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RED SWAN: The Story of a Secret Cable and the Crisis We Could Have Seen Coming
The Economic Standard ^ | 4/24/2020 | Daniel McGroarty

Posted on 04/24/2020 6:14:52 AM PDT by Hamiltonian

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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...

Partisan Media Shills update.


21 posted on 04/24/2020 9:10:27 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: Hamiltonian

RED SWAN: The Story of a Secret Cable and the Crisis We Could Have Seen Coming
Posted by GeoPolicy on April 24, 2020 8:33 am
Tags: china, Covid-19, critical minerals, strategic resources, supply chains
Categories: Geopolicy

By Daniel McGroarty, TES GeoPolicy Editor

COVID-19: It’s all we talk about, on the cable news, and in our 6-foot socially-distanced prison walks around our silent neighborhoods. And in nearly every conversation comes the intellectual shrug, “who could have seen this coming?” A single phrase that neatly absolves governments and experts alike of any responsibility of predicting the pandemic and, if not being able to stop it, at least cushioning its blow. We even have a name for it (credit Nassim Nicholas Taleb): A Black Swan – the quintessential case of something never seen before.

Except for the fact that some of us did see this coming, whether it’s Bill Gates in his 2015 TED talk, or the unnamed author of the 2008 U.S. Government Intelligence Report envisioning the World of 2025, which includes a section called “Potential Emergence of a Global Pandemic”: “If a pandemic disease emerges, it probably will first occur in an area marked by high population density and close association between humans and animals, such as many areas of China and Southeast Asia, where human populations live in close proximity to livestock.”

So if Black Swan is a misnomer, what is it that’s got us locked in our homes, wearing gloves and masks? Call it a Red Swan, given COVID’s point of origin, whether it seeped out on the sleeve of a lab tech at the Wuhan Virology Lab or jumped to a human host off a butcher’s hook at the Wuhan wet market.

But is it unfair to engage in so much 20-20 hindsight? After all, who could see COVID coming?

Well, we did. We — as in nodes within the U.S. Government tasked with tracking critical infrastructure on a global scale, literally maintaining a list of critical materials and capabilities, wherever they may be around the globe.

How do we know? It’s an interesting story, with a classified document and a cloak-and-dagger tale of how it came to light. It starts with Julian Assange, the famed Wikileaker. In early 2010, his motives nefarious and his means indiscriminate, he spilled out a torrent of U.S. Government diplomatic cables – ultimately 251,000 in all.

Among the documents, a cable sent by the U.S. State Department, providing a fleeting inside-look at something called the “Critical Foreign Dependencies Initiative.”

While the document’s State Department senders designated the cable “SECRET/NOFORN” (no foreign nationals) and marked it for de-classification in 2019. Wikileaks made it public a decade ahead of schedule, revealing an intriguing list of “Critical Infrastructure/Key Resources” outside of the U.S. “whose loss could critically impact the public health, economic security, and/or national and homeland security of the United States.”

What’s on the no-longer-Secret U.S. Government list?

Under the heading for China: “Polypropylene Filter Material for N-95 Masks”

…Precisely the ones the federal government and states are scrambling to source right now. That’s right: The U.S. Government knew in 2009 that N-95 masks were critical, came from China… And did nothing about it.

But there’s more – and it goes to the broader supply-chain dependence on China that has only deepened in the past decade. The classified list includes a series of Chinese mines deemed critical:

“Fluorspar Mine

Germanium Mine

Graphite Mine

Rare Earth Minerals/Elements

Tin Mine and Plant

Tungsten – Mine and Plant”

Six Chinese mines, understood in 2009 to be critical to U.S. national security, producing essential materials needed for technology applications ranging from aluminum and steel production, uranium processing, EV batteries and flat-panel displays to aerospace and missile guidance systems, infrared imaging, fiber optics, lasers, advanced airframes, body armor and armor plate. In short, just about every major U.S. advanced manufacturing sector as well as 21stCentury weapons platforms.

Why would Chinese production of these six materials be a matter of U.S. national security?

Because at the time, for these six materials the U.S. was 100% import-dependent – producing precisely zero – for fluorspar, graphite and rare earths, 90% dependent for germanium, 80% for tin and 63% for tungsten. In the cases of fluorspar, graphite, rare earths and tungsten, China was the world’s leading producer, and was a Top 3 producer for germanium and tin.

And today, 10 years after that highly-classified warning?

The U.S. remains 100% dependent for fluorspar, graphite and rare earths. China remains the world’s top supplier. And while the dependency has eased a bit for germanium, tin and tungsten, the U.S. remains more than 50% import dependent for each, while China’s role as global provider stands unchanged.

And this, despite the fact that the U.S. hosts known resources for all six, but simply fails to make mining, refining and recovering them a policy priority.

As a warning unheeded, the cable makes for interesting reading in light of today’s COVID pandemic – and as U.S. policymakers embark on a rolling series of multi-trillion dollar spending bills, the next of which will include infrastructure projects.

At issue is not just one but three layers of risk: Maybe the metals and minerals produced by the Chinese mines will be withheld in time of conflict, as Beijing seeks to leverage access for American concessions. Maybe the metals and minerals will soon be prioritized for internal Chinese consumption, under its Made in China 2025 program to drive Chinese technology dominance, with little left for export to the U.S. or elsewhere.

Or maybe – as the leaked cable presciently notes – the Chinese mines will be disrupted by a pandemic, slamming on the supply chain brakes for a U.S. economy dependent on critical materials that go from arriving “just in time” to “not at all.”

In any case, the warning could hardly be more clear. The U.S. has a choice: It can take immediate steps to reduce its dangerous dependency on a Chinese supply chain for critical technology metals. Or we can hope COVID 2.0 will not disrupt supply in a second global shut-down – or that Beijing won’t one day decide to curtail access to these critical materials in time of crisis.

But here’s one thing we can no longer do: If an act of nature or of man cuts off U.S. access to vital technology materials, we can’t claim to be surprised by the appearance of a Red Swan. We’ve seen it coming.

Daniel McGroarty, TES GeoPolicy editor, served in senior positions in the White House and Department of Defense, and has testified in the U.S. Senate and House on critical minerals issues. McGroarty is principal of Washington, D.C.-based Carmot Strategic Group, and president of the American Resources Policy Network, a non-partisan virtual think tank dedicated to informing the public on the importance of developing U.S. metal and mineral resources. The views expressed here are his own.


22 posted on 04/24/2020 9:20:49 AM PDT by WildHighlander57 ((WildHighlander57 returning after lurking since 2000)
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To: Hillbilly sage; Hamiltonian

The Defense Appropriations Act is the counter to the Chinese ownership.

Hillbilly sage wrote:

“On April 22nd 2020, MP Minerals was awarded a DOD contract that will rapidly expand production of rare earth minerals in the U.S.

President Trump,through the DOD and EPA, has made production of this class of materials a national security priority.

The Mountain Pass Mine was once the world leader in rare earth production. After many years as an EPA Superfund site, it has been reclaimed, new technology employed and in production.

This contract just announced is only Phase 1 in the drive to make the US self-reliant for the vital minerals.”

Hamiltonian wrote:

“The real head scratcher in that this week’s DOD set of awards is that one selectee (MP) has Chinese ownership and the other (Lynas) is based on ore that is produced in Australia and extracted in Malaysia before it would get to the U.S.
Not sure if that’s a good way to build a “domestic” supply chain.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-rareearths-insight/american-quandary-how-to-secure-weapons-grade-minerals-without-china-idUSKCN2241KF


23 posted on 04/24/2020 9:28:15 AM PDT by WildHighlander57 ((WildHighlander57 returning after lurking since 2000)
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To: henkster
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟. You win the Grand prize for clear thinking. PRC money is probably behind almost every group bringing America down ( from media, to pushing perversion, to Commie University propaganda. We need a law that if you operate in ANY format to influence government, media, or education, you cannot receive ANY funding from any foreign governmentts, corporations, or individuals.
24 posted on 04/24/2020 9:36:40 AM PDT by boxlunch (Pray for President Trump! Break up the Chicomm/Demomafia/Lying media/Deep State cartel)
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To: RedStateRocker

You have a good point. Government seems to be forever reactive instead of proactive.

Perhaps I’m late to the game here. But, is that what 5G is about? Being proactive to the safety of our infrastructure ie EMP’s?


25 posted on 04/24/2020 9:37:25 AM PDT by HollyB
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To: Hamiltonian

While Shenghe Resources Holding Co is a 9.9% holder of MP Minerals stock, they also had access to production components necessary to tool up that MP had been unable to source.

Reuters AKA Rothschild had access to much detail info but “forgot” to include it in their release.

Mine workers from Searchlight, NV are real happy to be digging CA dirt again. Locals there don’t call it rare earth, they call it precious earth, I always thought that seemed odd.


26 posted on 04/24/2020 9:42:41 AM PDT by Hillbilly sage (Birds of a feather)
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To: HollyB

New wireless standard. China has put a lot of effort into being the leader. In addition, some real nutters think the frequencies and other tech-related to it cause all sorts of physical problems that their tinfoil hats can’t protect against.


27 posted on 04/24/2020 9:52:53 AM PDT by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca. Deport all illegals. Abolish the DEA, IRS and ATF,.)
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To: Hamiltonian

China will buy out mining lands of a bankrupt America selling out federal land, just as the French were being snookered in selling major government airports and rail lines to CHina...

Cross border nationalization globalization.


28 posted on 04/24/2020 10:07:50 AM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security in hatse:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucified)
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To: Hillbilly sage

Which components can Shenghe get that MP can’t? The flotation plant is still there and the hydrometallutgy processes were developed in the U.S. decades ago.


29 posted on 04/24/2020 10:08:10 AM PDT by Hamiltonian
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To: RedStateRocker

I assumed there had to be more than just faster streaming considering all of the discussion of health issues.


30 posted on 04/24/2020 10:19:55 AM PDT by HollyB
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To: HollyB

Nutters gotta do their thing.


31 posted on 04/24/2020 10:25:41 AM PDT by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca. Deport all illegals. Abolish the DEA, IRS and ATF,.)
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To: henkster

“They have armies of lobbyists and lawyers whose only goal is to end US industrial capacity. Those lobbyist/lawyers are very well paid. Grandma sends them a $10 check because she saw the photo of a sad polar bear on their ad in Good Housekeeping. You think that’s enough money to pay all those people? Next question; who benefits from the destruction of US industrial capacity?”

Congress released a report, based on hearings, in...2017(?) I believe? Said many environmental groups were funded via offshore cutouts traced to Russia, and China. Named the Sierra Club in particular. Crickets from the msm...


32 posted on 04/24/2020 10:50:34 AM PDT by Basket_of_Deplorables (Unredact the 99 Collyer Report!!!)
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To: Hamiltonian

I don’t have a clue. Just read in some article that changes in the process that got them closed down and made a Supersite for clean-up have been made and Shenghe was helpful in securing some components. I had no reason to doubt since Shenghe stands to make a ton of money now.

My only point in my original post was that the Trump administration is focused on getting us out of the impossible situation the past four admins have put us in.


33 posted on 04/24/2020 10:56:13 AM PDT by Hillbilly sage (Birds of a feather)
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To: HollyB
Amazing what the net has on the subject.

For example, China produces 95% of world's gallium, used in 5G base station chipsets

"...The article, “Gallium: China tightens grip on wonder metal as Huawei works on promising applications beyond 5G” doesn’t describe any immediate threat to U.S. chipmakers. However, it does lay out facts that show both China and chipmaker Huawei could dominate in products made with gallium-based chips in years to come. Against the backdrop of trade negotiations over tariffs and blacklists between China and the U.S., the question of raw material supplies could become more critical....."

34 posted on 04/24/2020 10:59:46 AM PDT by Hamiltonian
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To: Hillbilly sage

Sure hope the Federal Government isn’t going tbe buying Chinese stuff to “secure the domestic supply chain”.


35 posted on 04/24/2020 11:02:41 AM PDT by Hamiltonian
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To: GOPJ

The U.S. Government knew in 2009 that N-95 masks were critical, came from China… And did nothing about it.

Would someone help an old man here.

Who was our president at that time?


36 posted on 04/24/2020 11:35:43 AM PDT by Grampa Dave (Are the ChiComs, their ownership of America's, fake news media/CNN, the real Deep Staters?)
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To: 1Old Pro

“Fauci: ‘No doubt’ Trump will face surprise infectious disease outbreak January 11, 2017 “

Trump had not been sworn in as Potus when Fauxi uttered this!


37 posted on 04/24/2020 11:38:25 AM PDT by Grampa Dave (Are the ChiComs, their ownership of America's, fake news media/CNN, the real Deep Staters?)
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To: henkster

“Follow the environmental money. I guarantee it goes back to the PRC.”

Check my tagline.


38 posted on 04/24/2020 11:42:37 AM PDT by Grampa Dave (Are the ChiComs/PRC, their ownership of America's, fake news media/CNN, the real Deep Staters?)
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To: Hamiltonian

Bttt.

5.56mm


39 posted on 04/24/2020 11:48:15 AM PDT by M Kehoe (DRAIN THE SWAMP! Finish THE WALL!)
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To: Hamiltonian
My question is “How, exactly, do the Chinese prevent our stock market from reflecting events in China of this magnitude???

Sure, after the fact we know we have to on-shore all critical supply chain elements. But how was that inobvious to the smart money in January???

40 posted on 04/24/2020 12:16:48 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (Socialism is cynicism directed towards society and - correspondingly - naivete towards government.)
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