
Trump team hears pitches on access to Myanmar's rare earths
Trump
administration has heard competing proposals that would significantly alter longstanding U.S. policy toward
Myanmar
, with the aim of diverting its vast supplies of rare earth minerals away from strategic rival China, four people with direct knowledge of the discussions said.
Nothing has been decided and experts say there are huge logistical obstacles, but if the ideas are ever acted upon, Washington may need to strike a deal with the ethnic rebels controlling most of Myanmar's rich deposits of heavy rare earths.
Explore courses from Top Institutes in
Please select course:
Select a Course Category
MBA
Degree
Artificial Intelligence
Operations Management
Digital Marketing
healthcare
Project Management
CXO
Data Analytics
Data Science
Design Thinking
Others
Product Management
Data Science
Technology
others
Cybersecurity
MCA
Leadership
Healthcare
Public Policy
PGDM
Management
Finance
Skills you'll gain:
Financial Management
Team Leadership & Collaboration
Financial Reporting & Analysis
Advocacy Strategies for Leadership
Duration:
18 Months
UMass Global
Master of Business Administration (MBA)
Starts on
May 13, 2024
Get Details
Skills you'll gain:
Analytical Skills
Financial Literacy
Leadership and Management Skills
Strategic Thinking
Duration:
24 Months
Vellore Institute of Technology
VIT Online MBA
Starts on
Aug 14, 2024
Get Details
Among the proposals are one advocating talks with Myanmar's ruling junta to get a peace deal with the
Kachin Independence Army
rebels and another calling for the U.S. to instead work directly with the KIA without engaging the junta. Washington has avoided direct talks with the country's military leaders following their overthrow of the country's democratically elected government in 2021.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Elegant New Scooters For Seniors In 2024: The Prices May Surprise You
Mobility Scooter | Search Ads
Learn More
Undo
The ideas have been proposed to administration officials by a U.S. business lobbyist, a former adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi, in indirect talks with the KIA and some outside experts, the sources said.
The conversations have not previously been reported.
Live Events
Rare earths are a group of 17 metals used to make magnets that turn power into motion. So-called heavy rare earths are used to build fighter jets and other high-performance weaponry. The U.S. produces very small amounts of heavy rare earths and is reliant on imports.
Securing supplies of the minerals is a major focus of the Trump administration in its strategic competition with China, which is responsible for nearly 90% of global processing capacity, according to the International Energy Agency.
Engaging the junta would be a sharp departure for the United States, given U.S. sanctions on the military leaders and the violence committed against the Rohingya minority that Washington calls genocide and crimes against humanity.
Last week, the Trump administration lifted sanctions designations on several junta allies, but U.S. officials said this does not indicate any broader shift in U.S. policy toward Myanmar.
The ideas pitched to the U.S. administration also include easing U.S. President Donald Trump's threatened 40% tariffs on the country, pulling back sanctions against the junta and its allies, working with India to process some heavy rare earths exported from Myanmar, and appointing a special envoy to execute these tasks, people familiar with the matter said.
Some of these suggestions were discussed in a July 17 meeting in Vice President JD Vance's offices that included Adam Castillo, a former head of the American Chamber of Commerce in Myanmar who runs a security firm in the country, a person close to Vance's office said. Among those present were advisers to
Vance on Asian affairs
and trade. Vance himself did not attend, the source said.
Castillo told Reuters he suggested to U.S. officials that the United States could play a peace-broker role in Myanmar and urged Washington to take a page out of China's playbook by first brokering a bilateral self-governance deal between the Myanmar military and the KIA.
Myanmar's ruling junta and the KIA did not respond to a request for comment.
While Vance's office declined to comment on Castillo's visit to the
White House
, one person familiar with the situation said the Trump administration has been reviewing policy on Myanmar, also known as Burma, since Trump's January inauguration and had weighed direct discussions with the junta over trade and tariffs.
The White House declined to comment.
REVIEWING MYANMAR POLICY
The White House discussions were described as exploratory and in early stages by people familiar with them, who added the talks may result in no shift in strategy at all by Trump, given the administration's wariness about intervening in foreign conflicts and in Myanmar's complex crisis.
"The officials took this meeting as a courtesy to the American business community and to support President Trump's efforts to balance the U.S. $579 (million) trade deficit with Burma," a senior administration official said when asked about the July 17 meeting.
Castillo, who describes Myanmar's rare earth deposits as China's "golden goose," said he told U.S. officials that key ethnic armed groups - particularly the KIA - were tired of being exploited by China and wanted to work with the United States.
Mines in Myanmar's Kachin region are major producers of heavy rare earths that are exported to China for processing.
He said he had repeatedly urged officials in Washington to pursue a deal with the KIA that includes cooperation with U.S. partners in the Quad grouping - specifically India - for resource processing and eventual heavy rare earths supply to the United States. The so-called Quad grouping brings together the United States with India, as well as Australia and Japan.
India's Ministry of Mines did not respond to an email seeking comment.
An Indian government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he was unaware of whether the Trump administration had communicated any such plan to India but stressed that such a move would take several years to materialize because it would require infrastructure to be built for processing rare earths.
Another pitch to the White House was more in line with the Myanmar policy Trump inherited from former President Joe Biden.
Sean Turnell, an Australian economist and former adviser to Suu Kyi, whose government the junta toppled in 2021, said his rare earths proposal was to encourage the Trump administration to continue supporting Myanmar's democratic forces.
In a visit to Washington earlier this year, Turnell said he met with officials from the State Department, the
White House National Security Council
and Congress, and urged continued support for the country's opposition.
"One of the pitches was that the U.S. could access rare earths via KIA etc," he said, adding that the group wants to diversify away from China.
There have also been multiple discussions between U.S. officials and the Kachin rebel group on rare earths through interlocutors in recent months, said a person with knowledge of the talks, which have not previously been reported.
OBSTACLES
In the years since the coup, Myanmar has been ravaged by civil war and the junta and its allies have been pushed out of much of the country's borderlands, including the rare earths mining belt currently under control of the KIA.
A rare earths industry source said that U.S. officials had reached out around three months ago, following the Kachin takeover of the Chipwe-Pangwa mining belt, to ask for an overview of the Kachin rare earths mining industry.
The person added that any new, major rare earths supply chain, which would require moving the minerals out of remote and mountainous Kachin State into India and onward, may not be feasible.
Swedish author Bertil Lintner, a leading expert on Kachin State, said the idea of the United States obtaining rare earths from Myanmar from under the nose of China seemed "totally crazy" given the unforgiving mountainous terrain and primitive logistics.
"If they want to transport the rare earths from these mines, which are all on the Chinese border, to India, there's only one road," Lintner said. "And the Chinese would certainly step in and stop it."
For its part, the junta appears eager to engage with Washington after years of isolation.
When Trump threatened new tariffs on Myanmar's U.S.-bound exports this month as part of his global trade offensive, he did so in a signed letter addressed personally to the junta's chief, Min Aung Hlaing.
Min Aung Hlaing responded by lavishing praise on Trump for his "strong leadership" while asking for lower rates and the lifting of sanctions. He said he was ready to send a negotiating team to Washington, if needed.
Senior Trump administration officials said the decision to lift some sanctions was unrelated to the general's letter.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
20 minutes ago
- India Today
Which countries face Trump's new US tariffs? Full list of import rate changes
US President Donald Trump has announced sweeping new tariffs—some as high as 41 per cent—on imports from dozens of countries, invoking emergency powers to address what he calls 'persistent and damaging' trade the newly announced 25 per cent additional tariff on imports, India has now joined Brazil at the top of the list of countries facing the highest import taxes under the Trump administration's adjusted tariff regime, with both countries now facing a total levy of 50 per latest move, announced on Wednesday, is a direct response to what Washington described as India's 'continued' import of Russian oil, despite previous warnings. Brazil, which was previously subject to a 10 per cent reciprocal tariff, now faces an additional 40 per cent levy. The move, linked to the prosecution of former President Jair Bolsonaro, brings its total tariff burden in line with India's at 50 per White House order, issued just hours before the original deadline on August 7, lists increased import duty rates for 69 US trading partners, taking effect the same day. However, there is a 21-day window before the newly announced additional 25 per cent tariff on Indian imports comes into THE FULL LIST OF COUNTRIES FACING ADJUSTED IMPORT TARIFFS:India: 50%Brazil: 50%Syria: 41%Laos: 40%Myanmar: 40%Switzerland: 39%Iraq: 35%Serbia: 35%Bosnia and Herzegovina: 30%Libya: 30%South Africa: 30%Brunei: 25%Kazakhstan: 25%Moldova: 25%Tunisia: 25%Indonesia: 19%Cambodia: 19%Malaysia: 19%Pakistan: 19%Philippines: 19%Bangladesh: 20%Sri Lanka: 20%Taiwan: 20%Vietnam: 20%Nicaragua: 18%Afghanistan: 15%Algeria: 15%Bolivia: 15%Botswana: 15%Cameroon: 15%Chad: 15%Costa Rica: 15%Cte d'Ivoire: 15%Democratic Republic of the Congo: 15%Ecuador: 15%Equatorial Guinea: 15%Fiji: 15%Ghana: 15%Guyana: 15%Iceland: 15%Israel: 15%Japan: 15%Jordan: 15%Lesotho: 15%Liechtenstein: 15%Madagascar: 15%Malawi: 15%Mauritius: 15%Mozambique: 15%Namibia: 15%Nauru: 15%New Zealand: 15%Nigeria: 15%North Macedonia: 15%Norway: 15%Papua New Guinea: 15%South Korea: 15%Trinidad and Tobago: 15%Turkey: 15%Uganda: 15%Vanuatu: 15%Venezuela: 15%Zambia: 15%Zimbabwe: 15%United Kingdom: 10%Falkland Islands: 10%European Union: 0%–15%- EndsWith inputs from ReutersTune InMust Watch


Mint
20 minutes ago
- Mint
White House confirms Russia proposed Trump-Putin meeting; Date and venue undecided
The White House has confirmed that the idea of a direct meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin was initiated by Moscow. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Wednesday (August 6) that the proposal followed a lengthy meeting in Moscow between Putin and US special envoy Steve Witkoff. 'The Russians expressed their desire to meet with President Trump, and the President is open to meeting with both President Putin and President Zelensky,' said Leavitt. While the statement signaled growing diplomatic momentum, Leavitt did not comment on when or where the potential meetings could take place. An unnamed White House official told The Associated Press that no date or location had been finalised. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said planning remained in early stages. If the meeting materializes, it would mark Trump's first face-to-face with Putin since returning to office in January and a significant milestone in the ongoing three-year war in Ukraine. The Kremlin confirmed that Putin held a three-hour meeting with Steve Witkoff, Trump's special envoy, in Moscow on Wednesday. The discussion came just days before a Friday deadline set by the White House for Russia to agree to a peace deal or face expanded economic sanctions, including secondary sanctions targeting nations that continue to buy Russian oil. 'Everyone agrees this war must come to a close,' Trump posted on Truth Social. 'And we will work towards that in the days and weeks to come.' Trump, who has repeatedly vowed to end the war on 'Day One' of his second term, has spoken with Putin multiple times by phone since January. He has also met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House in February and again during Pope Francis' funeral in April. Trump acknowledged speaking to European leaders on Wednesday following what he described as a 'highly productive' meeting between Witkoff and Putin. Zelensky said he had a phone call with Trump after the Moscow meeting and that European leaders joined the conversation. 'It seems that Russia is now more inclined to agree to a ceasefire,' Zelensky said, adding that 'the pressure on Moscow is working.' However, he warned against complacency. 'It is important to make sure Russia does not deceive us or the United States when it comes to the details of a potential agreement,' Zelensky said. The US is expected to announce new sanctions against Russia on Friday if no meaningful progress is made toward peace. The Trump administration had imposed a 10-day deadline following stalled negotiations between Russia, Ukraine, and Western allies. The New York Times first reported the potential for a three-way summit between Trump, Putin, and Zelensky. It was also reported that Trump has informed European leaders of his intent to meet with Putin first, then host a trilateral summit.


Hindustan Times
20 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
A new immigrant detention partnership nicknamed after Indiana's iconic racetrack inspires backlash
Top Trump administration officials boast that a new state partnership to expand immigrant detention in Indiana will be the next so-called ' Alligator Alcatraz.' A new immigrant detention partnership nicknamed after Indiana's iconic racetrack inspires backlash However, the agreement is already prompting backlash in the Midwest state, starting with its splashy 'Speedway Slammer' moniker. Here's a closer look at the agreement, the pushback and Indiana's role in the Trump agenda to aggressively detain and deport people in the country illegally. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem trumpeted the deal late Tuesday, saying Indiana would add 1,000 detention beds for immigrants facing deportation under a revived federal program. On social media, DHS also posted an altered image of a race car emblazoned with 'ICE,' short for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The IndyCar-style vehicle is shown rolling past a barbed-wire prison wall. 'If you are in America illegally, you could find yourself in Indiana's Speedway Slammer,' Noem said, likening it to the controversial facility built in the Florida Everglades. She added the new partnership will 'help remove the worst of the worst out of our country.' However, the Indiana deal doesn't involve construction. Federal funds will be used for space at the Miami Correctional Facility in Bunker Hill, roughly 75 miles north of Indianapolis. The prison's total capacity is 3,100 beds, of which 1,200 are not filled, according to Indiana Department of Correction spokeswoman Annie Goeller. Officials did not say when the detentions would start. 'Details about the partnership and how IDOC can best support those efforts are being determined,' Geoller said. The deal is part of the decades-old 287 program, which Trump has revived and expanded. It delegates immigration enforcement powers to state and local law enforcement agencies. Immigrants, attorneys and advocates have raised a number of concerns about the program, including a lack of oversight. The Florida detention facility has prompted lawsuits and complaints about poor conditions and violations of detainees' rights. Authorities have disputed the claims. Republican Gov. Mike Braun first announced the federal partnership on Friday. 'Indiana is not a safe haven for illegal immigration," he said. "Indiana will fully partner with federal immigration authorities as they enforce the most fundamental laws of our country.' The outlandish name quickly drew backlash, notably from the town of Speedway, an Indianapolis suburb which is home to the iconic racetrack that hosts the Indianapolis 500. 'This designation was developed and released independently by the federal agency, without the Town's involvement or prior notice regarding the use of the name 'Speedway,' ' officials with the Indiana town of roughly 14,000 said in a statement. 'Our primary focus remains the well-being of our residents, businesses, and visitors.' IndyCar officials were also caught off guard. 'We were unaware of plans to incorporate our imagery as part of announcement,' IndyCar said, asking that its intellectual property 'not be utilized moving forward in relation to this matter.' The altered image used by DHS featured an IndyCar with the No. 5, the same number as the only Mexican driver in the series. 'I was just a little bit shocked at the coincidences of that and, you know, of what it means,' IndyCar driver Pato O'Ward said Wednesday. 'I don't think it made a lot of people proud, to say the least.' President Donald Trump's border czar Tom Homan said Wednesday that he didn't name the facility. 'But I'll say this, the work of ICE, the men and women of ICE, are trying to do their job with integrity and honor,' he told reporters at the White House. 'I don't want these names to detract from that.' Leaders in the Trump administration have already singled out Indiana as key to their immigration agenda. Braun, a first-term governor and former U.S. senator, has been a strong Trump supporter. In January, Braun signed an executive order directing law enforcement agencies to 'fully cooperate' on immigration enforcement. The nation's newest immigration court opened in Indianapolis earlier this year as a way to address the backlog and divert cases from the busy courthouse in Chicago. Federal and state leaders are also working on plans to use a central Indiana military base, Camp Atterbury, to temporarily house detainees. 'Indiana is taking a comprehensive and collaborative approach to combating illegal immigration and will continue to lead the way among states,' Braun said in a statement Tuesday. Associated Press writer Will Weissert in Washington contributed to this report. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.