Trump to host Central Asian presidents, as US seeks to counter China, Russia influence

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US President Donald Trump speaks as he meets with the NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on October 22, 2025. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP)

US President Donald Trump will host the leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan on Nov 6.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • Trump will host Central Asian leaders on Nov 6 to increase US influence amid competition from Russia and China.
  • The US seeks new partnerships for minerals, energy, and trade routes, signing a minerals cooperation deal with Kazakhstan.
  • Central Asia is rich in minerals like uranium; the US aims to diversify supplies away from Russia and China.

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WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump will host the leaders of five Central Asian nations at the White House on Nov 6 as the US seeks to gain influence in a region long dominated by Russia and increasingly courted by China.

The talks take place amid intensifying competition for Central Asia’s vast mineral resources.

Western nations are seeking to diversify supply chains away from Moscow and Beijing.

In particular, the US is pursuing new partnerships to secure critical minerals, energy supplies, and overland trade routes that circumvent its geopolitical rivals.

Launched in 2015, the so-called C5+1 platform brings together the United States and the five Central Asian states — Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan — to advance cooperation on economic, energy and security issues. Their leaders will also attend a dinner with Mr Trump at the White House on Nov 6.

US and Kazakh representatives signed a memorandum of cooperation on critical minerals at a meeting in Washington on Nov 6, according to the news service of the country’s president, Mr Kassym-Jomart Tokayev. It did not elaborate.

The White House had no immediate comment on that report.

Dr Gracelin Baskaran, a director at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think-tank, said the administration will pursue government-to-government engagement but also commercial deals that secure US access to vital minerals.

“As China and Russia entrench their control over the region’s mining, processing, and infrastructure systems, Washington is seeking to establish a tangible foothold through targeted strategic projects,” Dr Baskaran said. 

Rich in minerals and energy, the five nations remain economically tied to Russia, their former Soviet ruler, while neighbouring China has expanded its influence through large-scale infrastructure and mining investments.

Together, the countries are home to about 84 million people and hold vast deposits of uranium, copper, gold, rare earths and other strategic minerals essential to global efforts to transition to greener forms of energy.

Kazakhstan, the region’s largest economy, is the world’s leading uranium supplier, producing nearly 40 per cent of global output in 2024, while Uzbekistan ranks among the top five. 

Together, they account for just over half of the world’s uranium production - a vital resource for US nuclear power, a significant source of US electricity. Russia still supplies roughly 20 per cent of America’s imported uranium, making diversification an increasingly urgent goal.

Under Mr Trump, the US has pursued a multi-pronged strategy to secure critical minerals and reduce reliance on China, which dominates global supply chains for strategic metals including uranium, rare earth elements, copper, and titanium.

China at times has leveraged its dominance by restricting exports, underscoring Washington’s urgency to secure alternative sources. REUTERS

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