Sergey E. Ivashchenko
In 2025–2026 the world faced a series of decisions by China that at first glance looked like another step in its technological confrontation with the West. Beijing introduced export licenses for gallium, germanium, and several other rare‑earth metals, citing the need to protect national security. The United States and the EU responded by increasing strategic reserves, attempting to accelerate domestic production, and launching diplomatic efforts to diversify supply. The markets experienced a short‑term panic, but most observers viewed the situation as a temporary episode that would not change the overall dynamics of global trade. A deeper and more strategically significant process lies behind this episode. Restrictions on rare‑earth exports became the starting point of a chain of interconnected consequences that disrupted U.S. defense supply chains, altered the balance of influence in Africa, and accelerated the formation of new technological blocs.
The analysis uses the Yankee angle — a framework I introduced to describe how the United States interprets and responds to strategic disruptions. It combines a defined analytical viewpoint, a deliberate angle of approach, and the American habit of turning positioning and timing into advantage. Applied to the current situation, this perspective shows that the rare‑earth crisis is not an isolated market fluctuation but a direct challenge to U.S. technological and defense resilience.
Operators clear the way, then the specialists move in, US Army Nuclear Disablement Teams handle the devices no one else can touch. Image Source: DVIDs