India's bid to forge a unified BRICS foreign ministers' statement collapsed in New Delhi this week, as disagreements over how to describe the Israel-Gaza conflict and a separate bilateral dispute between the UAE and Iran blocked consensus. India, which holds the BRICS Presidency this year, was forced to issue a "Chair's Statement" instead, a procedural fallback that records what was discussed but carries no collective endorsement from member states.
What broke down and why
Two fault lines emerged. First, India reportedly pushed to soften or dilute language on the Israel-Palestine conflict, a move that drew resistance from members who wanted stronger wording. Second, the UAE and Iran, both relatively recent additions to the expanded BRICS bloc, brought their own bilateral tensions into the room, making it harder to agree on Middle East text that both could sign. With neither issue resolved, diplomats could not produce a joint statement that all deputy foreign ministers would accept.
The Chair's Statement is a weaker outcome. It reflects the agenda and subjects covered during the meeting but does not represent a shared BRICS position. For India, which is managing the bloc's presidency, it is a visible diplomatic setback, the kind that signals internal fractures rather than cohesion.
Why BRICS unity is harder now
The bloc expanded significantly in 2024, adding the UAE, Iran, Ethiopia, and Egypt alongside the original five members. A larger membership brings more competing foreign policy interests into the same room. The Israel-Gaza war has been a particular stress point: members like Iran hold maximalist positions, while others, including India, have tried to maintain balance between Western and Global South relationships. Getting all sides to agree on a single paragraph of text has become genuinely difficult.
India's broader diplomatic posture on Gaza has been carefully hedged, calling for restraint and a two-state solution without explicitly condemning Israel. That middle-ground stance, useful bilaterally, becomes a friction point inside a multilateral format where several members want blunter language.
The breakdown also reflects a recurring tension in expanded multilateral groupings: more members means more vetoes in practice, even where formal veto rules do not exist. Consensus-based drafting becomes a lowest-common-denominator exercise, and when that floor cannot be found, the chair absorbs the failure.
For India's BRICS presidency, the immediate question is whether this signals a pattern or a one-off. The full BRICS summit later in the year will test whether leaders can paper over what their deputies could not resolve at the working level. Watchers should track whether India adjusts its language strategy on Israel-Palestine ahead of that meeting, and whether UAE-Iran tensions ease enough to allow coordinated positions on Middle East issues.