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As G7 leaders met to discuss critical minerals, the negotiations exposed a difficult but unavoidable reality. Rebuilding supply chains outside of China will require significant investment, coordination, leadership and political will.

A few months ago, Vice President J.D. Vance announced a bold framework to strengthen Western production and processing of strategic minerals and said that “the global market is failing.” Recently, our allies have raised concerns about the cost of the administration’s initiative, governance structures and the prospect of government intervention in mineral markets.

The real question facing the G7 and our allies is not whether there will be costs associated with building alternative supply chains it is whether the costs of continued dependence on China are greater. The Trump administration deserves credit for recognizing that critical minerals are not merely commodities but strategic assets.

While allies may disagree on implementation, pricing mechanisms, or governance models, success should be measured by whether the West can build a resilient and competitive critical minerals ecosystem capable of reducing dependence on China and strengthening the collective industrial base of the democratic world.

For years, Beijing has pursued a deliberate national strategy to secure control over critical minerals.

Through state subsidies, market intervention, below-market pricing, strategic acquisitions and investments throughout Africa, Latin America, and Asia, China has built a commanding position not only in mining but, more importantly, in processing and refining. Today, China controls a vast majority of the global rare earth processing capacity and holds considerable influence over numerous strategic mineral markets.

Western manufacturers, defense contractors, and technology companies increasingly rely upon supply chains that can be disrupted by geopolitical tensions or weaponized by Beijing. Recent Chinese export restrictions on gallium, germanium, graphite, antimony, and other strategic materials should serve as a warning. China has shown its willingness to use economic leverage as a geopolitical tool. In May 2026, China’s Ministry of Commerce said, “The Chinese government imposes export controls on rare earths and other critical minerals in accordance with laws and regulations.”

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The United States cannot afford to ignore this challenge. That is why the Trump administration’s effort to build a critical minerals partnership among Western allies is exactly the type of strategic leadership this moment requires.

Critics have focused on disagreements among G7 countries about pricing mechanisms, market interventions, and governance structures. Such debates are inevitable. The United States, Canada, Japan, Australia and Europe all have different economic interests and political considerations.

But focusing on those differences misses the larger point. For the first time in decades, Western nations are recognizing that critical minerals are not simply commodities. They are strategic assets in the global marketplace.

President Donald Trump’s approach recognizes a fundamental reality. Markets alone will not solve a problem that evolved through years of state-directed competition from China. When a strategic competitor uses subsidies, predatory pricing, export restrictions, and industrial policy to dominate global markets, Western governments cannot simply hope private investment will restore balance on its own.

The administration’s willingness to explore purchase guarantees, investment support, tax incentives, Defense Production Act authorities and strategic partnerships reflects a growing understanding that rebuilding supply chains requires both public and private sector leadership. Equally important, these efforts are not about isolating America. They are about strengthening the collective resilience of America’s allies and partners.

This is about national security. It is about ensuring that America’s defense industrial base has reliable access to the materials needed to build aircraft, ships, missiles and advanced weapons systems. It is about ensuring that artificial intelligence infrastructure and semiconductor manufacturing are not dependent on supply chains vulnerable to geopolitical coercion. It is about reducing strategic vulnerabilities that adversaries could exploit during a future crisis.

Critical minerals are the foundation of the modern economy. They are also the foundation of military power, technological innovation and economic competitiveness.

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The choice is straightforward. We can continue accepting dependence on supply chains controlled by our principal strategic competitor, or we can collaborate with allies to build secure, resilient alternatives. America’s economic future and national security dominance demand leadership.

Timothy Maney is a board member of Zenith Intelligence Group. He previously directed and managed the Federal Budget and Appropriations portfolios for the U.S. Chamber from 2000-2024. Previously, he served as the Chief Investigator for the Census Subcommittee (1998-2000).

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

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