Sunday, January 11, 2026

Can Antimony Make Pakistan a Strategic Player?

Antimony has quietly become one of the world’s most strategically critical defense metals, used in night-vision technology, missile sensors, ammunition, and even nuclear weapons systems. With China dominating the global antimony supply chain and the United States almost entirely dependent on imports, Washington is urgently searching for alternative suppliers.

In recent months, Pakistan has been mentioned as a potential new player in this strategic race. Headlines claimed multi-million-dollar deals, U.S. interest, and the possibility of Pakistan becoming a key geopolitical partner through antimony exports. But how much of this story is grounded in economic and strategic reality — and how much is hype?

This video breaks down:

Why antimony is classified as a critical defense material

China’s near-monopoly over global antimony production and processing

America’s supply-chain vulnerability after China’s 2024 export restrictions

Pakistan’s actual antimony reserves and production capacity

The difference between headline deals and binding commercial agreements

Structural problems in Pakistan’s mining sector, including policy uncertainty, lack of local processing, and investor risk

The geopolitical balancing act between China, the U.S., and Pakistan, especially in Balochistan

The conclusion is clear: antimony is not a silver bullet for Pakistan’s economy or global standing. Without clear mining policies, domestic refining capacity, provincial trust, and long-term infrastructure investment, antimony risks becoming yet another overhyped resource story — exporting raw material while value and control remain abroad.

This is not just a story about a metal. It’s a story about geopolitics, supply chains, and Pakistan’s place in the global strategic economy.

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