
BRICS nations resist 'anti-American' label after Trump tariff threat
Trump's threat on Sunday night came as the US government prepared to finalize dozens of trade deals with a range of countries before his July 9 deadline for the imposition of significant "retaliatory tariffs."
"Tariffs should not be used as a tool for coercion and pressuring," Mao Ning, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said in Beijing.
The BRICS advocates for "win-win cooperation," she added, and "does not target any country." South Africa, which was slapped with 30% tariffs that were later suspended pending trade talks, reaffirmed that it is "not anti-American," trade ministry spokesman Kaamil Alli said, adding that talks with the US government "remain constructive and fruitful."
A Kremlin spokesman said Russia's cooperation with the BRICS was based on a "common world view" and "will never be directed against third countries."
India and Brazil, which is hosting the BRICS gathering, did not immediately provide an official response to Trump.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva told reporters that he would only comment after wrapping up the summit.
His opening remarks to BRICS leaders gathered in Rio de Janeiro on Monday focused on the environmental and public health issues on the summit's official agenda.
A Brazilian diplomat who was not authorized to comment officially said Trump's threat underscored the importance of the BRICS group to give developing nations a way to argue for fair and effective global ground rules on topics such as trade.
Many BRICS members and many of the group's partner nations are highly dependent on trade with the United States.
New member Indonesia's senior economic minister, Airlangga Hartarto, who is in Brazil for the BRICS summit, is scheduled to go to the US on Monday to oversee tariff talks, an official told Reuters.
Malaysia, which was attending as a partner country and was slapped with 24% tariffs that were later suspended, said that it maintains independent economic policies and is not focused on ideological alignment.
MULTILATERAL DIPLOMACY
With forums such as the G7 and G20 groups of major economies hamstrung by divisions and Trump's disruptive "America First" approach, the BRICS group has presented itself as a haven for multilateral diplomacy amid violent conflicts and trade wars.
In a joint statement released on Sunday afternoon, leaders at the summit condemned the recent bombing of member nation Iran and warned that the rise in tariffs threatened global trade, continuing its veiled criticism of Trump's tariff policies.
Hours later, Trump warned he would punish countries seeking to join the group.
The original BRICS group gathered leaders from Brazil, Russia, India and China at its first summit in 2009.
The bloc later added South Africa and last year included Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates as members.
Saudi Arabia has held off formally accepting an invitation to full membership, but is participating as a partner country.
More than 30 nations have expressed interest in participating in the BRICS, either as full members or partners.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
37 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Trump calls for MAGA base to end 'Epstein Files' obsession
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump urged his political base on Saturday to stop attacking his administration over files related to notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a case that has become an obsession for conspiracy theorists. Trump's Department of Justice and the FBI said in a memo made public last week there was no evidence that the disgraced financier kept a "client list" or was blackmailing powerful figures. They also dismissed the claim that Epstein was murdered in jail, confirming his death by suicide at a New York prison in 2019, and said they would not be releasing any more information on the probe. The move was met with incredulity by some on the US far-right – many of whom have backed Trump for years – and strident criticism of Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel. "What's going on with my 'boys' and, in some cases, 'gals?' They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB!" Trump said Saturday in a lengthy post on his Truth Social platform. "We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening. We have a PERFECT Administration, THE TALK OF THE WORLD, and 'selfish people' are trying to hurt it, all over a guy who never dies, Jeffrey Epstein," he added, referring to his "Make America Great Again" movement. Many among the MAGA faithful have long contended that so-called "Deep State" actors were hiding information on Epstein's elite associates. "Next the DOJ will say 'Actually, Jeffrey Epstein never even existed,'" furious pro-Trump conspiracy theorist Alex Jones tweeted after last week's move. "This is over the top sickening." Far-right influencer Laura Loomer called for Trump to fire Bondi over the issue, labeling her "an embarrassment." But on Saturday, Trump came to the defense of his attorney general, suggesting that the so-called "Epstein Files" were a hoax perpetrated by the Democratic Party for political gain, without specifying what benefits they hoped to attain. On Saturday, Trump struck an exasperated tone in his admonishment of his supporters. "For years, it's Epstein, over and over again," he said. "Let' waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about." The US president called for Patel and Bondi to instead focus on what he terms "The Rigged and Stolen Election of 2020," which Trump lost to Joe Biden. The Republican has repeatedly perpetuated unfounded conspiracy theories about his loss being due to fraud. He called for the FBI to be allowed to focus on that investigation "instead of spending month after month looking at nothing but the same old, Radical Left inspired Documents on Jeffrey Epstein. LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB - SHE'S GREAT!" Trump, who appears in at least one decades-old video alongside Epstein at a party, has denied allegations that he was named in the files or had any direct connection to the financier. "The conspiracy theories just aren't true, never have been," said FBI Director Patel on Saturday, hours before Trump's social media post. Not everyone, however, seemed to be on the same page. US media reported that Dan Bongino – an influential right-wing podcast host whom Trump appointed FBI deputy director – had threatened to resign over the administration's handling of the issue. --AFP

The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Inside Trump's border military zone
THE weapons system atop a drab green US Army Stryker swivels, its camera locking on a white Ford F-150 crawling along the US-Mexico border. Under the gaze of the 26-tonne armoured vehicle perched on a sand dune, humanitarian volunteers cruise the dirt road beside the border wall, hoping to continue their search for migrant remains in one of two new military zones established by the Trump administration. Their hopes are short-lived. An unmarked grey pickup appears, spins around in the sand, flashes a siren. A US Border Patrol agent steps out and tells them they're no longer allowed there. James Holman, founder of Battalion Search and Rescue – whose volunteers also hand water through the bars of the barrier to migrants – complies, but fumes. 'We're ramping up all this military and taking this public land away,' says Holman, 59, a former Marine. 'It doesn't make sense, and it's theatre – deadly, deadly theatre.' They are inside one of two 'National Defence Areas' created along 418km of the southern border in New Mexico and Texas, part of Trump's effort to deploy active-duty troops for border enforcement – a mission traditionally handled by Border Patrol. The military zones are classified as US Army installations. Troops can now temporarily detain and question migrants or civilians caught inside, a shift towards military policing without invoking the Insurrection Act. The Army has not disclosed exact boundaries, but in New Mexico the zone appears to stretch nearly 5km inland, according to 'restricted area' signs posted along State Road 9. Within the zones, signs are posted every 100m, about 15m north of the barrier – meaning migrants read them only after crossing. Yet, crossing here now carries new risks: trespassing charges on top of unlawful entry, with penalties of up to 10 years in prison. But early attempts to prosecute have largely failed. Since May, federal judges in Texas and New Mexico have dismissed trespass charges, including one case involving a Peruvian woman, ruling there was no proof the migrants saw the signs before entering. Despite this, Trump insists the military zones are necessary to repel an 'invasion' of traffickers and smugglers, even though illegal crossings are at historic lows following a 2024 asylum crackdown and tighter immigration controls in Mexico. A US Army soldier using binoculars while riding a Stryker armoured vehicle at the US-Mexico border. — Reuters Border buildup Since March, Trump has more than tripled active-duty troop levels along the border – from 2,500 under Biden to 8,000, according to the US Army. Earlier this year, the Bureau of Land Management transferred 44,500ha of public land – seven times the size of Manhattan – to the Army to create the first zone. In May, a second was added using land from the International Boundary and Water Commission in Texas. These areas now function as satellites of Fort Huachuca in Arizona and Fort Bliss in Texas. Deployed units include around 2,400 troops and 105 Stryker armoured vehicles from the 4th Infantry Division in Colorado. The eight-wheeled Strykers – seen in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Ukraine – now patrol stretches from El Paso to Santa Teresa, one of the border's deadliest crossing zones. Parked beneath bridges, beside landfills, or overlooking gaps in the wall, their engines hum 24/7 in the 38°C heat to cool crews. Soldiers are unarmed, but carry personal weapons and operate long-range cameras with night vision. 'Monotonous,' one insider said – but it gives soldiers 'a sense of purpose'. According to Army figures, troops have alerted Border Patrol to 390 crossings since the first zone was created, and made their first detentions in June, handing three migrants over in New Mexico. A different kind of line Locals are divided. In Sunland Park, Harold Gregory says fewer migrants now enter his juice bar or ask customers for rides. 'We feel safer,' he says. 'They do kind of intimidate.' But nearby, in Santa Teresa, trade consultant Jerry Pacheco calls the buildup overkill. 'It's like killing an ant with a sledgehammer,' he says. 'It's more of a political splash.' In rural New Mexico, rancher Russell Johnson welcomes the zone, citing cattle thefts and drug smuggling. But even he is unsure if his home or ranch – in his family since 1918 – lies inside it. 'I don't know, I don't think anyone knows,' says Johnson, a former Border Patrol agent. The Army is negotiating memoranda of understanding with local authorities to allow hunting, ranching and mining to continue. 'The MOU process is complex,' Army spokesman Nicole Wieman said. Jenifer Jones, a Republican state lawmaker, insists residents can carry on as before. But in Las Cruces, Democrat Sarah Silva calls it 'an occupation' by the US Army. Vanishing remains West of Santa Teresa, Abbey Carpenter, 67, stands among sand dunes where her group has found 24 migrant remains in 18 months – mostly women. She fears the military zone will block future searches. 'Who's going to look for these remains if we're not allowed out here?' she asks, gesturing to a woman's jawbone reported to authorities months ago. 'Will they just be covered up by the desert sands?' — Reuters


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Spies in the sun
A view of the beach in Botafogo in Rio de Janeiro. — Dado Galdieri/The New York Times ARTEM Shmyrev had everyone fooled. The Russian intelligence officer posed as a Brazilian entrepreneur, running a 3D printing business and sharing a Rio de Janeiro apartment with his girlfriend and a cat. Cancel anytime. Ad-free. Full access to Web and App. RM 13.90/month RM 9.73 /month Billed as RM 9.73 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter. RM 12.39/month RM 8.63 /month Billed as RM 103.60 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.