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JAMES CARTER And JACOB CHOE: Trump’s Board Of Peace And The Quiet Reallocation Of Power

6 0
28.01.2026

At this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, President Trump unveiled a new global initiative—the “Board of Peace”—and promoted it as a flexible mechanism for dialogue and conflict mitigation. The language soothed, the ambition sprawled, and the audience offered polite applause.

But the underlying story is not “peace.” It is power—where it is moving, how leaders are organizing it, and who ultimately controls it.

President Donald Trump recognized this reality earlier than his critics did. Long before policymakers embraced “ecosystems” as fashionable language, Trump argued that nations that lacked control over production, supply chains, and leverage surrendered real power, regardless of how many forums they attended or diplomatic statements they signed.

Trump’s Board of Peace signals a shift from rule-based global institutions (e.g., the United Nations) to fast-changing, interest-based global coalitions. To understand why this shift matters, policymakers must look past rhetoric and examine how power actually functions in modern systems—an approach Trump adopted instinctively when he challenged the global consensus. (RELATED: Davos Elites No Longer Pretending Their Globalist Shindig Helps Anyone But Themselves)

Power does not flow from treaties or multilateral institutions. It flows through ecosystems: integrated systems that combine infrastructure, global........

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