India has taken charge of BRICS in 2026 with a fresh logo, renewed messaging, and promises to shape the grouping for “today’s realities.” But as New Delhi rolled out symbolism on land, something far more concrete was unfolding at sea and India wasn’t there to witness it. Off the coast of South Africa, BRICS Plus countries launched naval wargames involving destroyers, corvettes, and frigates. China led the drills. Russia joined. Iran and the UAE sent ships. Even newer members showed up as observers. What stood out wasn’t the firepower, it was the absence of a founding member and current chair: India. This isn’t just about skipping an exercise. It’s about timing, alignments, and pressure. The drills began days after the U.S. seized a Venezuela-linked Russian oil tanker. They unfolded as Washington openly labels BRICS “anti-American.” And they brought together countries that are either rivals of the U.S., sanctioned by it, or quietly hedging against it. So where does India stand? Is New Delhi protecting strategic autonomy or avoiding a geopolitical line it knows is coming? As BRICS evolves from an economic idea into a harder power platform, one question looms larger than ever: how long can India stay away from geopolitics while sitting at its very center?

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