Rising Powers at 13th BRICS Summit 2021: Together but Separate?

Policy Alert #236 | September 13, 2021

On September 9, 2021, the 13th BRICS Summit was held via videoconference, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The theme of the Summit, chosen by India, was BRICS@15: Intra-BRICS Cooperation for Continuity, Consolidation and Consensus. The Summit saw the participation of all BRICS leaders – President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil, President Vladimir Putin of Russia, President Xi Jinping of China, and President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa. Several new initiatives included the first BRICS Digital Health Summit; the first BRICS Ministerial Joint Statement on multilateral reforms; a BRICS Counter-Terrorism Action Plan; an Agreement on cooperation in field of remote-sensing satellites; a virtual BRICS vaccine Research & Development Centre; and a BRICS Alliance on Green Tourism.

At the conclusion of the Summit, the leaders adopted the New Delhi Declaration, which placed an emphasis on COVID-19, strengthening and reforming the multilateral system, and peace, security, and counterterrorism, as well as economic and financial cooperation for sustainable development. Elaborating on these themes, the declaration highlighted the leading role that BRICS countries can play in the post-COVID global recovery through enhancing speed and accessibility of vaccination and diversifying pharma and vaccine production capacities beyond the developed world.

Meeting for the first time since the Taliban captured power, the BRICS leaders managed to cobble together some joint objectives on Afghanistan on paper even as their geopolitical divergences persist: “We stress the need to contribute to fostering an inclusive intra-Afghan dialogue so as to ensure stability, civil peace, law and order in the country…We underscore the priority of fighting terrorism, including preventing attempts by terrorist organization.”

India passes the baton to China as the next Chair of BRICS 2022.

In this Policy Alert, we examine the rising powers’ level of convergence at the 13th BRICS Summit 2021.

India

According to India’s Ministry of External Affairs’ official press release, Prime Minister Modi “expressed his appreciation for the cooperation received from BRICS partners during India’s Chairship this year.” During his address as chair, Modi cautioned “... (it is important that) we do not become too self-satisfied and we must ensure that BRICS is even more result-oriented in the next 15 years.” On Twitter, the Prime Minister “called for BRICS to contribute to post-COVID global recovery on the motto ‘Build-back Resiliently, Innovatively, Credibly, and Sustainably’.”

China

In his speech at the summit entitled “Advance BRICS Cooperation to Meet Common Challenges Together,” Chinese President Xi Jinping put forward five lofty proposals invoking solidarity and mutual benefit on public health, equitable access of vaccines, economic, political and security cooperation, and increased people-to-people exchanges. President Xi also announced that China will donate 100 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to developing countries by the end of 2021. In a press conference on September 10, Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian stated, “As China takes over the BRICS chairmanship next year, we look forward to working hand in hand with BRICS partners to deepen cooperation across the board.”

Russia

In his speech at the BRICS Summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin raised Afghanistan as an issue that BRICS countries would have to pay special attention to. While not naming the U.S. or any other western country directly, he claimed the situation “is a direct consequence of irresponsible extraneous attempts to impose someone else’s values on the country and to build ‘democratic structures’ using socio-political engineering techniques, ignoring the historical and national specifics of other nations and the traditions by which they live. All of that leads to… chaos, after which the masterminds behind these experiments hastily retreat leaving their charges behind. The entire international community then has to face the consequences.”