
Trump Forms Board of Peace: Global Power Shift Begins in Davos
What is Trump’s Board of Peace? Full List of Member Nations and Global Impact
U.S. President Donald J. Trump on Wednesday unveiled the Board of Peace, a new international body aimed at resolving global conflicts and overseeing post-war reconstruction, beginning with Gaza. The charter was signed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, marking what analysts describe as the most direct challenge yet to the United Nations’ role as the world’s primary peacekeeping authority.
The White House said around 50 countries were invited to join the initiative. Of these, about 35 expressed willingness to participate, while 23 nations formally joined at the Davos launch.
🚨 JUST IN: In a jaw-dropping move that has the globalist elite reeling, President Donald J. Trump today officially launched and signed the charter for his revolutionary Board of Peace—a bold, America-led international body that TRUMP IS CALLING THE UN’s DIRECT REPLACEMENT. pic.twitter.com/56Fy8Dddmz
— FAN TRUMP ARMY (@TRUMP_ARMY_) January 22, 2026
Nations That Joined
The following countries signed on to the Board of Peace:
- Albania
- Argentina
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Bahrain
- Belarus
- Bulgaria
- Egypt
- Hungary
- Indonesia
- Israel
- Jordan
- Kazakhstan
- Kosovo
- Morocco
- Pakistan
- Paraguay
- Qatar
- Saudi Arabia
- Turkey
- United Arab Emirates
- Uzbekistan
- Vietnam
Invited but Not Yet Committed
- United Kingdom
- Germany
- China
- Russia
- India
- Japan
- Thailand
- Singapore
- Greece
- Italy
- Ukraine
Countries That Declined
- France
- Norway
- Sweden
- Spain
- Slovenia
Canada’s invitation was withdrawn, making it the only country publicly removed from the process.
Why Trump Is Taking on the UN
Trump argues the UN has become slow, bureaucratic, and politically compromised.
The Board of Peace is designed to:
Replace UN crisis mechanisms with a faster U.S.-led structure
Remove veto powers and permanent members
Directly control aid, security, and reconstruction
Build a new global order based on strategic alignment rather than universal membership
Trump has long criticised the United Nations as slow, bureaucratic, and politically biased. He has argued that the organisation passes resolutions but fails to stop wars. The Board of Peace is designed as a smaller, faster decision-making forum without veto powers, allowing the U.S. to coordinate security, aid and reconstruction directly with aligned nations.
By bypassing UN agencies, the new body places Washington at the centre of global crisis management, shifting power away from traditional multilateral institutions toward a U.S.-led coalition.
A New World Order?
With many Western democracies staying out and several Middle Eastern and Asian nations joining, the Board of Peace signals a reorganisation of global alliances. Whether it becomes an effective peace platform or a geopolitical power tool will shape international diplomacy in the years ahead.
