BRICS Kazan Summit: China And India Highlight – OpEd

By

As expected, western media in its sketchy coverage of the recent BRICS summit in Kazan has continued its long held partisan analysis. This time the spin was directed at Russia and President Vladimir Putin – for now the West’s public enemy number one.

“Putin presents himself as champion of the developing world”; “Putin ends BRICS summit that sought to expand Russia’s global clout but was shadowed by Ukraine”; “Inside Putin’s Alternate Reality: Warm Embraces and a Veneer of Normalcy” were among the headline columns posted in American media in their campaign to further demonise Putin and to influence readers to viewing BRICS as an inconsequential geo political grouping.

American media’s barely concealed hostility to the Kazan summit which brought together leaders from 36 countries appears to have played second fiddle on this occasion to what has been posted in Japanese media which has emerged as an anti-BRICS echo chamber of the west. This positioning is surprising since BRICS members are among Japan’s biggest trading partners and export markets, and have played a key role in the rise and development of Japan. 

According to Japan Times, “BRICS once again meet to complain and vent frustrations”.  Nikkei Asia, the conservative pro American Japanese business media organisation, had more neutral but still clearly negative headlines: “As BRICS expands, its recruits chase disparate goals” and “Russia wants BRICS to become OPEC for wheat. Will members buy it?”. 

Summit Highlights For ASEAN and Asia 

What BRICS achieved in Kazan can be seen in different ways from what has appeared in western and Japanese media and replicated by English language media in the Asian region.

Firstly, it has grown from the original 5 countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). 4 were added in January 2024 (Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran and United Arab Emirates) and it now has another potentially 13 new members. Countries that have become “partner states” as a prelude to full membership are: Turkey, Indonesia, Algeria, Belarus, Cuba, Bolivia, Malaysia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Vietnam, Nigeria, and Uganda.

This expansion of BRICS has made the BRICS+ group an even more formidable geo-political and economic powerhouse.  Before the Kazan summit, the nine BRICS members were estimated to comprise 40% of the world’s population and to account for more than one-third of world GDP (measured at purchasing power parity). By contrast, the G7 nations have less than 10% of the world’s population and under 30% of GDP (PPP). 

With the additional 13  new members and a combined economy estimated at US$30 trillion, the clout of the BRICS+ grouping of 3.5 billion people has the potential to succeed where efforts at unifying and enhancing the progress of the less developed nations through the Non Aligned Movement (NAM) and group of 77 (G77) in the United Nations (UN) had earlier failed.  

According to a report from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace:   

The coalition [BRICS] can use this leverage not only to demand a more equitable international order but also to act on those ambitions, for instance by establishing a parallel energy trading system, deepening commercial links among members, creating an alternative system of development finance, reducing dollar dependence in foreign exchange transactions, and deepening technology cooperation in fields from AI to outer space.”  See https://carnegieendowment.org/research/2024/10/brics-summit-emerging-middle-powers-g7-g20?lang=en

Secondly, four member countries of ASEAN are now partner states and are likely to be full members in the next summit. According to Piti Srirangam, executive director of the ASEAN Foundation, “Being a member of BRICS would open up trade and investment opportunities, so the question is ‘why not? The bloc has members from all over the world, but none from Southeast Asia yet”. 

It is not just trade and investment benefits the ASEAN countries and other aspiring members are looking out for. They, together with other participating countries, endorsed the Kazan Declaration issued on 23 October. Titled Strengthening Multilateralism for Just Global Development and Security, the 43 page, 134 point document calls for a “more representative, fairer international order, a reinvigorated and reformed multilateral system, sustainable development and inclusive growth”.  See http://static.kremlin.ru/media/events/files/en/RosOySvLzGaJtmx2wYFv0lN4NSPZploG.pdf

A third highlight was the announcement at the summit of the agreement by its two founding members, India and China, to resolve their border and other disputes, stabilise relations and move to a new era of peace, security and cooperation. The timing of this momentous announcement is especially significant for BRICS+ development.

While not a direct issue of the summit itself, the agreement will have ripple effects across a wide range of global and regional areas of contestation and concern – military, political and economic. 

If the two countries can reset their relationship according to what their leaders have agreed to, this agreement can be a game changer for the two countries and BRICS. 

Significance of the India-China Rapprochement

In their face to face meeting on the sidelines of the summit, Xi told Modi:

“It is important for both sides to have more communication and cooperation, properly handle differences and disagreements, and facilitate each other’s pursuit of development aspirations, It is also important for both sides to shoulder our international responsibilities, set an example for boosting the strength and unity of developing countries, and contribute to promoting multi-polarisation and democracy in international relations”.

India’s position can be gauged in a post on Modi’s X account  in which he wrote that India-China relations were “important for the people of our countries, and for regional and global peace and stability. Mutual trust, mutual respect and mutual sensitivity will guide bilateral relations”. This positive take has been elaborated on by Indian Foreign Secretary, Vikran Misri in his statement: “The two leaders welcomed the agreement reached between the two sides through sustained dialogue over the last several weeks in diplomatic as well as military channels. PM Modi underscored the importance of not allowing differences on boundary-related matters to disturb peace and tranquillity on our borders”. 

Should these two geo-political giants live up to their new commitment, the impact will extend beyond BRICS, derided by western powers as an organisation doomed to failure as a result of internal disputes and rivalries. 

They will also provide for the rest of the world an example of how to contest the current rules based order crafted by the US and western allies to entrench western hegemony and dominance through manipulation of the dissension and divisions of nations not aligned with or supportive of the west.

Lim Teck Ghee

Lim Teck Ghee PhD is a Malaysian economic historian, policy analyst and public intellectual whose career has straddled academia, civil society organisations and international development agencies. He has a regular column, Another Take, in The Sun, a Malaysian daily; and is author of Challenging the Status Quo in Malaysia.

One thought on “BRICS Kazan Summit: China And India Highlight – OpEd

  • October 31, 2024 at 1:54 am
    Permalink

    The Evil US and the West are not only jealous but also worried about the rising BRICS. Instead they should recognise and accept a multipolar world to work together in harmony. There is no need to lord over and bullying the subjugated eastern countries.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *