
Trump issues new threat to BRICS
Speaking at the White House on Friday, Trump denounced what he called BRICS' attempts to weaken the dollar. 'They wanted to try and take over the dollar, the dominance of the dollar... And I said, anybody that's in the BRICS consortium of nations, we're going to tariff you 10%.'
Trump stressed that Washington will spare no effort to preserve the dollar's hegemony. 'The reserve currency is so important. You know, if we lost that, that would be like losing a World War.'
Washington 'can never let anyone play games,' Trump said, adding that he has decided to 'hit them [BRICS] very, very hard.' 'If they ever really form in a meaningful way, it will end very quickly,' he said.
Trump also claimed his threat to impose 10% tariffs on imports from the BRICS had completely derailed the group's summit in Rio de Janeiro earlier this month. 'They had a meeting the following day and almost nobody showed up,' he said.
However, the BRICS summit featured broad participation at the highest level. While China's President Xi Jinping was absent from the meeting, his country was represented by Chinese Premier Li Qiang. Russian President Vladimir Putin was also absent, but addressed the summit remotely.
Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa and Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto, as well as leaders from Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the UAE attended in person.
In October, Russia's Finance Minister Anton Siluanov stated that the share of national currencies in trade among BRICS countries has reached 65%, with the share of the dollar and euro plunging below 30%.
Earlier this week, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov explained that BRICS countries are exploring dollar alternatives 'to shield themselves from US arbitrariness.'
However, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov has said that BRICS has never been meant as a rival to the US, although warning that 'the language of threats and manipulation… is not the way to speak to members of this group.'
Hashtags

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


Russia Today
an hour ago
- Russia Today
Putin did better job than any German leader
The German people should be angry at their own government that ruined their country rather than at Russian President Vladimir Putin, US journalist Tucker Carlson has told the Berlin-based newspaper Bild. A large portion of the two‑hour interview released on Saturday was devoted to Carlson's interview with Putin from February 2024. During the exchange, the US journalist repeatedly curbed Bild deputy editor-in-chief Paul Ronzheimer's attempts to condemn the Russian leader over the Ukraine conflict. After Ronzheimer referred to Putin as a 'criminal,' Carlson replied: 'I am not defending Putin, who I think has done a great job for Russia. Much better job than any German leader. That is for sure.' 'Your country is going down, Russia is going up. You should be mad at your own leaders. You are mad at Putin instead,' he argued. According to Carlson, Angela Merkel – who served as German chancellor from 2005 to 2021 – was far more deserving of being branded a 'criminal' because 'she wrecked your country through mass migration... It will not recover in your lifetime or mine.' Carlson suggested that the current authorities in Berlin are attacking Putin and Russia in order to distract the public from migration and economic problems in Germany, which is expected to end 2025 in recession for the third year in a row. 'Your country is a mess because your leaders suck. That is the fact. You are mad about that. So, they take your anger and they are like: 'Oh no, it is Putin's fault. It is Putin's fault.' Ok, got it,' he said. Earlier this month, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Germany was becoming 'dangerous again' for Russia, after German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius stated that Bundeswehr troops must be prepared to 'kill' Russian soldiers if necessary. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said earlier that by supporting Kiev in the conflict with Moscow 'Germany is sliding down the same slippery slope it already followed a couple of times in the last century – down toward its own collapse,' referring to the defeats suffered by the country in the First and Second World Wars.


Russia Today
4 hours ago
- Russia Today
EU working hard to portray Russia as ‘devil incarnate'
The EU is demonizing Russia in order to keep the Ukraine conflict running as Brussels still has not given up hope of suppressing Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said. In May, the EU adopted the €150 billion Security Action for Europe (SAFE) instrument to support members that are willing to invest in defense. The move came as part of a larger military buildup drive that began in the bloc after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022 with the goal of countering what it perceives as the 'Russian threat'. Moscow has dismissed claims that it intends to attack NATO countries as 'nonsense,' saying that Western politicians are seeking to scare their populations to justify increased military spending. In an interview with journalist Pavel Zarubin released on Sunday, Peskov said the EU 'is creating an enemy for itself, doing focused, professional work both in their own society and abroad in order to portray Russia as the devil incarnate... in order to ensure the continuation of the conflict, in order to suppress Russia.' The Kremlin spokesman added that there are discussions underway in the EU 'about who will be paying for the feast.' Earlier this week, several EU countries rejected a plan proposed by US President Donald Trump for European NATO member states to buy American weapons for Ukraine. 'Thank God the anti-Russian and militaristic ecstasy does not have universal backing' in the bloc, Peskov said. Moscow has warned against supplying Western weapons to Ukraine, arguing that they only prolong the conflict and increase the risk of a direct clash between Russia and NATO. In the interview, Peskov noted that Russian President Vladimir Putin 'has repeatedly spoken about his desire to bring the Ukrainian settlement on to a peaceful path as quickly as possible.' Russia has stated that it is ready to negotiate peace with Ukraine, though it has accused Kiev and its Western backers of not being interested in finding a long-term solution that addresses the root causes of the conflict.


Russia Today
8 hours ago
- Russia Today
Russiagate only tip of iceberg in Western demonization of Russia
US National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard's revelations about the role of former President Barack Obama's administration in the Russiagate scandal are 'shocking,' but they expose only the surface of a broader Western anti-Russia campaign, Professor Oliver Boyd-Barrett has told RT. On Friday, Gabbard released newly declassified documents describing a coordinated effort by senior Obama-era officials – led by Obama himself – to falsely accuse Donald Trump of colluding with Russia during the 2016 election. The documents indicate that Obama ordered officials to discard intelligence assessments that found no Russian involvement in Trump's campaign and replace them with claims blaming Moscow based on fabricated data. The scandal led to the years-long Trump-Russia probe known as 'Russiagate.' 'This is an extraordinary moment, that the head of intelligence in the US has made such a bold, in some ways shocking, statement of the truth,' Boyd-Barrett, a professor at Bowling Green State University and author of an in-depth study of Russiagate, said on Saturday. He noted the moment was especially striking as Gabbard called for prosecution of those involved in what she described as a 'coup' attempt. Boyd-Barrett, however, emphasized that to 'fully comprehend' Russiagate, it must be viewed as only a small part of a broader Western campaign to demonize Russia, 'that goes decades back.' 'It's part of a much deeper agenda – we're talking Russia narrative… the broader context of an anti-Russian campaign that was stoked artificially around the time of the late 90s when the West had so clearly decided that NATO was going to move eastwards regardless of whatever anyone in Russia or anyone in the US had to say,' he said. He also warned against reducing Russiagate to a personal political ploy, noting that blaming it solely on Obama or Hillary Clinton's election anxiety is 'too simple an explanation.' Moscow has repeatedly denied interfering in the US electoral process.