HomeWorldTrump wanted to break BRICS, his tariff gamble may end up doing opposite | Explained

Trump wanted to break BRICS, his tariff gamble may end up doing opposite | Explained

In trying to undercut the bloc he sees as a threat to US dominance, Trump may be doing exactly what BRICS’ founders once dreamed of -- forging it into a coherent, coordinated force against American trade pressure.

August 08, 2025 / 15:57 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
File Photo - Heads of state and government of member, partner, and external engagement countries attend a plenary session of the BRICS summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 7, 2025.
File Photo - Heads of state and government of member, partner, and external engagement countries attend a plenary session of the BRICS summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 7, 2025.

When US President Donald Trump rolled out his latest round of punishing tariffs against the world’s biggest emerging economies, his goal was clear: weaken BRICS, fracture its unity, and force each member to bargain with Washington on Trump’s terms.

Instead, Trump has triggered a diplomatic chain reaction that is drawing China, India, Brazil, Russia, and South Africa closer together than they have been in years. In trying to undercut the bloc he sees as a threat to US dominance, Trump may be doing exactly what BRICS’ founders once dreamed of -- forging it into a coherent, coordinated force against American trade pressure.

Story continues below Advertisement

In recent weeks, BRICS members have been stepping up political contact, economic coordination, and even personal diplomacy. The irony? The US president’s “America First” tariff barrage may be laying the foundation for a far more consolidated BRICS front -- the nightmare scenario for Washington’s trade strategists.

Tariff assault on BRICS