Yesterday in Davos, President Trump declared peace in the Middle East—eight wars settled under his leadership.
He stood before the world and launched the Board of Peace, the most formidable diplomatic body ever assembled.
Nineteen nations have already signed on, from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to Hungary and Uzbekistan.
This board answers only to its chair: the President of the United States.
The United Nations may nod, but it no longer calls the shots.
“If Hamas refuses to disarm, it’s the end of them,” Mr. Trump warned. No hedging. No excuses.
A new, transitional Palestinian government will rise under international peacekeepers overseen by this board.
The mission won UN ratification last November—and it’s already proving more effective than a decade of empty resolutions.
Now Mr. Trump is expanding the board’s mandate beyond Gaza, ready to tackle conflicts from Ukraine to Africa.
He intends to supplant the UN as the world’s chief arbiter of peace.
Yes, Vladimir Putin accepted his invitation. Good leaders get things done, even when they’re controversial.
Not everyone is on board. Britain balked over Mr. Putin’s role—and cited legal concerns. Fine. Their caution only highlights our resolve.
This is the decisive rebuke to global bureaucracies that fail to secure real stability.
With American confidence restored, the era of endless wars is over.
Once again, the world looks to the United States for leadership—and we deliver.





