Islamabad
Bloc Politics
Pakistan will have to overcome severe difficulties and hurdles to achieve full BRICS membership.
Since its inception, the BRICS, a group of five emerging national economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, has emerged as a multilateral platform, fostering cooperation based on a new paradigm away from the US-led liberal world order. This was evident as the BRICS states repeatedly refused to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine. With their increasingly assertive and risk-fearing posture, China and Russia are stridently leading the organization as a counterweight to the Western institutions.
The BRICS’ stance on international issues, including the Iran nuclear deal, instability in Afghanistan, and the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, shows that the organization is pursuing an increasing role in international politics. The member nations seek to modify their roles in the contemporary global order. In an era of intensifying bloc politics, geo-strategic and geo-economic flux, and the heightened competition and tensions between the US and China on the one hand and Russia and the West on the other, the last two BRICS summits have provided China an opportunity to promote its vision of the international order. This has also enabled China to use BRICS as a diplomatic platform during the revival of NATO and increased US activities in Asia-Pacific.
The strong commitment of BRICS members to a comprehensive reform of the United Nations demonstrates the concerns regarding the governance structures of the UN, which are viewed as representing the interests of the Western powers and the concerns of the wider world, particularly the Global South, are grossly ignored. In short, a coalition of five dissimilar countries has come a long way and has steered this partnership successfully, demonstrating modest yet positive results, and has succeeded in laying down a future framework to achieve global development goals.
The last BRICS Summit achieved an across-the-board consensus on several issues, but particularly two major agenda points stand out: a) positive movement of member states towards the use of national currencies in trade and financial transactions among group members and with other nations of the ‘Global South’; and b) agreement on the expansion of the group into a broader platform by inviting new member states into BRICS. The BRICS invited six more countries to join, taking the total number of its members from five to eleven: Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran (IRI), Saudi Arabia (KSA), and the UAE. Membership of these six countries will take effect on January 01, 2024. The BRICS expansion process establishes the growing interests of other countries in building partnerships with BRICS, including Pakistan, which formally applied for BRICS membership in November 2023.
After the inclusion of new members, BRICS no longer remains BRICS and has transformed into BRICS Plus. This expansion brings with it both opportunities and challenges for the group. On the one hand, the inclusion of new members will add to its geo-political, geo-strategic, geo-economic clout, and material strength. On the other hand, challenges will surface in the group, with additional voices from other regions bringing their unique perceptions to the table. This will pose problems, especially for the consensus-based decision-making within BRICS, due to diverging interests of different members. China, which has a mixed economy, Russia with an unprecedentedly Western-sanctioned economy, combined with India’s increasing bonhomie with the West and the United States in particular and its enhanced desire to continue trading in the US dollar are some of the reasons why the idea of a common BRICS currency is unable to gain any meaningful traction so far.
Undoubtedly, BRICS is a highly vibrant and interesting group with different factors influencing its decision-making. Geopolitical interests, of course, remain the most influential factor of all. However, economic cooperation is one of the main driving forces and uniting elements behind the BRICS. Trade among themselves is impressive; they encourage investment among member states and desire to lower trade barriers to improve economic integration. Similarly, on the political front, BRICS members hold annual summits to discuss various political issues, including regional disputes, international security, and global governance.
Geopolitical interests, of course, remain the most influential factor of all. However, economic cooperation is one of the main driving forces and uniting elements behind the BRICS.
Due to its growing political, economic, and diplomatic potential, it was logical for Pakistan to apply to join a dynamic organization like BRICS. Acquiring BRICS full membership will undoubtedly accrue great political and financial and political benefits to Pakistan and present great opportunities. If we get the all-clear from BRICS to join the forum as a full member, it would benefit Pakistan’s short and long-term interests and help in realizing its much-desired pivot to geo-economics, keeping in mind its geo-strategic interests. By joining BRICS, Pakistan could expand its diplomatic influence, open up lucrative trade and investment opportunities, and access vast natural resources like oil and gas. Especially after adding new members, BRICS members will cover half of the world’s oil and gas resources.
With climate change now a reality and Pakistan being one of the top ten countries most adversely affected, food security is of existential importance. BRICS countries contribute almost half to global food production, with 4 of its members being the world’s top food producers, including China, India, Brazil, and Russia. Hence, Pakistan, a country facing acute food and energy shortages, will significantly benefit from having access to massive energy and food markets by being a part of the BRICS organization. Pakistan will get access to mobilized funds and resources allocated by the New Development Bank (NDB) for different sustainable development projects that Pakistan critically needs. Also, by becoming a member of the NDB, Pakistan will have alternatives to the Western-created and dominated creditors like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. This will lift off substantial pressure from Pakistan’s policy and decision-making, which it has also faced for a long time.
However, Pakistan will have to overcome severe difficulties and hurdles to achieve full membership of BRICS. These include India’s opposition to Pakistan’s inclusion, political and economic pressure that Pakistan might face from its Western partners and the fragile economic situation, internal political instability, and the rising scourge of terrorism. As a key BRICS member, India will use these issues against Pakistan to damage its case. Besides India, there are also chances that other countries might give in to the pressure from external forces antagonistic towards Pakistan and block Pakistan’s entry into BRICS. It is, therefore, imperative for Pakistan to devote serious attention to ameliorating the political and economic situation and controlling the rising terrorism re-emerging in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. If the situation on these three counts does not improve, then irrespective of how strong the case for Pakistan membership is, it will be exploited by our detractors.![]()

The writer served as Ambassador of Pakistan to China, European Union, Belgium, Luxembourg and Ireland, from 1993 to 2020. She can be reached at naghmanahashmi40@gmail.com
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