By seeking to isolate his rivals, Donald Trump could well get the opposite effect. Under the pressure of his trade sanctions, the countries of the BRICS bloc, long divided, are beginning an unprecedented strategic rapprochement. As tensions rise, China, India, Russia and their partners seem more willing than ever to cooperate economically and diplomatically.
Since his return to the White House, Donald Trump has chosen to confront the BRICS head-on through an aggressive trade policy , marked by unprecedented tariff increases. The figures speak for themselves and illustrate a resolutely punitive strategy:
Ajay Srivastava, a former senior Indian trade official, points out that these sanctions only fuel a common front: “they give them a common incentive to reduce their dependence on the United States, even if their agendas differ”.
Faced with this external pressure, BRICS alliance countries are responding convergently. The group’s central banks have increased their gold purchases, and bilateral trade agreements in national currencies (yuan, rupee, ruble) are multiplying. This momentum, once sporadic, now takes the form of a deliberate strategy to reduce dependence on the US dollar.
As trade tensions with the United States intensify, leaders of the main BRICS members are preparing to display their unity at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit, to be held in Tianjin, China.
For the first time in six years, a trilateral summit between China, India and Russia is planned. The Kremlin is pushing in this direction, hoping to “strengthen the core of the BRICS alliance” and ease historic tensions between New Delhi and Beijing. This is a deliberate attempt to consolidate the group’s hard core in the face of Western pressure.
This initiative is accompanied by bilateral détente signals. Beijing and New Delhi, long at odds over their 3,500-kilometer border, have reopened direct flights, facilitated visa access and engaged in discussions on rare earth supply, a sector in which China holds over 85% of the world’s processing capacity.
During an official visit, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi confirmed that China is committed to increasing deliveries to India, essential for its defense industries and energy transition.
Nevertheless, mistrust persists, notably due to Beijing’s closeness to Islamabad and the controversial Chinese dam project on the Tibetan plateau, which worries New Delhi. This geopolitical complexity limits the scope of a true rapprochement, especially as India continues to rely heavily on the American market, with $77.5 billion in exports to the US in 2024, against much smaller volumes to China or Russia.
However, beyond tensions, a pragmatic logic seems to emerge. BRICS is no longer a mere ideological platform. The bloc becomes a variable geometry cooperation space, focused on trade, finance and supply chains. Thus, projects for settlement in local currencies, “Buy BRICS” campaigns, and ambitions to reform global governance (notably via the WTO) attest to this. While the BRICS single currency project is on hold , alternatives to the dollar are taking shape.