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Rio to host BRICS summit wary of Trump

Andrew Murphy by Andrew Murphy
July 4, 2025
in Economy
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Brazilian soldiers patrol Ipanema beach during security operations ahead of the 2025 BRICS summit, in Rio de Janeiro on July 3, 2025. ©AFP

Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) (AFP) – The BRICS nations will convene for a summit in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday and Monday, with members hoping to weigh in on global crises while tiptoeing around US President Donald Trump’s policies. The city, with beefed-up security, will play host to leaders and diplomats from 11 emerging economies including China, India, Russia, South Africa, and host Brazil, which represent nearly half of the world’s population and 40 percent of its GDP.

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Brazil’s left-wing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will have to navigate the absence of Chinese President Xi Jinping, who will miss the summit for the first time. Beijing will instead be represented by Premier Li Qiang. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is facing a pending International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant, will not travel to Brazil but is set to participate via video link, according to the Kremlin. Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian, fresh from a 12-day conflict with Israel and a skirmish with the United States, will also be absent, as will his Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, a Brazilian government source told AFP.

Tensions in the Middle East, including Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, will weigh on the summit, as well as the grim anticipation of tariffs threatened by Trump and set to take effect next week. Trump stated that starting Friday, his administration would send countries letters outlining their tariff levels, as negotiations to avoid higher US levies enter their final stretch.

“We’re anticipating a summit with a cautious tone: it will be difficult to mention the United States by name in the final declaration,” Marta Fernandez, director of the BRICS Policy Center at Rio’s Pontifical Catholic University, told AFP. China, for example, “is trying to adopt a restrained position on the Middle East,” Fernandez said, pointing out that Beijing is also facing tricky tariff negotiations with Washington. “This doesn’t seem to be the right time to provoke further friction” between the world’s two leading economies, the researcher added.

BRICS members did not issue a strong statement on the Iran-Israel conflict and subsequent US military strikes due to their “diverging” interests, according to Oliver Stuenkel, a professor of international relations at the Getulio Vargas Foundation. Nevertheless, Brazil hopes that countries can take a common stand at the summit, including on the most sensitive issues. “BRICS countries, throughout their history, have managed to speak with one voice on major international issues, and there’s no reason why that shouldn’t be the case this time on the subject of the Middle East,” Brazil’s Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira told AFP.

Lula on Friday again defended the idea of finding an alternative to the dollar for trade among BRICS nations. “I know it is complicated. There are political problems,” Lula said at a BRICS banking event. “But if we do not find a new formula, we are going to finish the 21st century the way we started the 20th.”

However, talks on this idea are likely dead in the water. For Fernandez, it is almost “forbidden” to mention the idea within the group since Trump threatened to impose 100 percent tariffs on countries that challenge the dollar’s international dominance. Brazil, which later this year will host the COP30 UN climate conference, also hopes to find unity on the fight against climate change. Artificial intelligence and global governance reform will also be on the agenda.

“The escalation of the Middle East conflict reinforces the urgency of the debate on the need to reform global governance and strengthen multilateralism,” said Foreign Minister Vieira. Since 2023, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Ethiopia, Iran, and Indonesia have joined BRICS, formed in 2009 as a counterbalance to leading Western economies. But, as Fernandez points out, this expansion “makes it all the more difficult to build a strong consensus.”

© 2024 AFP

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