Why Russia And Chinas Brics May Fail In Competition With The West

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 01:12

Why Russia And Chinas Brics May Fail In Competition With The West

Russia’s Brics summit shows determination for a new world order

The BRICS Summit in Kazan Is a Showdown With the West

The BRICS Summit in Kazan and the Limits of Western Influence

China

China-led BRICS growth raises questions about shifting world order

Why Russia and China's BRICS May Fail Competing with the West

China's and Russia's clout is increasing in Africa, as resentment builds towards Western nations.

While BRICS must be taken

The Battle for the BRICS: Why the Future of the Bloc Will Shape

BRICS: A Shared Discontent

While BRICS must be taken seriously, it would be wrong to interpret it as one pole of a two-sided geopolitical competition between China and Russia and the West.

Turkey

The BRICS countriesor BRICS, since the original grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and later South Africa has since further expanded to include four more

Turkey’s rapprochement with BRICS benefits Brazil and India, both eager to prevent Russia and China from framing the bloc as an anti-Western coalition. Like Delhi and

Brics summit: How China's and Russia's clout is growing in Africa

So

‘The race is on’: Brics ramps up its challenge to the Western-led

Russia’s ties to its fellow BRICS members China and India have allowed the regime to weather the Western sanctions campaign. But U.S. sanctions on Russia still affect

So, despite what Russia may want, it’s unlikely that BRICS will assume a confrontational stance toward the West. China knows that a non-confrontational approach is

The allure of Brics

The economic bloc has embraced an attempt to challenge the global power balance. Yet, there is a reality in which Russia and China’s BRICS could fail in competition

A warming of relations between China and India could generate more momentum for Brics to deliver on its ambitious agenda to develop, and ultimately implement, a

The allure of Brics, which originally comprised Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, lies not just in its economic potential but in its challenge to the Western