Critical Minerals and New Trade Routes Top Agenda at First White House C5+1 Summit
Washington, D.C.: President Donald Trump hosted the leaders of all five Central Asian nations—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—at the White House on Thursday for a landmark summit aimed at significantly boosting U.S. influence in a region long dominated by Moscow and increasingly courted by Beijing.
The meeting, held under the C5+1 diplomatic framework which marks its 10th anniversary, is the first of its kind to be hosted by a U.S. President in Washington and signals an intensified American effort to counter its primary geopolitical rivals in Eurasia.
The core of the new U.S. strategy is the diversification of global supply chains for critical minerals and the development of new trade routes that bypass Russia and China.
Critical Minerals Race: Central Asia holds vast reserves of key strategic resources, including uranium, copper, and rare earth elements, which are vital for U.S. technology and clean energy sectors. Kazakhstan, for example, is the world’s leading uranium supplier, producing nearly 40% of global output in 2024. Washington is actively seeking to secure access to these resources to reduce its reliance on Chinese-dominated supply chains.
Alternative Trade Corridor: The U.S. is heavily promoting the Middle Corridor—a trans-Caspian transport route that links Central Asia to the South Caucasus and Europe—as a key logistical hedge against both Russian and Chinese infrastructure control.


