BRICS Seize World’s Commanding Heights

oil&gas

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James Rickards
Aug 28, 2023

The BRICS Leader’s Summit ended on August 24 with a momentous decision to expand the membership of BRICS for the first time since 2010.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Argentina, Ethiopia, and Iran were all admitted to membership effective January 1, 2024. Both Brazil and India have some reservations about this move.

But in the end, Russia and China used their muscle to push through the new members despite objections. The BRICS are now BRICS+ with eleven full members and on their way to greater political power and a new currency union.

This is a momentous development, though its effects will take time to fully manifest themselves.

As a result of this expanded membership, the new BRICS currency will emerge in the year ahead.

This is because all current and prospective BRICS members and the entire Global South (including members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Eurasian Economic Union) are suffering from the weaponization of the U.S. dollar.

They fear that their dollar-denominated reserves may be frozen by the U.S., as recently happened to Russia.

Their solution is to start a new currency union big enough to offer a diverse range of goods and services (and eventually bonds) that bypasses the dollar.

It won’t happen overnight and the new currency will face challenges, but the process is getting underway.

The implications of expanded BRICS membership actually go far beyond the currency union.

With the additions of Saudi Arabia, Iran and UAE, the BRICS have now effectively surrounded the Persian Gulf. With the addition of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, they now effectively control the Red Sea and the Suez Canal.

Meanwhile, the addition of Argentina gives BRICS control of the Straits of Magellan for transit from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans (good luck in the Drake Passage; I’ve been there. It’s a daunting body of water).

BRICS are moving closer to the dual visions of Halford Mackinder, the geopolitical theorist whose notion of the World Island and Heartland were both based in Asia — and to Alfred Mahan, the naval strategist whose theory of sea power emphasized control of critical straits and other sea chokepoints.

The BRICS are consolidating physical control of both the land and sea pivots of history.

Expanded BRICS membership also marks the beginning of the end of the petrodollar era. Membership of Saudi Arabia in the BRICS is a large step in that direction. This is why the admission of new members and the launch of a new currency cannot be viewed in isolation.

They are two parts of a common project. The expanded membership is precisely what makes the new currency more feasible.

This is all happening under the noses of U.S. policymakers who seem ignorant both of history and current events.

 

NotADcotor

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Mar 8, 2017
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Looks at title
Looks at list "Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Argentina, Ethiopia, and Iran"
Looks at title again
Laughs stops reading post comment and closes thread.
 

jsanchez

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T.O.
Looks at title
Looks at list "Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Argentina, Ethiopia, and Iran"
Looks at title again
Laughs stops reading post comment and closes thread.
More Diarrhea from OP.'s author.

I'll believe in the "commanding heights" when the citizens of BRICS nations trust their yuans and rubles and rials and egp's and rupees
more than they trust USDs and Euros.
 

y2kmark

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James Rickards
Aug 28, 2023

The BRICS Leader’s Summit ended on August 24 with a momentous decision to expand the membership of BRICS for the first time since 2010.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Argentina, Ethiopia, and Iran were all admitted to membership effective January 1, 2024. Both Brazil and India have some reservations about this move.

But in the end, Russia and China used their muscle to push through the new members despite objections. The BRICS are now BRICS+ with eleven full members and on their way to greater political power and a new currency union.

This is a momentous development, though its effects will take time to fully manifest themselves.

As a result of this expanded membership, the new BRICS currency will emerge in the year ahead.

This is because all current and prospective BRICS members and the entire Global South (including members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Eurasian Economic Union) are suffering from the weaponization of the U.S. dollar.

They fear that their dollar-denominated reserves may be frozen by the U.S., as recently happened to Russia.

Their solution is to start a new currency union big enough to offer a diverse range of goods and services (and eventually bonds) that bypasses the dollar.

It won’t happen overnight and the new currency will face challenges, but the process is getting underway.

The implications of expanded BRICS membership actually go far beyond the currency union.

With the additions of Saudi Arabia, Iran and UAE, the BRICS have now effectively surrounded the Persian Gulf. With the addition of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, they now effectively control the Red Sea and the Suez Canal.

Meanwhile, the addition of Argentina gives BRICS control of the Straits of Magellan for transit from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans (good luck in the Drake Passage; I’ve been there. It’s a daunting body of water).

BRICS are moving closer to the dual visions of Halford Mackinder, the geopolitical theorist whose notion of the World Island and Heartland were both based in Asia — and to Alfred Mahan, the naval strategist whose theory of sea power emphasized control of critical straits and other sea chokepoints.

The BRICS are consolidating physical control of both the land and sea pivots of history.

Expanded BRICS membership also marks the beginning of the end of the petrodollar era. Membership of Saudi Arabia in the BRICS is a large step in that

Who is this Rikards joker? Has he bought the bologna concession from Oscar Meyer?? As if "the world" actually has any "commanding heights":LOL:
 

onthebottom

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The BRICS

 

NotADcotor

His most imperial galactic atheistic majesty.
Mar 8, 2017
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Who is this Rikards joker? Has he bought the bologna concession from Oscar Meyer?? As if "the world" actually has any "commanding heights":LOL:
It doesn, it's called Washington DC... not literally of course.
 

oil&gas

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Ghawar
BRICS nations are the future powers. They do seem to be roping in the countries with most oil though. But calling them as seizing "Commanding Heights" is a bit much. 😂
I agree with you. Author of the OP article could use better wording.

It may turn out that BRICS is indeed seizing commanding heights of
the oil sector of world's economy. While the U.S. is still world's top oil
producer it isn't a major net oil exporter. Further expansion including
Kuwait, Iraq, Venezuela, Algeria, Nigeria and Qatar would pretty much secure
nearly all of the Earth's economical oil and gas resources to power the
economies of the developing parts of the world for the rest of the century.
 
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onthebottom

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BRICS nations are the future powers. They do seem to be roping in the countries with most oil though. But calling them as seizing "Commanding Heights" is a bit much. 😂
Just in time for the EV revolution.
 

onthebottom

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Won't have much impact in the developing world where people are extremely price conscious. EVs cost too much. Plus charging infrastructure is practically non existent.
But as the rich world moves away from Oil how important will it be to be a large oil exporter?
 

WyattEarp

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I agree with you. Author of the OP article could use better wording.

It may turn out that BRICS is indeed seizing commanding heights of
the oil sector of world's economy. While the U.S. is still world's top oil
producer it isn't a major net oil exporter. Further expansion including
Kuwait, Iraq, Venezuela, Algeria, Nigeria and Qatar would pretty much secure
nearly all of the Earth's economical oil and gas resources to power the
economies of the developing parts of the world for the rest of the century.
I'm not sure why this is a big deal when you already have OPEC.

A BRICS summit and expansion is kind of a silly construct when you realize a Goldman Sachs economist Jim O'Neill concocted it up basically for marketing and self-promotion over twenty years ago. India and Brazil don't have anything in common with China and Russia. They both hope to gain some trade and investment advantages from the arrangement with China and Russia.

Here are O'Neill's recent words on BRICS:

"Over the past two decades, some have misread my initial paper as a kind of investment thesis, while others have interpreted it as an endorsement of the BRICS (South Africa was added in 2010) as a political grouping. But I never intended any such thing. On the contrary, ever since the Brazilian and Russian foreign ministers proposed the idea of creating a formal BRIC political grouping in 2009, I have questioned the organization’s purpose, beyond serving as a symbolic gesture."
 

WyattEarp

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Who is this Rikards joker? Has he bought the bologna concession from Oscar Meyer?? As if "the world" actually has any "commanding heights":LOL:
From what I know, James Rickards writes books on the collapse of the Dollar and is a Gold supporter.
 

WyattEarp

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I'll believe in the "commanding heights" when the citizens of BRICS nations trust their yuans and rubles and rials and egp's and rupees
more than they trust USDs and Euros.
1693612796770.jpeg
 

Frankfooter

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Won't have much impact in the developing world where people are extremely price conscious. EVs cost too much. Plus charging infrastructure is practically non existent.
You're assuming they will buy Teslas and not some $5000 Chinese EV.
 
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