What the Iran war has revealed about Brics+
Those arguing that the conflict has exposed the grouping as a failure misunderstand its role

This has prompted criticism that Brics+ failed its first major geopolitical test. Such criticism misunderstands the organisation’s purpose. Before asking why Brics+ failed, it is worth asking a more fundamental question: what was Brics+ designed to do?
Part of the misunderstanding stems from the analytical frameworks through which Western institutions have traditionally interpreted the international order. For much of the post-Cold War period, geopolitical influence was associated with highly institutionalised alliances characterised by common threat perceptions, formal commitments and collective responses.
Brics+ emerged in a different historical context. Its appeal derives from its ability to accommodate diversity, allowing members to cooperate selectively while preserving room for independent manoeuvre. Judging such a platform through alliance-centric assumptions risks obscuring the very logic that underpins its attractiveness.
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