Trump’s Board of Peace: Breakthrough Diplomacy or a Hostile Takeover of Global Order?
A new US-led peace body promises results—but critics warn it sidelines the UN and rewrites international power rules
A new and highly unconventional diplomatic body is rapidly reshaping the global conversation on peace and power.
President Donald Trump’s proposed Board of Peace has drawn in a striking mix of allies and rivals, from Israel and Saudi Arabia to Turkey and Egypt, with more countries quietly lining up.
Marketed as a results-driven alternative to traditional multilateral institutions, the board claims to focus on ceasefires, reconstruction, and long-term stability, starting with Gaza.
Yet its leaked charter reveals something far more radical: a permanent international organization chaired by Trump himself, funded by billion-dollar buy-ins, empowered to bypass or replace existing global frameworks.
Supporters hail it as decisive leadership in a paralyzed world.
Critics see it as the most serious challenge to the post-war international order in decades.