| From left Brazils President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Chinas President Xi Jinping South Africas President Cyril Ramaphosa Indias Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russias Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pose for a BRICS group photo during the 2023 BRICS Summit at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg South Africa Wednesday August 23 2023 | MR Online From left, Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, China’s President Xi Jinping, South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pose for a BRICS group photo during the 2023 BRICS Summit at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, August 23, 2023

BRICS expansion is positive–but not a coherent challenge to U.S. power

Originally published: Morning Star Online on August 2023 by Morning Star Online Editors (more by Morning Star Online)  | (Posted Aug 26, 2023)

AS SIGNIFICANT as the fact of BRICS expansion are which countries are now set to join: Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Ethiopia and Argentina.

The six applicants will mean the BRICS (which already account for a larger share of world GDP than the G7 group of developed capitalist countries) rise to representing 37 per cent of the global economy and 46 per cent of the human race.

They are also heavily concentrated in the Middle East, a region traditionally dominated by U.S. imperialism. There is a definite move from Middle Eastern powers away from Washington’s orbit and the implications for continued U.S. hegemony could be great.

Could be. Socialists should be alert both to the positive aspects of BRICS expansion and to the many contradictions within the group, some already being exploited by Western imperialist powers.

BRICS expansion indicates the rise of the global South. BRICS countries share an–entirely accurate–perception that most global institutions, especially financial institutions such as the IMF and World Bank, are instruments used by the United States and the old imperialist powers to maintain economic dominance through control of other countries’ resources.

Changing economic interests provide opportunities to resolve longstanding feuds. China’s brokering of a rapprochement between Iran and Saudi Arabia may–we do not know–have been facilitated by promised BRICS membership for both.

Its immediate consequence was progress towards a peace in Yemen between the Saudi-led coalition and the Iran-backed Houthi movement. An end to Saudi-Iranian rivalry weakens the U.S. in the Middle East and it is no surprise that Western powers have not welcomed a prospective end to the Yemen war.

Britain–so dedicated to Saudi victory it maintained arms sales even when the U.S. paused them over the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, and which has provided extensive logistical support for an air force bombing hospitals, schools and residential areas–is reportedly deploying extra troops to oil-rich eastern Yemen, while Mohammad al-Atifi, defence minister in the Houthis’ Government of National Salvation, said this month that the U.S. and Britain were “leaving no stone unturned to obstruct” any peace deal.

Iran and Saudi Arabia joining the BRICS makes the success of these spoiler schemes less likely. But not impossible. Existing BRICS members are regularly at loggerheads. India–a core member in the seemingly anti-U.S.-hegemony BRICS–is simultaneously a member of the Quad, a U.S.-led anti-China military bloc.

BRICS expansion shows the decline of U.S. power. Its efforts to isolate Russia following the invasion of Ukraine have only worked on its closest allies: most of the world isn’t listening.

But it does not indicate any coherent foreign policy on the part of the BRICS themselves, unlike the ideologically aligned G7. And the US’s military and economic dominance over its European and East Asian allies has if anything increased since the Ukraine war started, with Nato expanding and Japan both rearming and in U.S.-brokered engagement with South Korea.

The BRICS’ ideological diversity is a strength and a weakness.

It allows any country looking to challenge a “rules-based international order” in which the U.S. makes and breaks the rules to see advantages in membership. This shared interest can unite old enemies and bring together progressive governments with some of the world’s most reactionary ones.

But it does not systematically oppose imperialism, as India’s military alliance with the U.S. in the Indo-Pacific (or that of Brazil in Latin America under former president Jair Bolsonaro) shows, and as we see in Yemen, imperialism will “leave no stone unturned” to divide and rule.

The rise of the BRICS is not enough to displace the U.S. or avert a third world war. Anti-imperialists in remaining U.S. allies like Britain must do what we can to halt the drive towards militarisation and end our governments’ subordination to Washington.

Monthly Review does not necessarily adhere to all of the views conveyed in articles republished at MR Online. Our goal is to share a variety of left perspectives that we think our readers will find interesting or useful. —Eds.