2 Answers

3 like 0 dislike
by Journeyman (2.7k points)
selected by
 
Best answer

According to the article you referenced, both Saudi Arabia and Iran are looking to formally join the BRICS group of countries as official member states.

The BRICS countries--Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa--is an international political is made up of some of the fastest growing economies in the world and, as per this article from Politics Today, "has been working together [to] challenge the dominance of traditional Western powers." Those being, largely Western European and North American NATO countries.

According to that same article, Saudi Arabia (as well as Argentina) has expressed interest in joining the group. It's hard to say if both Saudi Arabia and Iran will get their bids to join; they certainly both fit the criteria of being fast-growing and largely anti-western in terms of culture. However, as traditional enemies, the Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran regimes may cause discord in the group if both are to join, perhaps endangering their bid status. 

No available information
1 like 0 dislike
by Apprentice (1.6k points)

It seems that Iran and Saudi Arabia have displayed their interests in joining the BRICS countries. According to this article, “The BRICS group of nations plans to decide this year whether to admit new members and what criteria they would have to meet, with Iran and Saudi Arabia among those who’ve formally asked to join, according to South Africa’s ambassador to the bloc.” However, it is important note that even though they have requested to join, there is no guarantee that they will join. According to the same article, BRICS is currently drafting the criteria for the countries that can join the BRICS group. Thus, there is no guarantee that they will join. However, the circumstances suggest that there is a good chance that they might join the BRICS group.

Link to article:

https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2023/02/15/BRICS-discusses-expansion-as-Iran-Saudi-Arabia-formally-ask-to-join

Exaggerated/ Misleading

Community Rules


• Be respectful
• Always list your sources and include links so readers can check them for themselves.
• Use primary sources when you can, and only go to credible secondary sources if necessary.
• Try to rely on more than one source, especially for big claims.
• Point out if sources you quote have interests that could affect how accurate their evidence is.
• Watch for bias in sources and let readers know if you find anything that might influence their perspective.
• Show all the important evidence, whether it supports or goes against the claim.
...