Russian President Vladimir Putin caught the headlines this week as he hosted the leaders of 36 other nations at this year’s BRICS summit, held in Kazan on the banks of the Volga River.
BRICS is a grouping made up of the initials of the founding states: Brazil, Russia, India, and China, with South Africa joining shortly after. Newer members include Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates. Alongside the members, 28 other countries participated as invitees. Most were represented by heads of state. Notable participants included President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. Turkey was the only NATO country at the summit.
The participants discussed a wide range of issues and projects—from the world’s financial architecture to an Indian-sponsored scheme to protect big cats and issued a communiqué at the conclusion that was short on detail.
Nonetheless, the BRICS 2024 Summit can be seen as a major diplomatic achievement for the host. It was the largest foreign policy event held in Russia since it invaded Ukraine in February 2022. The number and seniority of the participants help Putin show that the West’s attempts to portray Russia as a pariah are inaccurate. For its part, the Ukrainian government took issue with the UN Secretary-General’s agreement to attend and meet Putin, who Kyiv described as a “war criminal”, adding that this had damaged the UN’s reputation.
Understanding BRICS
Increasingly influential in world affairs, to understand what BRICS is, it helps to first understand what BRICS is not. Its founding manifesto lists some general principles, but there is no organisational chart, permanent secretariat, or headquarters. In a system of rotating presidency, a member country assumes the presidency for a year, does the organisational and administrative work, hosts the summit, and then hands over the presidency to the next. This year, Russia will hand over to Brazil.
Although Russia, China, and India have some of the world's most powerful armies, BRICS is not a military alliance. Rather, it is a grouping of emerging market economies and what is often referred to as the global south.
It aims to present an alternative to the international order shaped by the US-led West. Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping see a new multipolar world order being formed, and Putin sees BRICS as part of that. He wants to establish a new international financial system in which the US dollar and the international SWIFT banking system cannot be “weaponised” in global trade and financial transactions.
Putin called on member states to trade in local currencies and railed against sanctions imposed on Russia by the West for its invasion of Ukraine. He said sanctions should be approved by the UN Security Council (UNSC), even though, as a permanent member of the UNSC with a veto, he would have vetoed sanctions against Moscow.
Membership criteria
Membership criteria, agreed at last year’s BRICS Summit in Johannesburg, states that would-be BRICS members must have diplomatic and friendly relations with all current members and must not impose non-UNSC sanctions on them.