BRICS & New World Order Thread

horse

Colonel
Registered Member

This is not a serious proposal.

They already know that their recommendations and demands, will eventually go unheeded.

This probably the last straw before these BRICS members ditch the old systems completely.

Got to hand it to them. They are being diplomatic. They are covering their ass.

BRICS is the new organization for the Global South. A non-ideological organization devoted mostly to development.

Something a lot of the Global South is interested in.

That the leaders of two of the original BRICS countries did not come to this meeting, and it is still a big success, only shows the viability, the buy in, and momentum BRICS has.
 

tonyget

Senior Member
Registered Member
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Trump threatens extra 10% tariff on nations siding with Brics​


US President Donald Trump has warned that countries which side with the policies of the Brics alliance that go against US interests will be hit with an extra 10% tariff.

Trump has long criticised Brics, an organisation whose members include China, Russia and India, which was designed to boost countries' international standing and challenge the US and western Europe.

"Any country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy," Trump wrote on social media.

A deadline for countries to agree a tariff deal with the US had been set for 9 July but US officials now say they will begin on 1 August.

So far, the US has only struck trade agreements with the UK and Vietnam. However, Britain and America have still not reached a deal over taxes for UK steel imported by the US.

Since taking office in January, Trump has announced a series of import taxes on goods from other countries - arguing they will boost American manufacturing and protect jobs.

In April, on what he called "Liberation Day", he announced a wave of new taxes on goods from countries around the world, although he quickly suspended his most aggressive plans to allow for three months of talks up until 9 July.

Asked whether the taxes would change on 9 July or 1 August, Trump said on Sunday: "They're going to be tariffs, the tariffs are going to be tariffs."

He added that between 10 and 15 letters would be sent to countries on Monday advising them on what the new tariff rate will be if a deal had not been reached.

US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick clarified that the taxes will come into force on 1 August.

On Sunday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had told CNN: "President Trump's going to be sending letters to some of our trading partners saying that if you don't move things along, then on August 1 you will boomerang back to your April 2 tariff level."

Trump's threat to countries working with Brics nations emerged after members criticised US tariff policies as well as proposing reforms to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and how major currencies are valued.

Last year, the list of Brics members expanded beyond Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

The countries in the bloc account for more than half of the world's population.

Brics leaders, who are holding a two-day meeting in Rio de Janeiro, have called for reforms to global institutions and positioned the alliance as a platform for diplomacy amid escalating trade conflicts and geopolitical tensions.

A joint statement by finance ministers of the Brics nations on Sunday criticised tariffs as a threat to global economy, bringing "uncertainty into international economic and trade activities".

Andrew Wilson, deputy secretary general of the International Chambers of Commerce, said it would be challenging for countries to move away from doing business with China.

He told the BBC's Today programme: "Shifting away from China...in a number of sectors is far more difficult to achieve in the world in practice.

"You look at the dominance China has in a number of sectors - EVs, batteries [and] particularly rare earths and magnets, there are no viable alternatives to China production."

During the Brics meeting in Brazil, leaders also condemned the military strikes on Iran in June, saying the attacks were a violation of international law.

Over 12 days, Israel and the US struck targets in Iran, including its nuclear facilities before a ceasefire was agreed.

The Brics summit was attended in person by world leaders, including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.

China's President Xi Jinping missed the event for the first time, with Premier Li Qiang standing in for him.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin, who has an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court against him over alleged war crimes in Ukraine, attended online.

In 2024, Trump threatened 100% tariffs on Brics countries if they moved ahead with their own currency to rival the US dollar.
 

horse

Colonel
Registered Member

Trump threatens extra 10% tariff on nations siding with Brics​


That is why there is a BRICS organization.

Seems to me the BRICS is completely misunderstood in the West.

Think of the BRICS as the United Nations, for development, of Global South countries, without any Western influence.

Looking at it that way, if the BRICS continues as is, it will only get more countries wanting to join.

Trade routes and infrastructure to facilitate that trade, financing to develop companies and new markets, when there is already a very large market to begin with inside the BRICS, and the BRICS can sell you anything from high tech, to bananas to weapons.

The BRICS has it all, except for Western influence.

Now that is organization some would really truly want to be part of.

:)
 

Wrought

Senior Member
Registered Member
Connecting Brazil to Peru would be a big boost for trade via Chancay. Of course, it will take many years to complete such a huge project.

Brazil and China agreed on Monday to study the feasibility of a transcontinental railway that could reshape South America’s trade routes by connecting Brazil’s Atlantic Ocean coast to Peru’s Pacific Ocean port of Chancay.

The memorandum of understanding was signed between Infra S.A., the Brazilian state-owned company linked to the Ministry of Transport, and the China Railway Economic and Planning Research Institute, part of China State Railway Group. The plan outlines a railway of about 4,500 kilometres (roughly 2,800 miles), running from Ilhéus in the northern Brazilian state of Bahia to Rio Branco in the northwestern state of Acre, before crossing the Andes towards the Peruvian coast.

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