‘Will for Peace’ drills: Brics tests the waters of military cooperation
The first naval exercises under the ‘Brics plus’ banner saw Brazil, Egypt, China, Russia and South Africa take part. India did not

But some analysts saw in the manoeuvres a gradual effort to normalise military cooperation within the Brics framework, testing whether the bloc can expand its influence into the security realm without officially formalising itself as an alliance.
The naval exercise brought together new and existing Brics members under China’s leadership, with Brazil, Egypt and Ethiopia taking part as observers. Iran also sent ships, but reportedly later withdrew them to avoid antagonising the US. India, notably, did not join.
Brics – an initialism derived from the names of the five members Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – began expanding in 2024 to include the so-called Brics-plus nations of Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, the UAE and Indonesia, among others.
Its founding aim largely concerned expanding economic cooperation, but in recent years the bloc’s focus has shifted more towards reforming global governance to better represent a more multipolar world order.