IAI | Ernesto Gallo
The BRICS+ group, despite persistent Western narratives of its decline due to internal differences and geopolitical tensions, demonstrates remarkable resilience and potential for reconfiguration. India, a core member, distanced itself from BRICS military exercises in January 2026, and the Iran war exposed rifts, particularly between new members Iran and the UAE. However, the conflict did not fracture the bloc; Russia and China offered diplomatic condemnation of US-Israeli attacks without escalation, and even the West exhibited significant internal divisions. India's foreign policy, characterized by strengthening ties with Israel while maintaining crucial economic links with Arab nations and proposing BRICS digital currency initiatives, reflects a complex "multialignment" rather than a definitive shift towards the West. Primarily an economic forum, BRICS+ seeks greater voice in global institutions and aims to foster a "non-Western" pluriversal world. As 2026 Chair, India faces the critical task of providing a strong, peace- and development-focused vision to consolidate the group's diverse interests, countering self-serving Western decline narratives.