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The world is changing in ways no one ever expected; though Putin, Xi, and others have been quietly laying the groundwork for it for decades. Looks like the fever dream that was "The American Century" is fading away:

How Big Is BRICS?
by Ted Snider Posted on May 01, 2023

While the US labors to maintain the unipolar world it leads, a multipolar world is springing up all around it. Africa and Brazil cry for it. China and India support it. Germany has whispered it, and France has called for it. Iran and Saudi Arabia are joining the multipolar Shanghai Cooperation Organization. But the most stunning sign of the reality of the new multipolar world may be the explosive growth of BRICS.

BRICS is an international organization whose primary purpose is to balance US hegemony in a new multipolar world. Its roots go back to 1996 and the emergence of the core group of Russia, India and China (RIC). In 2009, along with Brazil, BRIC held its first summit. In 2010, South Africa joined, and BRICS was formed, making it, perhaps, the only major international body in which representatives of Africa and Latin America have an equal voice.

The group is neither an alliance nor a bloc, and it is not against the United States. But it does seek to end the American led unipolar world and replace it with a world with many poles and many nations with equal voices. With members from almost every continent, the BRICS nations represent 3.2 billion people, or almost 41% of the planet’s population.

And that counterbalance is growing. At the recent BRICS Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Egypt, Nigeria, Senegal and Thailand were all welcomed as guests. Turkey, a NATO member, is seeking membership. At their annual summit in South Africa in June, the five BRICS members will discuss enlargement and the nineteen countries that have expressed interest in joining. Thirteen countries have formally requested membership in the multipolar organization, and six have made informal requests. Iran and Saudi Arabia have formally requested membership. Argentina, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Egypt, Bahrain and Indonesia are all known to have declared their interest. That list represents another 600 million people and would push BRICS’ share of the global population well past 41%. The list also reportedly includes Mexico and at least three other African nations. Russia has previously said that Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Sudan and Venezuela are also on the list.

But the growth of BRICS is not confined to membership and share of the world’s population. Thought impossible only a few years ago, BRICS has now passed the US led G7 as the biggest gross domestic product bloc in the world. In 2021, the combined GDP of BRICS reached $42 trillion, or 31.5% of global GDP, versus $41 trillion, or 30.7%, for the G7. That trend is expected to continue. Bloomberg reports that, based on the latest IMF data, in 2023, BRICS will contribute 32.1% of GDP versus a G7 contribution of 29.9%.

In 2014, BRICS launched its own bank, The New Development Bank, as an alternative to the World Bank and the IMF. Financial assistance from the Western controlled World Bank and IMF often comes with dictates for ideological alignment or economic or political structural adjustments. Brazilian President and founding member of BRICS Lula Da Silva has explained that The New Development Bank, “is the product of a partnership among BRICS countries with a view to creating a world with less poverty, less inequality and more sustainability," unlike the IMF that Lula has accused of “asphyxiating countries’ economies.” The BRICS bank has reportedly “approved 99 loan projects totaling more than $34 billion, mainly for infrastructure projects, according to China’s Foreign Ministry.”

But the significance of BRICS goes beyond its economic impact. It was originally conceived as an antidote to US hegemony in international affairs. The two are not mutually exclusive as several BRICS members have called for a BRICS currency as a mechanism to emancipate themselves from US hegemony.

BRICS members have had a significant impact in global affairs, including the world’s response to Russia’s war in Ukraine and the push for multipolarity. Brazil’s president has criticized the US for "encouraging war" in Ukraine instead of "talking about peace." He as challenged the US by "positively receiv[ing] the Chinese proposal" to help broker a peace in Ukraine and by endorsing multipolarity by proposing a joint effort, or a "peace club," that could include the members of BRICS. Brazil has neither joined the US in sanctioning Russia nor voted against Russia in the UN

Lula has been a fierce promoter of multipolarity and a more "just and equitable international order.” He has called for "multilateralism" and for strengthening "BRICS and other multilateral institutions.”

Lula has also suggested that "the BRICS bank have a currency to finance trade between Brazil and China, between Brazil and other BRICS countries" so that countries are not compelled "to chase after dollars to export, when they could be exporting in their own currencies."

India has also declined to condemn Russia at the UN. Far from sanctioning Russia, India has increased imports from Russia, especially of oil, promoting Russia from India’s eighteenth largest import partner to its fourth. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that "Relations between Russia and India have significantly improved," and India has recently called its relationship with Russia "among the steadiest of the major relationships of the world in the contemporary era."

India has reiterated its "commitment to a multi-polar world." Like its BRICS partner, Brazil, India has sought to demote the US dollar by promoting trade with the rupee and by beginning to purchase some of its Russian oil in Russian rubles.

China has supported Russia diplomatically at the UN and economically by offering it an outlet from the sanctions regime. China-Russia trade has swollen to $190 billion a year. Chinese President Xi Jinping has not only “reaffirm[ed] the special nature of the Russia-China partnership,” but "signed a statement on deepening the strategic partnership and bilateral ties which are entering a new era."

South Africa has rebuffed US pressure to join the sanctions regime and has abstained from voting against Russia at the UN. In February, South Africa held joint military training exercises with Russia and China off its coast. The South African National Defense Force said that the drills are a “means to strengthen the already flourishing relations between South Africa, Russia and China.”

South African President Cyril Ramphosa has joined the counter choir of calls for negotiations in the war and has even criticized the US, saying that "The war could have been avoided if NATO had heeded the warnings from amongst its own leaders and officials over the years that its eastward expansion would lead to greater, not less, instability in the region.”

Like the rest of its BRICS partners, South Africa has continued the call for a multipolar world.

Growing both in size and in economic might, BRICS is amplifying the voice of the global majority in the call for a multipolar world.

Ted Snider is a regular columnist on US foreign policy and history at Antiwar.com and The Libertarian Institute. He is also a frequent contributor to Responsible Statecraft and The American Conservative as well as other outlets.

[original.antiwar.com]

Druvius 8 May 1
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5 comments

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0

Adapt or perish.

1

I'm not the flag waving moron that many think I am even though I spent active years in the U. S. Army. BRICS may turn out to be more than you think it is, but not in our favor. Those that would take over hope so and they also promote a false love of our flag. In the last 6 years I have seen more flags flying than ever before and also a great revival of religion. I view this as signs that we might be lulled to sleep as they take over peaceably. Meanwhile, if Russia has anything to do with it you end up blown to bits and killed. The false narrative there is to get rid of Nazis. I read that many Russian soldiers are deserting rather than be a part of this farce. So much for BRICS and a dying Putin makes little difference to any of this.

7

I had always thought that the people of the US. despite large political differences would never accept an autocratic dictatorship.
Then the marmalade menace came along and showed that some people will gladly welcome just that. And dumpety praises the dictators and their leadership style and his Qult minions cheer. And they have also proven they are willing to take power by any means ncessary.

1

Historically every empire has eventually ended and the US empire may be going that way.
What is going to replace it ? I doubt very much if it will be the multipolar world described here.
A world over ruled by China and Russia with their puppets sounds even more horrific than the world situation since the end of WW2 with the USA in the ascendancy.

5

If you seriously believe that this is not a new power bloc and "is not against the United States", you're high. Or foolish. Or foolishly high. China and Russia have never been selfless promoters of smaller nations' economies or wealth, they are looking for power, influence, and control.

Nations which have a problem with the IMF and World Bank insistence on following some "ideology" as a condition of their loans are almost always those whose current ideology is "democracy bad, dictatorship good"- like Russia, China, India under Modi (for the first time in decades, international organizations such as Freedom House have excluded India from the category of free countries since Modi has taken to jailing opposition leaders), and many many African, Latin American, and Asian states who would prefer to take a loan without the baggage of democratic reforms. Or paying it back.

I have no problems with a so-called "multipolar" world. The problem is that the other two superpowers are envious, thuggish dictatorships who are trying to expand and rule through fear. (Just ask Taiwan, Ukraine, or South Korea whether they prefer another American century, or Russia and China dictating their futures.) For a free world, people have to actually be free. Putin and Xi have no interest in freedom for anyone but themselves. All it needs is for Trump to be reelected and then all the superpowers will have egomaniacal dictators at their helm. Won't that be fun.

You better pray that this is another American century, because the alternative is horrible.

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