India Skips BRICS Naval Drills, Calls It "Not Regular" South African Initiative

India's Ministry of External Affairs has clarified that the country did not participate in the recent 'BRICS Naval Exercise', stating it was entirely a South African initiative and not a regular BRICS activity. The MEA spokesperson noted that not all BRICS members took part and highlighted India's regular participation in the IBSAMAR maritime exercise with Brazil and South Africa. The weeklong drills near South Africa, led by China, included participants like Russia and Iran but saw India and Brazil opt out. The exercises occur amid global maritime tensions and strained relations between South Africa and the United States.

Key Points: India Clarifies Non-Participation in BRICS Naval Exercise

  • India clarifies non-participation
  • Exercise a South African initiative
  • Not a regular BRICS activity
  • India part of IBSAMAR with Brazil, South Africa
2 min read

"Not regular activity": MEA clarifies India did not participate in 'BRICS Naval Exercise'

MEA says India did not join the BRICS naval drills, calling it a South African initiative and not a regular bloc activity. Details inside.

"It was not a regular or institutionalised BRICS activity, nor did all BRICS members take part in it. - MEA Statement"

New Delhi, January 17

Official Spokesperson of the Ministry of External Affairs, Randhir Jaiswal on Saturday said that the so-called 'BRICS Naval Exercise' was entirely a South African initiative in which some BRICS members took part.

Responding to comments relating to India's non-participation in the 'BRICS Naval Exercise', Jaiswal said that it was not a regular or institutionalised BRICS activity, nor did all BRICS members take part in it.

In an official statement, the MEA said, "We clarify that the exercise in question was entirely a South African initiative in which some BRICS members took part. It was not a regular or institutionalised BRICS activity, nor did all BRICS members take part in it. India has not participated in previous such activities. The regular exercise that India is a part of in this context is the IBSAMAR maritime exercise that brings together the navies of India, Brazil and South Africa. The last edition of IBSAMAR was held in October 2024."

Joint naval drills involving several members of the BRICS bloc, including China, Russia and Iran, have kicked off near South Africa's coast with South Africa describing the manoeuvres as a vital response to rising maritime tensions globally, Al Jazeera reported.

The weeklong Will for Peace 2026 exercises, which started on Saturday, are being led by China in Simon's Town, where the Indian Ocean meets the Atlantic Ocean. They will include drills on rescue and maritime strike operations and technical exchanges, China's Ministry of National Defence said.

The drills involving warships from the participating countries come amid frayed ties between South Africa and the US. Washington sees the bloc as an economic threat.

The BRICS acronym is derived from the initial letters of the founding member countries - Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - with South Africa serving as the current chair. India and Brazil, however, opted out of the drills, Al Jazeera reported.

China and Iran sent destroyers, Russia and the United Arab Emirates sent corvettes and South Africa deployed a mid-sized frigate.

Chinese officials leading the opening ceremony on Saturday south of Cape Town said Brazil, Egypt, Indonesia and Ethiopia were joining the drills as observers, as per Al Jazeera.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Wise decision to stay out. The exercise seems dominated by China and includes Iran. India must protect its strategic autonomy and not get drawn into drills that could be seen as aligning against other partners. Our foreign policy is balanced for a reason.
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Vikram M
It's a bit confusing for the common public though. Headlines say "BRICS exercise", MEA says it's not a BRICS exercise. Maybe better coordination on messaging is needed to avoid perception gaps? Just a thought.
R
Rohit P
Smart move! Why should we participate in an exercise led by China in the Indian Ocean region? Our navy is strong enough to conduct its own drills with trusted partners. IBSAMAR is the proven platform for cooperation with South Africa and Brazil.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the geopolitical lines being drawn. South Africa hosting this with China & Russia while tensions with US are high. India walking a careful diplomatic line, as always. Complex world stage.
K
Karthik V
Fully support this. We have our own priorities and partnerships. BRICS is an economic grouping first. Let's not mix things up. Jai Hind!

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