Africa’s Minerals Are Being Bartered for Security: Why It’s a Bad Idea

Yves here. This article describes a minerals pact among the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and the US with the US getting investment rights with no actual security obligations, despite this agreement being touted as a peace deal.

We just saw this movie in Ukraine, except this version has a bit more colorable optics via having a joint oversight committee. However, this article criticizes this scheme as following in the footsteps of ones with China and Russia, without mentioning the intelligence and sovereignity insulting Ukraine “raw earth” plan.

By Hanri Mostert, SARChI Chair for Mineral Law in Africa, University of Cape Town and Tracy-Lynn Field, Professor of Environmental and Sustainability Law, University of the Witwatersrand. Originally published at The Conversation

US-brokered peace deal between the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda binds the two African nations to a worrying arrangement: one where a country signs away its mineral resources to a superpower in return for opaque assurances of security.

The peace deal, signed in June 2025, aims to end three decades of conflict between the DRC and Rwanda.

A key part of the agreement binds both nations to developing a regional economic integration framework. This arrangement would expand cooperation between the two states, the US government and American investors on “transparent, formalized end-to-end mineral chains”.

Despite its immense mineral wealth, the DRC is among the five poorest countries in the world. It has been seeking US investment in its mineral sector.

The US has in turn touted a potential multi-billion-dollar investment programme to anchor its mineral supply chains in the traumatised and poor territory.

The peace that the June 2025 deal promises, therefore, hinges on chaining mineral supply to the US in exchange for Washington’s powerful – but vaguely formulated – military oversight.

The peace agreement further establishes a joint oversight committee – with representatives from the African Union, Qatar and the US – to receive complaints and resolve disputes between the DRC and Rwanda.

But beyond the joint oversight committee, the peace deal creates no specific security obligations for the US.

The relationship between the DRC and Rwanda has been marred by war and tension since the bloody First (1996-1997) and Second (1998-2003) Congo wars. At the heart of much of this conflict is the DRC’s mineral wealth. It has fuelled competition, exploitation and armed violence.

This latest peace deal introduces a resources-for-security arrangement. Such deals aren’t new in Africa. They first emerged in the early 2000s as resources-for-infrastructure transactions. Here, a foreign state would agree to build economic and social infrastructure (roads, ports, airports, hospitals) in an African state. In exchange, it would get a major stake in a government-owned mining company. Or gain preferential access to the host country’s minerals.

We have studied mineral law and governance in Africa for more than 20 years. The question that emerges now is whether a US-brokered resources-for-security agreement will help the DRC benefit from its resources.

Based on our research on mining, development and sustainability, we believe this is unlikely.

This is because resources-for-security is the latest version of a resource-bartering approach that China and Russia pioneered in countries such as Angola, the Central African Republic and the DRC.

Resource bartering in Africa has eroded the sovereignty and bargaining power of mineral-rich nations such as the DRCand Angola.

Further, resources-for-security deals are less transparent and more complicated than prior resource bartering agreements.

DRC’s Security Gaps

The DRC is endowed with major deposits of critical minerals like cobalt, copper, lithium, manganese and tantalum. These are the building blocks for 21st century technologies: artificial intelligence, electric vehicles, wind energy and military security hardware. Rwanda has less mineral wealth than its neighbour, but is the world’s third-largest producer of tantalum, used in electronics, aerospace and medical devices.

For almost 30 years, minerals have fuelled conflict and severe violence, especially in eastern DRC. Tungsten, tantalum and gold (referred to as 3TG) finance and drive conflict as government forces and an estimated 130 armed groups vie for control over lucrative mining sites. Several reports and studies have implicated the DRC’s neighbours – Rwanda and Uganda – in supporting the illegal extraction of 3TG in this region.

The DRC government has failed to extend security over its vast (2.3 million square kilometres) and diverse territory (109 million people, representing 250 ethnic groups). Limited resources, logistical challenges and corruption have weakened its armed forces.

This context makes the United States’ military backing enormously attractive. But our research shows there are traps.

What States Risk Losing

Resources-for-infrastructure and resources-for-security deals generally offer African nations short-term stability, financing or global goodwill. However, the costs are often long-term because of an erosion of sovereign control.

Here’s how this happens:

Examples of loss or near-loss of sovereignty from these sorts of deals abound in Africa.

For instance, Angola’s US$2 billion oil-backed loan from China Eximbank in 2004. This was repayable in monthly deliveries of oil, with revenues directed to Chinese-controlled accounts. The loan’s design deprived Angolan authorities of decision-making power over that income stream even before the oil was extracted.

These deals also fragment accountability. They often span multiple ministries (such as defence, mining and trade), avoiding robust oversight or accountability. Fragmentation makes resource sectors vulnerable to elite capture. Powerful insiders can manipulate agreements for private gain.

In the DRC, this has created a violent kleptocracy, where resource wealth is systematically diverted away from popular benefit.

Finally, there is the risk of re-entrenching extractive trauma. Communities displaced for mining and environmental degradation in many countries across Africa illustrate the long-standing harm to livelihoods, health and social cohesion.

These are not new problems. But where extraction is tied to security or infrastructure, such damage risks becoming permanent features, not temporary costs.

What Needs to Change

Critical minerals are “critical” because they’re hard to mine or substitute. Additionally, their supply chains are strategically vulnerable and politically exposed. Whoever controls these minerals controls the future. Africa must make sure it doesn’t trade that future away.

In a world being reshaped by global interests in critical minerals, African states must not underestimate the strategic value of their mineral resources. They hold considerable leverage.

But leverage only works if it is wielded strategically. This means:

  • investing in institutional strength and legal capacity to negotiate better deals
  • demanding local value creation and addition
  • requiring transparency and parliamentary oversight for minerals-related agreements
  • refusing deals that bypass human rights, environmental or sovereignty standards.

Africa has the resources. It must hold on to the power they wield

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3 comments

  1. lyman alpha blob

    I’m far from an expert on Angola, but I do have a family member whose father is a retired Angolan oil exec. The article uses Angola as an example of a country where resource deals haven’t panned out a couple times, but the deal with China was from 2004, which is a while ago. My (limited) understanding is that Angola is taking significant steps in recent years to stop just shipping out raw materials to other nations only to re-import the finished products later. They are currently building up their own domestic refining capacity to give the country more control over its resources – https://africanenergycouncil.org/angola-to-build-3-new-refineries/ That being said, I’m not sure who might be financing this project or what strings may be attached.

    Reply
  2. ISL

    Funny, the article fails to mention China even once.

    Carnegie Endowment asked the question back in March if the DRV can leverage US-China Competiton 1

    As part of US investment to weaken China in DRC. However, Congo uses Chinese weapons, has Chinese support to build infrastructure (where rRMB go way further than USD), and there are many Chinese companies operating in Congo.

    For an interesting detailed description of how very deep and long-term Chinese investment has been:

    https://www.intellinews.com/minerals-for-security-can-the-us-break-china-s-grip-on-the-drc-376360/

    whereas US efforts weathervane between administrations.

    This is against a backdrop of US overseas infrastructure projects (to oppose the BRI) that never happen.

    70% of Congo’s exports head to China, and whatever the US gets out of its agreement, that is where the refining will occur. Any realistic estimate is decades to set up a refining industry in the US based solely on the lack of modern technological expertise in mining, at much higher costs, and permitting (legal) challenges.

    I don’t have time to research deeper, but one wonders (aka Syria) if the dirty war against Congo from Rwanda has a US signature somewhere, which is why the US is able to negotiate its end.

    https://www.lloydsbanktrade.com/en/market-potential/democratic-republic-of-congo/trade-profile
    https://carnegieendowment.org/research/2025/03/can-the-drc-leverage-us-china-competition-over-critical-minerals?lang=en
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China%E2%80%93Democratic_Republic_of_the_Congo_relations
    3-https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10306200/

    Reply
    1. Yves Smith Post author

      You have a reading comprehension problem.

      “This is because resources-for-security is the latest version of a resource-bartering approach that China and Russia pioneered in countries such as Angola, the Central African Republic and the DRC.”

      Reply

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