The President's Daily Brief - October 22nd, 2025: U.S. & Australia Team Up To Disarm China’s Hidden Weapon & Europe Pushes New Peace Plan
Episode Date: October 22, 2025In this episode of The President’s Daily Brief: America and Australia are teaming up to disarm China’s most powerful weapon—its near-monopoly on rare earth minerals. We’ll break down t...he $8 billion deal that could reshape global supply chains and weaken Beijing’s economic leverage. Later in the show—Europe and Ukraine are reportedly drafting a 12-point peace plan to end the war, but Moscow doesn’t seem ready to budge. Plus—history made in Japan, where voters have elected the country’s first female prime minister, known for her hardline “Japan First” stance. And in today’s Back of the Brief—the European Union finally sets a date to end Russian gas imports once and for all, announcing a full cutoff by 2028. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting https://PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Mando: Control Body Odor ANYWHERE with @shop.mando and get 20% off + free shipping with promo code PDB at https://shopmando.com! #mandopod Birch Gold: Text PDB to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Wednesday the 22nd of October.
Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage.
All right, let's get briefed.
First up, America and Australia are teaming up to disarm one of China's most powerful weapons.
It's stranglehold on rare earth minerals.
We'll explain how this new $8 billion deal between the U.S. and Oz could upend Beijing's control over the materials that power the modern world.
Later in the show, Europe and Ukraine are reportedly working on a 12-point peace proposal to end the war.
But Moscow doesn't seem ready to budge. And by that, I mean, they're not ready to budge.
Plus, history made in Japan, where voters have elected the country's first female prime minister,
known for her nationalist Japan First stance. And in today's back of the brief,
the European Union finally sets a deadline to cut off Russian gas for good, announcing they'll end imports in 2008.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
regular listeners know that we usually talk about power in kinetic terms here on the PDB, weapons, intelligence, boots on the ground.
But one of China's most powerful weapons isn't on the battlefield. It's underground. And now the U.S. and Australia are teaming up to make it less threatening.
This week, Washington and Canberra announced a sweeping new deal worth roughly $8.5 billion to start with to try and break China's grip on the global supply of critical rare earth minerals.
The plan includes a U.S.-backed gallium refinery in Western Australia, a rare earth oxide facility run by Arafura Rare Earths, and billions more in government financing for mining and processing projects designed to serve defense and tech manufacturers across the west.
Officials are calling it a secure minerals corridor, a new allied supply chain that runs from Australia's mines straight into America's defense and manufacturing base.
The money is coming from the U.S. Export-Import Bank and Australia's critical minerals facility
with private investment expected to follow. Now, for years, Beijing has dominated this market.
Currently, China controls nearly 90% of the world's rare earth refining capacity. To give you a bit of
context, the U.S. Geological Survey found that in the year 2024, China's mines produced some
270,000 tons of rare earths, and the country has 44 million tons of reserves. By comparison,
the U.S. produced 45,000 tons of rare earths and had 1.9 million tons of reserves,
while Australia produced 13,000 tons and had 5.7 million tons of reserves. We'll have a test on
all that later. China has effectively used that dominance as a geopolitical weapon. In 2010, Beijing
cut off exports to Japan during a territorial dispute. And more recently, it's restricted exports
of gallium and germanium, metals vital for semiconductors and radar systems. Those moves rattled Washington,
of course, and pushed U.S. allies to start building alternatives. This new deal is the boldest step
yet to turn that idea into reality, and the implications are enormous. If successful,
the U.S. Australia corridor could give the West a stable, China-free lifeline for the materials
that keep its militaries and economies running. And that means Beijing loses one of its most effective
pressure points, and that, of course, would be the point. Think of it this way. Rare Earths are the
connective tissue of modern technology. They're in every smartphone, computer, electric car, and flat-screen
TV on the planet. Take them away, and you don't just lose fighter jets and missiles. You lose your phone,
your Wi-Fi, your car, your power grid. Oh, no TikTok. So this isn't just an economic partnership
between the U.S. and Australia. It's a strategic countermeasure, a way to disarm Beijing without firing
a shot. Now, as you might imagine, China is not expected to take this development quietly.
Analysts expect Basing to push back, maybe by slashing prices to flood the market, or by locking
down even more supply from Africa and Latin America, where Chinese companies already control key mines.
Another possibility, Beijing could tighten export permits further, trying to remind Washington
and Canberra that it still holds most of the cards, at least for now.
But there's a growing sense that the West has momentum.
Australia's government says some of the new refineries could be online as early as 2027,
with U.S. defense contracts already being lined up.
And markets have noticed.
Shares in Australian companies like Linus and Narafura jumped after the deal was announced.
This is part of a broader realignment that we've been watching.
for some time now, what trade experts call friend-shoring, allied nations working together to secure
critical industries from microchips to energy and to reduce dependency on China's supply chains.
The U.S. has already struck similar deals with Japan and Canada, but this one with Australia may be the
most important yet, because Australia has the raw resources and the political will to act.
Now, just to be clear, this isn't about punishing China. It's about removing a vulnerability.
For decades, the West got comfortable with China's dominance in rare earths because, well, because
it was cheap and convenient.
But over the past several years, it's realized that convenience comes at a strategic cost.
So, what's next?
Well, I'm glad you asked.
Expect more joint projects, more government funding, and more tension in the global minerals market.
We're watching a new kind of arms race.
One fought with supply chains instead of soldiers.
And for the first time, in a long time, Beijing's monopoly on rare earths,
looks vulnerable. As one Australian analyst put it, the West is finally digging in. Ah, you see what he did
there? Digging in, rare earth's minerals, mining. Don't forget to tip your waitresses. Coming up next,
Europe and Ukraine push a new 12-point peace plan as Moscow refuses to ease off its demands.
And Japan makes history with its first female prime minister, a nationalist with a Japan-first agenda.
We'll have those stories after the break.
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Welcome back to the PDB.
The road to peace in Ukraine has narrowed once again.
As Europe and Kiev rally behind President Trump's new 12-point plan,
to halt the war, the Kremlin shows no signs of budging from the hard lines that it drew back in
August. According to a Bloomberg news report, the proposal, now circulating among Washington and
Brussels and Ukraine, would freeze the war along existing battle lines and establish a peaceboard,
chaired by Trump himself, to oversee its implementation. It's a high-stakes attempt to create a
tenuous ceasefire that could turn into something lasting, even as both sides continue to trade
artillery and drone strikes. In the framework, both sides would open talks on the governance of the
current occupied areas of Ukraine, without Europe or Kiev, legally recognizing any agreed upon
Moscow's seized land as Russian territory. In exchange, Ukraine would receive sweeping security guarantees,
reconstruction aid, and a fast-track path to membership into the European Union. For Moscow,
economic sanctions would gradually ease, but about 300 billion in central bank reserves,
would remain frozen until the Kremlin contributes to Ukraine's post-war rebuilding.
If Russia reignites hostilities, the sanctions would automatically be reimposed.
The plan also carries a humanitarian component, the return of thousands of deported Ukrainian children
to Russia, and a large-scale prisoner exchange once both sides stop the gunfire.
It's an effort by Trump to pair diplomacy with visible relief on the ground.
It's, I suppose, a way to show progress, even as trust between Kiv and the Kremlin remains
wafer thin, if at that. As we've previously discussed, European capitals pressed Washington
to hold firm on the principle of an immediate ceasefire along current front lines, the same position
that Trump endorsed after meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky last week. But the diplomatic
road ahead, well, it looks steep and windy and bumpy at best. The White House confirmed yesterday
that preparations for a second Trump-Puton summit, this time in Hungary, have been shelved,
following the abrupt postponement of Secretary of State Marker Rubio's groundwork meeting with Russian foreign minister
Sergei Lavrov. When speaking to reporters, Lavrov declared that Russia's conditions for peace,
quote, remain unchanged since the Alaska summit from August. He added, quote,
I want to officially confirm Russia has not changed its position compared to the understandings that were reached,
warning that if the root causes are not addressed, there will be no enduring peace of the kind President Trump seeks, end quote.
Those so-called root causes, according to the Kremlin, include Ukraine, remaining non-nuclear,
and permanently outside NATO, legal protections for Russian-speaking minorities, and a written
Western pledge to halt the alliance's eastward expansion. So for those of you following this
process to peace at home, the demands haven't softened. In fact, it's quite the opposite,
alongside new pressure for Kiv to cede additional territory in Denezsk and Luhansk,
red lines that Ukraine has repeatedly rejected. So Trump insists he's committed to ending the war,
though he admits the challenge of brokering a deal is a tough one. That's putting it diplomatically.
He likened his latest effort to his past peace achievements, saying it's proved more difficult than
Gaza or India, Pakistan, but vowed that peace will come and soon. However, frankly, that optimism
continues to feel increasingly strained. All right, turning to Japan. The political ground has shifted in a
way that few saw coming. Sanai Takaichi, a hardline conservative and long-time ally of the late
Shenzhouabe, has been elected prime minister, becoming the country's first female leader at a moment
of uncertainty in the Pacific. Her rise comes after the stunning collapse of her predecessor's
government. Undone by election losses so severe, they rattled the foundations of Japan's
Liberal Democratic Party. For a party that dominated post-war politics for generations, it was an earthquake.
The loss triggered an opposition effort to rally, but in a rare show of unity across party lines,
the right-wing Japan Innovation Party backed Takeichi, tipping the scales and sealing her path to power.
But the victory was bittersweet.
Takeichi is Japan's fourth prime minister in five years, and the first to lead a minority government in decades.
That alone would be historic, but what comes next will be more defining.
She'll face her first test almost immediately.
President Trump lands in Tokyo next week, just days.
after her inauguration, setting the stage for a diplomatic trial by fire that could shape the future
of a U.S.-Japan alliance. When Trump touches down, the agenda will be loaded, a $550 billion investment
package tied to the new trade deal, debates over Japan's share of U.S. troop costs, and the rising
threat from an emboldened China and a restless North Korea. It's a familiar script,
security, trade, and the politics of burden sharing, but this time a new player has emerged.
As a protégé of Abe, Takeichi's brand of nationalism runs deep.
Her Japan-first vision mirrors Trump's America First movement, bold and laser-focused on sovereignty.
On the campaign trail, she vowed Japan would no longer, quote, apologize for defending its interests,
a line that electrified the country's conservatives.
That hawkish energy could help her connect with Trump or clash with him.
Washington insiders say Trump will push Tokyo to, quote, pay more for U.S. forces stationed in Japan,
reviving an old fault line in the alliance, one that has tested just how much Japan's security is worth
and who should foot the bill. For Takaichi, it's a political tightrope. Her instincts align with Trump's
call for self-reliance, but her minority government and Japan's fiscal strain could limit how far
she can follow through. Still, she's made her intentions clear. Expect higher defense spending,
a tougher stance on China's maritime provocations, and a readiness to confront North Korea's
missile tests. Yet at home, she must navigate deep public unease over remilitarization,
a debate that's haunted every Japanese leader, frankly, since the end of World War II.
On trade as well, she's treading carefully. The firebrand, who once blasted the U.S.-Japan deal
as two-one-sided, now sounds more pragmatic. Sources say she has no plans to reopen talks,
preferring to stabilize the alliance and shield Japan's manufacturing base from American tariff
pressure. With Trump's visit just days away,
Takeichi's ability to balance Japan-first nationalism with the realities of an alliance-first foreign policy
will define her premiership and reveal whether she can turn her historic first into a lasting shift for Japan's place in the Pacific.
All right, coming up in the back of the brief.
After years of dependence, Europe vows to quit Russian gas by 2028.
It's been so hard to quit.
A move, many say, is years overdue.
More on that when we come back.
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In today's back of the brief, after nearly three years of war in Ukraine, Europe is
finally cutting the cord from Moscow.
EU energy ministers have agreed to a plan to completely end imports of Russian natural gas
by the 1st of January, 2008.
The measure lays out a step-by-step phase-out, no new contracts starting in 26,
short-term deals ending that June, and all long-term agreements expiring by the start of
2008.
On paper, this marks one of the strongest collective actions the European Union has taken against
Moscow since the invasion began.
But critics say the timeline shows just how dependent the continent still is on Russian energy
and how difficult it will be to unwind that relationship entirely.
Before the war, Russia supplied about 40% of the EU's gas imports, powering industries from Germany
to Italy. That figure plummeted after the invasion as the Kremlin weaponized energy shipments,
cutting off flows through key pipelines and sending prices across Europe skyrocketing.
The shock forced governments to scramble for alternatives,
restarting coal plants, signing emergency deals with the U.S., Qatar and Norway, and accelerating
investment in renewables. Now, Brussels is framing the 2028 cutoff as the final step in breaking free
from Moscow's energy grip. EU officials say it's about both economic and political security,
removing one of Vladimir Putin's last major pressure points over the continent. Still, some
member states remain uneasy. Countries in central and eastern Europe, where infrastructure for liquefied natural
gas remains limited, warned the transition could drive up costs and risk future shortages. Others
argue the deadline is far too late, noting that Europe continues to funnel billions of euros
each year to Russia through remaining gas purchases, money that ultimately, of course, helps fund the
Putin war effort. So while Brussels is patting itself on the back for finally setting a date,
many analysts say the real question isn't whether Europe can end Russian gas by 2028. It's whether
it should have done so years ago.
And that, my friends,
is the President's Daily Brief for Wednesday,
the 22nd of October. Now, if you have
any questions or comments, and I hope you do,
reach out to me at PDB at
thefirsttv.com.
And if you like the show and you want to support what we do,
we'll consider becoming a premium member.
It's very easy to do. You'll get
every episode ad free. Just visit
PDB premium.com.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today
with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stand
formed. Stay safe. Stay cool.
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