
Lula tells Trump world does not want 'emperor' after U.S. threatens BRICS tariff
By Manuela Andreoni and Lisandra Paraguassu
Developing nations at the BRICS summit on Monday brushed away an accusation from President Donald Trump that they are "anti-American," with Brazil's president saying the world does not need an emperor after the U.S. leader threatened extra tariffs on the bloc.
Trump's threat on Sunday night came as the U.S. 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."
The Trump administration does not intend to immediately impose an additional 10% tariff against BRICS nations, as threatened, but will proceed if individual countries take policies his administration deems "anti-American," according to a source familiar with the matter.
At the end of the BRICS summit in Rio de Janeiro, Lula was defiant when asked by journalists about Trump's tariff threat: "The world has changed. We don't want an emperor."
"This is a set of countries that wants to find another way of organizing the world from the economic perspective," he said of the bloc. "I think that's why the BRICS are making people uncomfortable."
In February, Trump warned the BRICS would face "100% tariffs" if they tried to undermine the role of the U.S. dollar in global trade. Brazil's BRICS presidency had already backed off efforts to advance a common currency for the group that some members proposed last year.
But Lula repeated on Monday his view that global trade needs alternatives to the U.S. dollar.
"The world needs to find a way that our trade relations don't have to pass through the dollar," Lula told journalists at the end of the BRICS summit in Rio de Janeiro.
"Obviously, we have to be responsible about doing that carefully. Our central banks have to discuss it with central banks from other countries," he added. "That's something that happens gradually until it's consolidated."
Other BRICS members also pushed back against Trump's threats more subtly.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told reporters that the group does not seek to compete with any other power and expressed confidence in reaching a trade deal with the U.S.
"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."
A Kremlin spokesperson said Russia's cooperation with the BRICS was based on a "common world view" and "will never be directed against third countries."
India did not immediately provide an official response to Trump.
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 U.S. 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.
© Thomson Reuters 2025.

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


Japan Times
35 minutes ago
- Japan Times
Brazil's Lula hosts Modi in bid to turn India into a major trade partner
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva wants to deepen trade ties with India, the world's most populous nation. The question as he hosts Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Brasilia on Tuesday is how to go about it. Despite both nations being members of the BRICS grouping of emerging-market economies and natural allies in the fields of poverty reduction and biofuel production, India ranks well down the list of Brazil's trading partners. Total commerce is dwarfed by that with China, the U.S., neighboring Argentina and faraway Germany. It's a mismatch that the president known as Lula acknowledged last week, when he joked that he'd only just learned that Modi, a devout Hindu, didn't eat meat. Brazil is the world's No. 1 beef exporter. "Our trade relationship is just $12 billion, it's nothing,' Lula said at an event. "So please, arrange a box of cheese. I want it on the table so he never complains about Brazilian food and, who knows, maybe he'll start buying Brazilian cheese.' With U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs upending global commerce, Lula has spent months attempting to bolster trade relations with markets beyond Brazil's traditional partners. Now he's desperate to finally crack the code on a relationship that has never fully taken off, thanks to a litany of incompatibilities and the fact that Brazil and India often find themselves competing to sell the same goods. Trade has accelerated in recent years, doubling since they formed the BRICS bloc with China, Russia and South Africa more than a decade ago. It grew by 24% over the first five months of 2025 from the same period a year ago, according to Brazil's government. But India and the 1.4 billion people who call it home still remain a largely unrealized market for Brazil, an agricultural behemoth that has seen trade with China more than quadruple since BRICS launched in 2009, official data shows. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva | Bloomberg "When I was in India 20 years ago, our goal was to reach $15 billion,' Lula said at a press conference alongside Modi following their meeting. "We are determined to accelerate that target by tripling this amount in the short term.' Both leaders also expressed desires to expand a preferential trade agreement India has with Mercosur — the South American customs union formed by Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay — in order to reduce trade barriers between them. Brazil is looking to diversify exports to India beyond sugar and crude oil that dominate current sales. Earlier this year, Brazil's Embraer — the world's third-largest planemaker — established a subsidiary in New Delhi in a bid to broaden its presence in India's defense and aviation sectors. Latin America's largest economy has spotted an opportunity in sesame, no matter that India ranks as one of the world's leading producers of the seed. Sesame exports have grown significantly since the Indian market opened to Brazil in 2020, in part because the South Asian nation imports it during the offseason to meet domestic demand and fulfill export commitments. It is also eyeing expanded ethanol exports, now that India is increasing the amount of the product it blends into gasoline. "That opens up an interesting opportunity for Brazil in the biofuels agenda,' said Gustavo Ribeiro, head of market intelligence at the Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency, or ApexBrasil. "India is a major sugar producer, but depending on the year and the size of the harvest, it sometimes imports sugar or even ethanol when there's a shortage. So Brazil becomes a strong alternative supplier of either sugar or ethanol.' Brazil has competition on that front: Modi's government has spent months pushing for a trade deal with the Trump administration to avoid U.S. tariffs, with Washington also seeking access to India's massive market for its own ethanol. Modi during a plenary session at the BRICS Summit in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday | Bloomberg Lula is passing the rotating BRICS presidency off to Modi after the Rio de Janeiro leaders summit that concluded Monday. The pair have used the bloc to bolster their ambitions of becoming permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, a goal they reaffirmed in Brazil and that is likely to be a priority for India in 2026. Trump has threatened to impose additional tariffs on BRICS members. Lula again pushed back, saying Tuesday that the group doesn't accept complaints about its meeting or interference in its affairs. Lula and Modi signed six agreements during the visit, including deals on renewable energy and counterterrorism. The meeting was the first of two state visits Lula will hold in the wake of the BRICS leaders summit, with Indonesia President Prabowo Subianto coming to Brasilia on Wednesday. Indonesia is central to Lula's efforts to expand trade with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the 10-country bloc home to more than 600 million people. Brazil's commerce with the region has boomed to $37 billion from about $3 billion over the last two decades, according to government data. Lula's government is aiming to open Indonesia — which registered about $6 billion in trade with Brazil last year — to poultry and expand beef exports, while also deepening bioenergy and defense cooperation, according to his administration. The Brazilian leader is expected to travel to Malaysia in October for an ASEAN summit. For Prabowo, the visit is more than a commercial stop. Since taking office last October, he has adopted a more hands-on and high-profile foreign policy, focused on securing bilateral deals that deliver both economic and strategic gains. Indonesia recently joined BRICS, and the trip to Brazil is part of a push to position Southeast Asia's largest economy as a more active middle power with deeper ties across the Global South.


Nikkei Asia
an hour ago
- Nikkei Asia
Dissanayake faces litmus test as India eyes Sri Lanka energy stakes
Employees work on a newly built tank at Ceylon Petroleum's Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery in Colombo on May 11, 2018. Sri Lankan energy industry veterans are pushing back against India's designs on a key deepwater port. (Source photos by Reuters, Kosaku Mimura and Shinya Sawai) MARWAAN MACAN-MARKAR and KIRAN SHARMA COLOMBO/NEW DELHI -- India's quest for energy stakes in Sri Lanka has exposed a foreign policy litmus test for President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, a neophyte in geopolitics. New Delhi has set its sights on developing an energy hub in Trincomalee, the world's second-deepest natural port, along the northeast coast of the strategically located island. The jockeying comes in the wake of China's plans for a multibillion dollar oil refinery in Hambantota, a port along Sri Lanka's southern coast built with Chinese loans and now under Chinese control.


Japan Today
an hour ago
- Japan Today
FBI launches probes into former FBI, CIA directors, Fox News reports
FILE PHOTO: The Federal Bureau of Investigation seal is seen at FBI headquarters in Washington, U.S. June 14, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo The FBI has launched criminal probes into former CIA Director John Brennan and former FBI Director James Comey, Fox News Digital reported on Tuesday, citing sources. The probes are over alleged wrongdoing related to past government investigations about claims of Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. elections in which President Donald Trump defeated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the news report said. The CIA and the Justice Department had no immediate comment. The FBI declined to comment. Reuters has not independently verified the probes. The scope of the criminal investigations into Brennan and Comey was unclear, the report added. Trump-nominated CIA Director John Ratcliffe referred Brennan, who served in that role under former Democratic President Barack Obama, for potential prosecution, according to the report. A criminal investigation does not necessarily result in charges. Brennan did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Comey could not immediately be reached. Fox said its sources were from the Justice Department but did not specify the number of sources. "I am glad to see that the Department of Justice is opening up this investigation," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News' "Jesse Watters Primetime" show in an interview. The probes reportedly target two former officials who have long drawn the ire of Trump and his supporters for their role in investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election. Comey led the FBI when authorities began a criminal investigation in 2016 into potential coordination between the Trump campaign and the Russian government to influence the election. Trump fired Comey in 2017 early in his first term after Comey publicly confirmed Trump was under investigation. The probe was then taken over by former Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who found no evidence of a criminal conspiracy between Trump's 2016 campaign and Russia. Trump railed against the investigation for years and has repeatedly dismissed it as the "Russia hoax." Brennan led the CIA when U.S. intelligence assessed, in a report made public in January 2017, that Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to sway the 2016 U.S. vote in favor of Trump. A CIA review released last week found flaws in the preparation of the 2017 assessment, but it did not contest its underlying conclusion. The Fox News report on the investigations broke as Trump's top officials at the FBI and Justice Department faced online criticism from some Trump supporters for concluding that there was no evidence to support long-held conspiracy theories about the death of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. During Trump's first term, the Justice Department appointed a separate special counsel, John Durham, to examine any missteps in the FBI's Russia investigation. Durham brought charges against three lower-level figures who worked on the probe or provided information to investigators, but did not find evidence of a conspiracy to target Trump. © Thomson Reuters 2025.