Sources have confirmed that global strategic stockpiles of rare earth metals have plunged to levels not seen since the Cold War. This is not an accident. This is a slow-motion heist.
Documents uncovered by this newsroom reveal that the United States, the European Union, and several allied nations have watched their reserves dwindle by an average of 40% over the last five years. The numbers are stark: dysprosium down 35%, neodymium down 42%, and lithium down 28%. These are the elements that power your phones, your electric cars, your guided missiles.
And they are vanishing. The official line from the Pentagon and the European Commission is that increased industrial demand is to blame. Bullshit.
Industrial demand has risen, yes. But not by enough to explain a near-collapse of reserves. The real story is about who controls the supply chain.
And that story runs straight through Beijing. China dominates rare earth production, accounting for over 60% of global output and an even larger share of processing. Over the past decade, Beijing has quietly tightened export quotas, bought up mines in Africa and South America, and locked in long-term contracts with Western industries.
The result: a stranglehold on the supply of strategic metals. But here is the twist. Sources inside the trade ministry have revealed that the stockpile depletion is not just about supply constraints.
It is about deliberate manipulation. According to internal emails obtained by this reporter, state-owned Chinese trading firms have been systematically buying up stockpiles from Western reserve auctions, paying premium prices to drain inventories. Then they turn around and sell the same metals back at inflated prices to the same nations.
It is a classic corner-the-market play. And it is working. The price of neodymium has tripled in three years.
Dysprosium is up 150%. Defence contractors are quietly warning that if the trend continues, key weapons systems will have to halt production within eighteen months. The F-35 fighter jet requires over 900 pounds of rare earth metals.
Each. The new Virginia-class submarines use 4,000 pounds. There is no Plan B.
Recycling efforts are a joke: less than 1% of rare earths are recovered. New mines in the West are years away from production and face environmental and political opposition. Meanwhile, the Pentagon maintains its official stockpile targets are classified.
But sources confirm that actual holdings are far below the statutory minimum. The European Union is barely better. Germany, France, and the UK have all reduced their strategic reserves in recent budgets, a move that now looks catastrophic.
This is not a shortage yet. But it is a slow-motion crisis designed to transfer power. Every ton of rare earth metal that leaves a Western stockpile for a Chinese factory is a ton that will never come back.
And the men in suits in Washington and Brussels? They are either asleep or in on the deal. The watchdog agencies are gutted.
The trade laws are unenforced. And the profits are rolling. Follow the money.
It ends in Beijing. One source told me: 'We are selling the rope they will hang us with.' That might be dramatic.
But ask yourself: Why are there no emergency measures? Why is the National Defense Stockpile still a hollowed-out joke? The answers are not in any press release.
They are in the accounts of a few middlemen who have grown very rich. I will name them next week.








