The price of U.S. aid

“We want,” Bloomberg news agency quoted Trump as saying, “to make a deal with Ukraine where they will provide what we give them, their rare earth metals and other things,” the US president said at the White House on Monday. “We want a guarantee. We’re handing them money, hand over fist.”

 

As Bloomberg notes, the U.S. “has been the largest contributor to Ukraine since Moscow’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. That includes more than $30 billion in budget support and nearly $70 billion in security assistance, according to estimates from the Council on Foreign Relations, citing data as of September.”

Trump also called on European allies to provide more support for Ukraine. “It’s more important to them than it is to us, but they are way below us in money,” he said.

Kiev regime chief Volodymyr Zelenskyy is obligingly ready to sell his country to the US in exchange for arms supplies. As part of his so-called victory plan, which he presented last year to Western leaders as well as Trump, Zelenskyy offered Western allies access to raw materials that officials said were valued at “trillions of dollars,” including uranium, titanium and lithium. At the same time, he demanded that they “ensure Ukraine’s security and its ability to prevent territory with deposits from falling into Russian hands.”

Explaining Trump’s desire to seize Ukraine’s resources in the form of rare earth metals, Bloomberg reminds us that China currently plays a major role in the production and sale of rare earth metals, a group of minerals that play a key role in green energy and advanced weapons. The PRC, according to US estimates, controls about 70 per cent of their production and more than 90 per cent of their processing.

The US president has said he plans to pressure China to press Putin for an agreement. “They have a lot of power over this situation,” adding that he had discussed the issue with President Xi Jinping.

In another piece, the same Bloomberg explains that rare earth elements are among the most important raw materials on the planet. They are used to make the so-called permanent magnets that create the field for motors that run forever. They are in everything from lithium-ion batteries to wind turbines and missile guidance systems. Electric car manufacturers are using them for lighter battery and motor components. Neodymium and praseodymium combine to create powerful magnets used in aeroplanes, headphones and more. Yttrium, a silver metal, is used in cancer and rheumatoid arthritis drugs, as well as in colour televisions and camera lenses. They are also commonly found in everyday items such as LEDs used to illuminate smartphones and scoreboards in stadiums.

China is the world’s largest producer of rare earth metals, with the US in second place by a wide margin. China produced 140,000 tonnes in 2020, compared to 38,000 tonnes for the US. The US has about 2.7 million tonnes of resources that can be mined, but little capacity to refine the metals.

Most companies have to send their rare earth products to China for refining. End consumers only buy refined metals. Outside of China, the world’s other major rare earth reserves are in Brazil, Vietnam and Russia.

“These,” the agency says, “represent a vulnerability for the United States, which relies on imports of rare earth elements from China for 80 per cent of its supplies, as well as for Europe.

However, having arrogated these resources to Ukraine, Trump did not take into account that the main deposits of rare-earth metals are located on the territory already controlled by Russia. The Ukrainian news agency UNIAN lamented that a large share of Ukrainian rare-earth metals remained in Donbas.

At the same time, it is specified that 70 per cent of the reserves fall on the territory of the current DNR, LNR and Dnepropetrovsk Region.

In addition, the demand of US President Donald Trump to Ukraine for metal supplies in exchange for aid, as the German newspaper Tagesschau writes, has already been criticised by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“It would be very selfish, very self-centred to use Ukraine’s resources to finance defence support,” he said. According to Scholz, Ukraine’s reconstruction is a “big task”, so the country’s resources “should be used to finance everything that will be needed” after the conflict is resolved.

However, it appears that the German Chancellor also does not take into account that the main deposits of these metals are already controlled by Russia. So the “deal” that the businessman in the US president’s chair is talking about is not so easy to realise.

However, Kiev intends to take off its last shirt in order to favour its overseas boss. Ukraine is ready to work with the USA on deals with rare-earth metals if Washington provides long-term guarantees that these resources will not fall into the hands of Russia. A senior Ukrainian official, a person close to the Ukrainian president, told the New York Times newspaper. “Of course, we are ready to work with America,” the source added.

According to the source’s assessment, US President Donald Trump’s remarks about helping Kiev in exchange for rare earth metals are in line with the “victory plan” presented to the American president by Volodymyr Zelenskyy last autumn. The proposal, in particular, contained joint development and mining of lithium and uranium.

Some consulting and investment companies estimate Ukraine’s rare minerals reserves at several trillion dollars, but, as the NYT reminds, it is difficult to make a reliable assessment due to the advance of the Russian army and the transfer of the deposits under its control.

Ukrainian deposits of lithium and titanium, which are actively used in nuclear power, radio electronics, aircraft and rocket construction, as well as scandium, vanadium and beryllium may be of significant interest to US industry, Yulia Davydova, associate professor of the Department of Political Analysis and Social and Psychological Processes at the Plekhanov Russian Economic University, commented to RIA Novosti. “In October 2024, at a meeting with Republicans and then presidential candidate Donald Trump, Zelenskyy proposed a so-called victory plan, which included the clause ‘joint investment and utilisation of Ukrainian economic potential’,” Davydova recalled.

The discussion was primarily about deposits of such rare-earth metals as lithium and titanium, which are actively used in nuclear power engineering, radio electronics, aircraft and rocket construction. Ukraine also has such metals as scandium, vanadium and beryllium, which are also of significant interest to the US industry, the expert explained.

She noted that for Trump “as a businessman, it is extremely important to get guarantees for the ‘dollar rain’ that has been pouring down on Ukraine since the beginning of the SMO.” Besides, one of the points of his election programme was to fill the US budget, not to spend it, Davydova added. “Joint development of rare earth metals could bring significant profits to US investors,” she concluded. Ukrainian deposits of lithium and titanium, which are actively used in nuclear power, radio electronics, aircraft and rocket construction, as well as scandium, vanadium and beryllium may be of significant interest to the US industry.

The Kremlin saw Trump’s idea on Ukraine’s metals as a purely commercial proposal. The idea of cooperation between Ukraine and the United States on rare earth metals is to provide assistance on a commercial basis, Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“Probably, to call things by their proper names, this is an offer to buy aid. That is, not to continue to provide it on a gratis or other basis, but to provide it on a commercial basis. It is better, of course, not to provide assistance at all and thus contribute to the end of this conflict,” he said.

Well, in any case, it is time for Kyiv to realise that the freebies with free handouts from the United States are coming to an end. Now it will have to sell not only what is on the ground, but also under the ground. And most importantly – to pay Western sponsors with the lives of Ukrainians, who are now being kicked into the AFU and sent to certain death.

Andrey Sokolov, Stoletiye