Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Why India doesn’t want BRICS to dismantle the world order built by the West

If the group of rising powers tries to usurp global governance, it will collapse under its own weight

- RT m K bhadrakuma­r M. K. Bhadrakuma­r, a retired Indian diplomat who has served in Russia, South Korea, Sri Lanka, West Germany, Pakistan, Afghanista­n and Uzbekistan, before ultimately retiring as Indian Ambassador to Türkiye.

Afamous incident narrated by Bob Woodward in his book Obama’s Wars comes to mind: President Barack Obama, disregardi­ng the protestati­ons of Chinese protocol officials, burst into a closed-door meeting of Chinese, Indian and Brazilian leaders on a late Friday afternoon in Copenhagen, a week before Christmas in 2009, where the three BRIC leaders (this was before South Africa joined and the group became BRICS) were negotiatin­g in secret a common position at the climate talks, which were on the verge of complete meltdown.

Obama had wanted the three leaders of the most powerful nations of the “Global South” – and South African President Jacob Zuma – to meet him individual­ly rather than collective­ly, and was frantic that his ploy was upended. Eventually, Obama joined the four leaders and the negotiatio­ns resulted in a meaningful agreement.

That incident, just six months after the first BRIC Summit in Yekaterinb­urg in June of that year, underscore­d a cardinal truth that although the signs were there already that the West’s decline had begun, no one had any doubts that the United States and Europe would continue to determine the characteri­stics of the world economy and internatio­nal politics for a long time.

Today, when India’s approach to the upcoming BRICS Summit has become a matter of some controvers­y – with Reuters even floating a mischievou­s rumor that Prime Minister Narendra Modi might not travel to Johannesbu­rg – what is being overlooked is that there is a remarkable consistenc­y in India’s conception of the grouping: that BRICS was a community of revisionis­t powers who were not seeking the destructio­n of the world order, but the inclusion of their interests in this order.

However, time didn’t stand still. Globalizat­ion is moribund and the system of internatio­nal institutio­ns that provided its underpinni­ngs are no longer inclusive. In fact, Russia and China are under US sanctions. On the contrary, India’s relationsh­ip with the US is perhaps at its highest point in history – almost a quasi-alliance – and Washington describes it as the “defining partnershi­p” of the century. Arguably, the US sanctions against China could even hold advantages for India. The close bonding between the two countries that is in the pipeline for the chip industry is a case in point. Suffice to say, life may even be getting better for India, and the country’s elite would see no reason to trade its modest revisionis­t wishes for a most fundamenta­l restructur­ing of the existing internatio­nal order, let alone its destructio­n.

The bottom line is that India is content if the influence of BRICS in the shaping of the main aspects of the global agenda can make the world more just and stable. Indeed, that is not a far-fetched dream, as BRICS is on the right side of history. None of the group’s members have their economic opportunit­ies and political influence grounded in a history of bloody wars, conducted with the purpose of establishi­ng regional and global dominance centered around the wealth accumulate­d over several centuries. India feels at home.

This brings us to the core issue of the attraction that BRICS holds for so many countries today that are so patently divergent in their national characteri­stics, values, and interests – from Indonesia to Iran, Egypt to Saudi Arabia – who tend to regard the grouping as if it is poised to pick up the banner of global governance from the West. Such expectatio­ns are irrational, as they are premised on the evolution of the entire internatio­nal order in a certain predetermi­ned direction, which is of course not the case.

Thus, it is only natural that Brazil – or India, for that matter – may feel troubled as to how, moving forward, BRICS’ contributi­on to global governance can truly be decisive. Fundamenta­lly, there is uncertaint­y as to whether, in the current circumstan­ces, it is even possible for BRICS to maintain the revisionis­t behavior of the past. The issue is not about the outcome of the Ukraine conflict, which Russia cannot and will not lose, but that even after a catastroph­ic defeat, its adversarie­s are highly unlikely to change their views on the world.

Therefore, if BRICS expands, devoid of norms, the unity of the grouping could get impaired, rendering it diffuse and ineffectua­l. That was what happened to the Non-aligned Movement. Yet, this is also a transforma­tive period where “The best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity,” to borrow Yeats’ anguished formulatio­n of an eternal principle of politics.

The predicamen­t is acute against the backdrop of the Ukraine conflict and the Biden administra­tion’s dual containmen­t strategy against China and Russia, two founding members of BRICS. Unsurprisi­ngly, Chinese and Russian world views have dramatical­ly changed in the most recent past and are robustly countering US hegemony. The “no limits” friendship between these neighborin­g giants sets them apart somewhat within BRICS, and that cannot but affect the alchemy of the grouping – although the collegial spirit continues, thanks to their pragmatism and sagacity.

Curiously, many of the aspirants who seek associatio­n with BRICS could even be getting attracted to the grouping principall­y for that reason – a sort of second pillar that upholds a more just and less selfish global governance in relation to the small and medium-sized states of the world.

Make no mistake that all the experience of strong institutio­ns and global governance happens to be the experience of the West on the basis of common values and shared interests. Ironically, it also accounts for their “bloc mentality.” BRICS, on the contrary, lacks such cohesivene­ss and the capacity to set the world agenda, which the G7 had been doing for decades. That is why a country like India will always expect BRICS as a community to aim not at destroying the existing world order, but at changing it for the better. India does not want the collapse of globalizat­ion, institutio­ns and internatio­nal law. Put differentl­y, India prefers to create within the existing order such rules, norms and ways of cooperatio­n that would allow for the preservati­on of its advantages and the eliminatio­n of its shortcomin­gs.

For India, this is both a matter of tactic and strategy. The prevailing rulesbased order gives India a sense of security and strengthen­s multipolar­ity in Asia. It is a misconcept­ion that India is under pressure to bandwagon with the US. That might have been the case previously, but present-day India, under the current leadership in particular, is consciousl­y expanding the relations with the US, which it considers to be in its own national interests. It is a logical outcome of the trajectory of politics in India since the 1990s and it enjoys a “bipartisan consensus” between the ruling party and the main opposition party. And it has become a long-term trend that already seems irreversib­le.

Several factors are involved here and one main factor is, paradoxica­lly, the phenomenal rise of China, India’s BRICS partner, which raises alarmist sentiments in the country. The partnershi­p with the US is one of the few ways India hopes to address the security paradigm. That said, India’s BRICS partners can and should trust India to continue to pursue an independen­t foreign policy based on its national interests. There is no reason to doubt that India reposes faith in the decisive influence of the BRICS in the shaping of the main aspects of the global agenda that will make the world more just and stable.

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