Ajit Doval to chair BRICS security advisers' meeting in India on June 22
India will host the BRICS National Security Advisers' meeting on 22 and 23 June, with National Security Adviser Ajit Doval set to chair the talks. The meeting will take place as India holds the rotating presidency of the bloc this year. According to an official statement, the agenda will focus on non-traditional security challenges confronting the world today.
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The meeting is expected to bring together national security advisers and delegation heads from BRICS member countries. Among those named in the supporting material are Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Russian National Security Adviser Sergei Shoigu and Iranian Supreme National Security Council Deputy Secretary Nezamipour. The discussions are also expected to examine the rapidly changing nature of national security threats and the role of new technologies in emerging risks.
Officials said the gathering will also review the outcomes of recently held BRICS Joint Working Groups on counter-terrorism and on security in the use of information and communication technologies. That gives the meeting a practical policy role beyond the headline diplomatic format. It also places the security track of the bloc alongside wider preparations for the BRICS summit in India in September.
The meeting matters because BRICS has expanded into a larger grouping with members including Brazil, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and the United Arab Emirates. India's presidency gives it a central role in shaping the agenda and in steering discussions on security cooperation. The focus on non-traditional threats suggests attention to issues such as cyber risks, terrorism and technology-linked vulnerabilities rather than only conventional state security.
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The supporting material does not say what specific decisions will be taken in the June meeting. It also does not provide details on any bilateral meetings on the sidelines or whether the talks will produce a joint statement. What remains clear is that the gathering is intended to set the tone for the September summit and to test how far the bloc can align on security priorities.
The wider significance lies in the fact that BRICS is now a more diverse grouping than in earlier years, with a broader membership and a wider security agenda. That makes coordination more complex, but also potentially more consequential for countries seeking common ground on counter-terrorism, cyber security and emerging threats. The next key marker will be the outcome of the June 22-23 meeting and whether it produces any concrete language for the summit later in the year.
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