BRICS welcomes new members in push to reshuffle world order
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[August 25, 2023]
By Carien du Plessis , Anait Miridzhanian and Bhargav
Acharya
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The BRICS bloc of developing nations agreed on
Thursday to admit Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt, Argentina and the
United Arab Emirates in a move aimed at accelerating its push to
reshuffle a world order it sees as outdated.
In deciding in favor of an expansion - the bloc's first in 13 years -
BRICS leaders left the door open to future enlargement as dozens more
countries voiced interest in joining a grouping they hope can level the
global playing field.
The expansion adds economic heft to BRICS, whose current members are
China, the world's second largest economy, as well as Brazil, Russia,
India and South Africa. It could also amplify its declared ambition to
become a champion of the Global South.
But long-standing tensions could linger between members who want to
forge the grouping into a counterweight to the West - notably China,
Russia and now Iran - and those that continue to nurture close ties to
the United States and Europe.
"This membership expansion is historic," Chinese President Xi Jinping,
the bloc's most stalwart proponent of enlargement, said. "It shows the
determination of BRICS countries for unity and cooperation with the
broader developing countries."
Originally an acronym coined by Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim
O'Neill in 2001, the bloc was founded as an informal four-nation club in
2009 and added South Africa a year later in its only previous expansion.
The six new candidates will formally become members on Jan. 1, 2024,
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said when he named the countries
during a three-day leaders' summit he is hosting in Johannesburg.
"BRICS has embarked on a new chapter in its effort to build a world that
is fair, a world that is just, a world that is also inclusive and
prosperous," Ramaphosa said.
"We have consensus on the first phase of this expansion process and
other phases will follow."
FRIENDS AND ALLIES LEAD CANDIDATES
The countries invited to join reflect individual BRICS members' desires
to bring allies into the club.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva had vocally lobbied for
neighbor Argentina's inclusion while Egypt has close commercial ties
with Russia and India.
The entry of oil powers Saudi Arabia and UAE highlights their drift away
from the United States' orbit and ambition to become global heavyweights
in their own right.
Russia and Iran have found common cause in their shared struggle against
U.S.-led sanctions and diplomatic isolation, with their economic ties
deepening in the wake of Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
"BRICS is not competing with anyone," Russia's Vladimir Putin, who is
attending the summit remotely due to an international warrant for
alleged war crimes, said on Thursday.
"But it's also obvious that this process of the emerging of a new world
order still has fierce opponents."
Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi celebrated his country's BRICS invitation
with a swipe at Washington, saying on Iranian television network Al Alam
that the expansion "shows that the unilateral approach is on the way to
decay".
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South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa,
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russia's Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov attend a press conference as the BRICS Summit is held
in Johannesburg, South Africa August 24, 2023. REUTERS/Alet
Pretorius
Beijing is close to Ethiopia and the country's inclusion also speaks
to South Africa's desire to amplify Africa's voice in global
affairs.
LOFTY AMBITIONS, LITTLE RESULTS
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres attended
Thursday's expansion announcement, reflecting the bloc's growing
influence. He echoed BRICS' longstanding calls for reforms of the
U.N. Security Council, International Monetary Fund and World Bank.
"Today's global governance structures reflect yesterday's world," he
said. "For multilateral institutions to remain truly universal, they
must reform to reflect today's power and economic realities."
BRICS countries have economies that are vastly different in scale
and governments with often divergent foreign policy goals, a
complicating factor for the bloc's consensus decision-making model.
Though home to about 40% of the world's population and a quarter of
global gross domestic product, internal divisions have long hobbled
BRICS ambitions of becoming a major player on the world stage.
It has long been criticized for failing to live up to its grand
ambitions.
The regularly repeated desire of its member states to wean
themselves off the dollar, for example, has never materialized. And
its most concrete achievement, the New Development Bank, is now
struggling in the face of sanctions against founding shareholder
Russia.
Even as BRICS leaders this week weighed expanding the group - a move
every one of them publicly supported - divisions surfaced over how
much and how quickly.
Last-minute deliberations over entry criteria and which countries to
invite to join extended late into Wednesday evening.
Bloc heavyweight China has long called for an expansion of BRICS as
it seeks to challenge Western dominance, a strategy shared by
Russia.
Other BRICS members support fostering the creation of a multi-polar
global order. But Brazil and India have both also been forging
closer ties with the West.
Brazil's Lula has rejected the idea that the bloc should seek to
rival the United States and Group of Seven wealthy economies.
However, as he departed South Africa on Thursday, he said he saw no
contradiction in bringing in Iran - a historical arch-foe of
Washington - if it advanced the cause of the developing world.
"We can't deny the geopolitical importance of Iran and other
countries that will join BRICS. ... What matters is not the person
who governs but the importance of the country."
(Additional reporting by Sergio Goncalves in Lisbon, Ethan Wang in
Beijing, Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow, Elwely Elwelly in Dubai and
Anthony Boadle in Brasilia; Writing by Joe Bavier; Editing by Toby
Chopra, Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Jonathan Oatis)
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