Brazil’s president holds a forty-minute call with Vladimir Putin to discuss Ukraine peace efforts, BRICS coordination and unease over U.S. tariff policies
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a forty-minute telephone conversation on August 9, during which they discussed peace efforts in Ukraine, updates from Putin’s diplomatic engagements with the United States, cooperation within the BRICS group, and the broader international political and economic environment.
The call forms part of an intensifying diplomatic sequence by Putin, who has engaged in recent discussions with counterparts in China, India, Central Asia and Europe in advance of his scheduled meeting with U.S. President
Donald Trump in Alaska.
Lula, who has been subject to U.S. tariffs reaching fifty per cent on Brazilian imports, used the call to coordinate a collective BRICS response.
He signaled intentions to consult with leaders such as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping on forming a unified strategy to address the tariff measures, after Trump’s renewed threats of further duties following their July summit in Rio de Janeiro.
The exchange underscores Brazil’s leadership role in shaping BRICS cohesion.
Lula has emphasized multilateral engagement as a means to counter protectionist pressures, and to reinforce the bloc’s position on issues of global governance and economic sovereignty.
On a broader scale, the conversation reflects the evolving diplomatic dynamics within the Global South.
BRICS nations increasingly seek to coordinate their responses to unilateral economic actions, while reinforcing mechanisms for strategic partnership and dialogue amid shifting global power balances.