Former President Donald Trump’s administration has reportedly approached multiple nations with a unprecedented proposition: contribute $1 billion to secure permanent membership on a newly conceived ‘Board of Peace.’ According to documents obtained by Bloomberg and other media outlets, the initiative would be chaired by Trump himself and include invited heads of state such as Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Hungary’s Viktor Orban, and Canada’s Mark Carney.
The board’s draft charter reveals a tiered membership structure where standard three-year terms could be extended indefinitely for nations contributing over $1 billion within the first year of operation. While initially presented as overseeing Gaza’s reconstruction, the charter broadly defines the board’s mission as promoting ‘stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict’ without specific geographical limitations.
The proposal notably criticizes existing international institutions, suggesting the board would possess ‘the courage to depart from approaches and institutions that have too often failed’—a clear reference to Trump’s longstanding skepticism toward organizations like the United Nations. The White House framework outlines a main board, a Palestinian technocratic committee, and an executive board with advisory functions.
Membership would be exclusively by invitation from the chairman (Trump), who would retain authority to remove member states subject to a two-thirds veto. The emerging board composition has already drawn criticism from Israel regarding proposed Gaza committee representatives from Turkey and Qatar.
