
What difference has BRICS made on the world stage?
The 17th BRICS summit is being held in Brazil, again aiming to balance Western economic power and political dominance.
But as the meetings take place, eyes are on the US and President Donald Trump's trade tariffs, perhaps showing America still holds the cards. list of 3 items list 1 of 3 list 2 of 3 list 3 of 3 end of list
While the host nation Brazil condemns Israel's aggression and NATO's increased defence spending, other countries are not so outspoken.
And two important faces are not attending – Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian leader Vladimir Putin.
So does BRICS still have a cohesive purpose?
Has the grouping made tangible achievements over the years since it launched in 2009?
And what can it realistically hope to do, in today's world? Presenter:
James Bays Guests:
Gustavo Ribeiro – Founder and editor-in-chief of The Brazilian Report
Sergey Markov – Director at the Institute of Political Studies in Moscow and former public spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin
Jayant Menon – Former lead economist at Asian Development Bank and visiting senior fellow at ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore
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Al Jazeera
3 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Is Russia really ‘grooming' Western AI?
In March, NewsGuard – a company that tracks misinformation – published a report claiming that generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools, such as ChatGPT, were amplifying Russian disinformation. NewsGuard tested leading chatbots using prompts based on stories from the Pravda network – a group of pro-Kremlin websites mimicking legitimate outlets, first identified by the French agency Viginum. The results were alarming: Chatbots 'repeated false narratives laundered by the Pravda network 33 percent of the time', the report said. The Pravda network, which has a rather small audience, has long puzzled researchers. Some believe that its aim was performative – to signal Russia's influence to Western observers. Others see a more insidious aim: Pravda exists not to reach people, but to 'groom' the large language models (LLMs) behind chatbots, feeding them falsehoods that users would unknowingly encounter. NewsGuard said in its report that its findings confirm the second suspicion. This claim gained traction, prompting dramatic headlines in The Washington Post, Forbes, France 24, Der Spiegel, and elsewhere. But for us and other researchers, this conclusion doesn't hold up. First, the methodology NewsGuard used is opaque: It did not release its prompts and refused to share them with journalists, making independent replication impossible. Second, the study design likely inflated the results, and the figure of 33 percent could be misleading. Users ask chatbots about everything from cooking tips to climate change; NewsGuard tested them exclusively on prompts linked to the Pravda network. Two-thirds of its prompts were explicitly crafted to provoke falsehoods or present them as facts. Responses urging the user to be cautious about claims because they are not verified were counted as disinformation. The study set out to find disinformation – and it did. This episode reflects a broader problematic dynamic shaped by fast-moving tech, media hype, bad actors, and lagging research. With disinformation and misinformation ranked as the top global risk among experts by the World Economic Forum, the concern about their spread is justified. But knee-jerk reactions risk distorting the problem, offering a simplistic view of complex AI. It's tempting to believe that Russia is intentionally 'poisoning' Western AI as part of a cunning plot. But alarmist framings obscure more plausible explanations – and generate harm. So, can chatbots reproduce Kremlin talking points or cite dubious Russian sources? Yes. But how often this happens, whether it reflects Kremlin manipulation, and what conditions make users encounter it are far from settled. Much depends on the 'black box' – that is, the underlying algorithm – by which chatbots retrieve information. We conducted our own audit, systematically testing ChatGPT, Copilot, Gemini, and Grok using disinformation-related prompts. In addition to re-testing the few examples NewsGuard provided in its report, we designed new prompts ourselves. Some were general – for example, claims about US biolabs in Ukraine; others were hyper-specific – for example, allegations about NATO facilities in certain Ukrainian towns. If the Pravda network was 'grooming' AI, we would see references to it across the answers chatbots generate, whether general or specific. We did not see this in our findings. In contrast to NewsGuard's 33 percent, our prompts generated false claims only 5 percent of the time. Just 8 percent of outputs referenced Pravda websites – and most of those did so to debunk the content. Crucially, Pravda references were concentrated in queries poorly covered by mainstream outlets. This supports the data void hypothesis: When chatbots lack credible material, they sometimes pull from dubious sites – not because they have been groomed, but because there is little else available. If data voids, not Kremlin infiltration, are the problem, then it means disinformation exposure results from information scarcity – not a powerful propaganda machine. Furthermore, for users to actually encounter disinformation in chatbot replies, several conditions must align: They must ask about obscure topics in specific terms; those topics must be ignored by credible outlets; and the chatbot must lack guardrails to deprioritise dubious sources. Even then, such cases are rare and often short-lived. Data voids close quickly as reporting catches up, and even when they persist, chatbots often debunk the claims. While technically possible, such situations are very rare outside of artificial conditions designed to trick chatbots into repeating disinformation. The danger of overhyping Kremlin AI manipulation is real. Some counter-disinformation experts suggest the Kremlin's campaigns may themselves be designed to amplify Western fears, overwhelming fact-checkers and counter-disinformation units. Margarita Simonyan, a prominent Russian propagandist, routinely cites Western research to tout the supposed influence of the government-funded TV network, RT, she leads. Indiscriminate warnings about disinformation can backfire, prompting support for repressive policies, eroding trust in democracy, and encouraging people to assume credible content is false. Meanwhile, the most visible threats risk eclipsing quieter – but potentially more dangerous – uses of AI by malign actors, such as for generating malware reported by both Google and OpenAI. Separating real concerns from inflated fears is crucial. Disinformation is a challenge – but so is the panic it provokes. The views expressed in this article are the authors' own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial stance.


Al Jazeera
3 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Trump's new tariffs: Who is hit, what's next, how is the world responding?
United States President Donald Trump on Monday extended a pause on his sweeping reciprocal tariffs to August 1, while also sending 'tariff letters' to some countries, warning they would be subject to new tariff rates if they failed to reach a trade deal with the US by the new deadline. Here is what is going on with Trump's reciprocal tariffs, and what his tariff letters say: What has Trump announced? On Monday, the White House released a fact sheet saying Trump signed an executive order extending the tariff pause. The pause was originally scheduled to end on Wednesday, July 9, for the 'Liberation Day' tariffs he initially announced on April 2. However, Trump imposed a 90-day pause on the steep reciprocal tariffs on April 9. During this period, most of the US's trading partners faced a flat 10 percent tariff. Which countries face renewed tariffs? The White House listed 14 countries to which Trump sent tariff letters on Monday. These countries face these new tariff rates if they fail to reach a trade deal with the US by August 1. The renewed tariff rates for these countries announced on Monday are: Japan: 25 percent, 24 percent on April 2. South Korea: 25 percent, 25 percent on April 2. South Africa: 30 percent, 30 percent on April 2. Kazakhstan: 25 percent, 27 percent on April 2. Laos: 40 percent, 48 percent on April 2. Malaysia: 25 percent, 24 percent on April 2. Myanmar: 40 percent, 44 percent on April 2. Tunisia: 25 percent, 28 percent on April 2. Bosnia and Herzegovina: 30 percent, 35 percent on April 2. Indonesia: 32 percent, 32 percent on April 2. Bangladesh: 35 percent, 37 percent on April 2. Serbia: 35 percent, 37 percent on April 2. Cambodia: 36 percent, 49 percent on April 2. Thailand: 36 percent, 36 percent on April 2. For South Africa, South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia, these tariff rates are identical to what Trump had announced on April 2. Malaysia and Japan face a 25 percent tariff, up 1 percent from the 24 percent tariff announced on April 2. But most of the countries – Kazakhstan, Laos, Myanmar, Tunisia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bangladesh, Serbia and Cambodia – targeted by Trump on Monday now face lower tariffs than they did on April 2. What do Trump's tariff letters say? Trump posted the tariff letters he sent to leaders of the 14 countries on his Truth Social platform on Monday. In these letters, he expressed concerns about the trade imbalance between the US and the countries the letters are addressed to. Trump said companies that move their production to the US would be exempt from tariffs. But he also held out a threat: If countries impose retaliatory tariffs, they could face still higher tariffs from the US. And he held out the prospect of a change in tariff rates. Trump ended all his letters with: 'These Tariffs may be modified, upward or downward, depending on our relationship with your Country. You will never be disappointed with The United States of America.' Why is he threatening the BRICS? On Sunday, Trump also threatened the BRICS bloc with additional tariffs after the bloc, during its 17th summit in Brazil, indirectly criticised the US's trade war, as well as its recent military attack on Iran. 'Any Country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% Tariff,' Trump wrote on Truth Social. BRICS is named for its founding members, Brazil, Russia, India and China, and South Africa, which joined a year later. But it has grown to include other countries, such as Indonesia, Egypt, Iran, Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates. How many deals are already in place with the US? During the 90-day pause, the US brokered deals with two of its trading partners: the United Kingdom and Vietnam. The first deal was secured on May 8, between the US and the UK, setting a 10 percent tariff on UK exports to the US. The deal states that the first 100,000 vehicles imported into the US from the UK each year will face a 10 percent tariff, down from the 27.5 percent imposed earlier. Additional vehicles imported each year will face a 25 percent tariff. On July 2, Trump announced that he had secured a deal with Vietnam, which now faces a minimum 20 percent tariff in exchange for opening its market up to the US. Transshipments from third countries through Vietnam will face a 40 percent levy, while US products will not face any tariff in Vietnam. Specific details for this deal are unclear. On April 2, Trump had announced a 46 percent tariff on Vietnam. When the pause was first announced, Trump administration officials had hinted that Washington was seeking a greater number of trade deals. 'We're going to run 90 deals in 90 days. It's possible,' White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told Fox Business Network back in April. Between then and now, Trump expressed pessimism about potential trade deals with some of the US partners. 'We've dealt with Japan. I'm not sure if we're gonna make a deal, I doubt it, with Japan,' Trump told reporters on July 1. 'They and others are so spoiled from having ripped us off for 30, 40 years that it's really hard for them to make a deal.' Trump administration officials have indicated that stop-gap deals with India and potentially the European Union could be imminent. How have the targets of Trump's renewed tariffs reacted? Japan and South Korea have said on Tuesday that they would try to reach deals with Trump to reduce the effect of US tariffs on their economies. Japan's chief trade negotiator and economy minister, Ryosei Akazawa, told a news conference on Tuesday that he is seeking concessions for Japan's automobile industry but would not compromise on its agriculture sector. This is similar to the stance Japan has maintained when it comes to trade negotiations with the US. 'There's no point striking a deal with the US without an agreement on automobile tariffs,' Akazawa said. The agriculture sector has traditionally been a significant voting bloc for Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party, and elections to Japan's upper house in parliament are scheduled for July 20. Akazawa said he had spoken with US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and they had agreed to continue negotiations. 'The two countries must garner trust through sincere dialogue, and reach common ground step by step. Through such a process, my job as negotiator is to agree on a full package as soon as possible,' Akazawa said. The US is Japan's largest export market, accounting for 19.1 percent of total Japanese exports in 2023, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity (OEC). Japanese automobile exports to the US alone contributed about 1 percent to Japan's gross domestic product (GDP) in 2023. South Korea said it too would step up trade talks with the US. 'We also plan to use it as an opportunity to improve domestic systems and regulations to resolve the trade deficit that is a major interest of the United States,' South Korea's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy said in a statement on Tuesday. By contrast, South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa was more critical of the 30 percent tariff imposed by Trump on his country, deeming it 'unilateral' in a statement published on the presidency's X account on Tuesday. 'South Africa maintains that the 30 percent reciprocal tariff is not an accurate representation of available trade data,' the statement said. 'In our interpretation of the available trade data, the average tariff imported goods entering South Africa stands at 7.6 percent.' The statement added that 77 percent of US goods enter the South African market under a zero percent duty. 'South Africa will continue with its diplomatic efforts towards a more balanced and mutually beneficial trade relationship with the United States. We welcome the commitment by the US government, that the 30 percent tariff is subject to modification at the back of the conclusion of our negotiations with the United States.' Tensions between the US and South Africa have surged in recent months. During a meeting with Ramaphosa in the White House in late May, Trump accused South Africa of 'genocide' against white Afrikaners, a claim that was denied by Ramaphosa and that has been widely discredited. Earlier in May, a flight of white South Africans flew into the US as part of a relocation plan devised by the Trump administration. How have markets reacted? US stocks, based on the three major indices, fell on Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 0.94 percent; S&P 500, which tracks the stock performance of 500 leading US companies, fell by 0.79 percent; and the Nasdaq Composite saw a 0.92 percent drop. What are the key upcoming dates for the tariffs? The upcoming dates, significant to the trade war, to look out for are: July 9: This is the original White House deadline for when countries needed to reach trade deals with the US or face steep tariffs. Trump and his team are expected to announce those tariff rates for several countries coinciding with the end of that deadline. It is also the date Trump set for the US and EU to reach a deal to remove a 50 percent tariff on all EU imports. July 14: On April 9, the EU had announced that it would impose retaliatory tariffs on the US against US tariffs on EU steel and aluminium imports. However, the union announced a 90-day pause to these retaliatory tariffs when Trump announced the 90-day pause to the reciprocal tariffs. On July 14, the 90-day pause announced by the EU is set to end. August 1: This is when the increased retaliatory tariffs imposed by the US on its trading partners are slated to come into effect, if these countries fail to reach trade deals with the US.


Al Jazeera
8 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Russia probes ex-minister's death as body found hours after sacking
Russia's top criminal investigation agency is probing the death of Roman Starovoit, a former transport minister whose body was found with a gunshot wound near his car, hours after President Vladimir Putin dismissed him from his post. Authorities on Monday said the 53-year-old politician's body was discovered near a Tesla vehicle abandoned near a park in the Moscow region, with a pistol, registered in Starovoit's name, located nearby. The Investigative Committee has opened a case to determine the full circumstances of his death, suggesting it could be suicide. Russian media, citing law enforcement sources, said the gunshot appeared to be self-inflicted. However, the timing of the death has prompted speculation. Putin issued a decree earlier on Monday, removing Starovoit as transport minister, a role he had held for just more than a year. No explanation was provided. Political commentators quickly linked the decision to a long-running corruption investigation in the Kursk region, where Starovoit previously served as governor. The probe centres on whether 19.4 billion roubles ($246m) allocated in 2022 to bolster border defences in Kursk were embezzled. The funds were meant to reinforce Russia's frontier with Ukraine, but Ukrainian forces launched a cross-border assault into the region three months into Starovoit's ministerial term – the largest such incursion since World War II. In April, his successor and former deputy in Kursk, Alexei Smirnov, was charged with embezzling defence funds. Several Russian outlets reported on Monday that Smirnov, who denies wrongdoing, had told investigators Starovoit was also involved in the alleged fraud. The incident casts a shadow over Russia's transport sector, already grappling with wartime pressures. Western sanctions have left the aviation industry struggling for spare parts, while soaring interest rates have pushed Russian Railways – the country's largest employer – into financial strain. Meanwhile, Ukraine's drone attacks continue to disrupt domestic air traffic, forcing temporary airport closures and leading to logistical uncertainty. Following Starovoit's dismissal, the Kremlin announced that Andrei Nikitin, former governor of the Novgorod region, had been appointed as acting transport minister. Photographs released by state media showed him shaking hands with Putin. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Putin believed Nikitin had the necessary experience to steer the ministry through current challenges. At his meeting with the president, Nikitin pledged to modernise the sector by boosting digital infrastructure to improve cargo flows and cross-border trade.