in missiles fail when temperatures rise during high-velocity maneuvers.

[...]

The U.S. move againsArchivedt Iran has forced the world into two distinct resource blocs.

On one side is the Chinese-led axis, controlling 95% of the processing and a network of shadow tankers.

On the other is the emerging Resilience Axis anchored by North America’s new processing facilities in Ohio and Saskatchewan.

"Success means being specified into defense and industrial platforms designed to operate for decades," says the REAlloys team. "Once you’re qualified, you’re no longer a discretionary supplier. You’re embedded."

Sovereignty in 2026 is not found in a capital city. It is found in the middle of the supply chain, the point where a rock becomes a metal and a metal becomes a weapon.

The U.S. may have won the battle for Tehran on February 28, but the war for the materials that allowed those missiles to fly is just beginning.

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here