https://sputnikglobe.com/20260527/how-chinas-tungsten-restrictions-could-squeeze-the-us-military-industrial-complex-1124192745.html
How China’s Tungsten Restrictions Could Squeeze the US Military-Industrial Complex
How China’s Tungsten Restrictions Could Squeeze the US Military-Industrial Complex
Sputnik International
The US is scrambling for tungsten needed to replenish THAAD and Patriot interceptors, as well as Tomahawk missiles burned through during the Iran war, NBC News reports.
2026-05-27T06:04+0000
2026-05-27T06:04+0000
2026-05-27T06:27+0000
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Tungsten has traditionally been in high demand for the US defense industry, primarily for armor-piercing munitions, Ruslan Dimukhamedov, chair of the Association of Producers and Consumers of Rare and Rare Earth Metals, tells Sputnik. China currently controls around 80% of global tungsten mine production and there's no substitute for the "war metal." The US previously outsourced much of its tungsten and critical minerals industry to China — now China’s export controls, imposed in response to American tariffs, are backfiring on the US, stresses Igor Yushkov, an expert at the Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation. The way out of a potential shortage for the US is to ramp up production in other regions, but it would take time and money.
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How China’s Tungsten Restrictions Could Squeeze the US Military-Industrial Complex
06:04 GMT 27.05.2026 (Updated: 06:27 GMT 27.05.2026) The US is scrambling for tungsten needed to replenish THAAD and Patriot interceptors, as well as Tomahawk missiles burned through during the Iran war, NBC News reports.
Tungsten has traditionally been in high demand for the US defense industry, primarily for armor-piercing munitions, Ruslan Dimukhamedov, chair of the Association of Producers and Consumers of Rare and Rare Earth Metals, tells Sputnik.
Meanwhile, "dominant applications of tungsten are civilian," Dimukhamedov points out. "Primarily, it is used in cemented carbide tools, followed by alloy steels, then electrodes and filaments, and finally chemical compounds."
China currently controls around 80% of global tungsten mine production and there's no substitute for the "war metal."
The US previously outsourced much of its tungsten and critical minerals industry to China — now China’s export controls, imposed in response to American tariffs, are backfiring on the US, stresses Igor Yushkov, an expert at the Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation.
"If tensions between the US and China continue to escalate, China will undoubtedly use such tools —restricting exports — because they are highly sensitive for the United States," Ushkov stresses.
The way out of a potential shortage for the US is to ramp up production
in other regions, but it would take time and money.