Recent discussions around US President Donald Trump’s
proposed ‘board of peace’ should concern anyone who values multilateralism,
international law and global equity. While the idea is presented as a fresh
approach to conflict resolution, a closer look reveals something far less
benign.
Rather than strengthening global peace, this scheme reflects a deeper
pattern of unilateralism that undermines the United Nations, weakens the
rules-based international order and ultimately serves narrow US interests, possibly
even personal ones.
The UN, for all its imperfections, remains the most
legitimate platform for managing international peace and security. It is
grounded in collective decision-making, sovereign equality and internationally
agreed rules.
Trump’s ‘board of peace,’ by contrast, appears to bypass this
framework entirely. It promotes the idea that peace can be dictated by a small,
self-selected group, dominated by US influence, rather than shaped through
inclusive global consensus. This is not reform; it is circumvention.
History offers a clear warning. When powerful states
act outside multilateral institutions, the result is rarely peace or stability.
Instead, such actions erode trust, weaken international norms and create a
world where might makes right. Trump’s proposal fits neatly into this pattern.
It chips away at the authority of the UN while normalising the idea that global
governance can be redesigned at the whim of a single power. Over time, this
approach hollows out the very foundations of the international system built
after World War II to prevent chaos and domination.
Equally troubling is the economic dimension of this
proposal. Trump’s political record shows a consistent tendency to frame global
engagement as a transaction designed to benefit the US at others’ expense.
Under the guise of ‘peace,’ the board risks becoming another mechanism for
extracting economic and political concessions.
Whether through reconstruction
contracts, arms deals, or strategic access to resources, such initiatives often
leave developing regions paying the price while wealth flows back to Washington—and,
potentially, to private interests closely linked to political power.
For Africa, China and the broader Global South,
vigilance is essential. These regions have historically borne the costs of
externally imposed ‘solutions’ that prioritise foreign agendas over local
realities.
A so-called peace initiative that excludes their voices, weakens
multilateral protections and concentrates power in a few hands should be
approached with caution. Accepting such frameworks uncritically risks
reinforcing old patterns of dependency and exploitation under a new label.
Fortunately, alternatives already exist. China’s
Global Development Initiative, for instance, emphasises development as the
foundation of lasting peace.
Rather than imposing political conditions or bypassing
international institutions, it focuses on poverty reduction, infrastructure,
food security and inclusive growth issues that directly address the root causes
of instability. While no initiative is perfect, the GDI reflects a broader
commitment to cooperation, mutual benefit and respect for national sovereignty.
Africa, too, has its own homegrown frameworks worth
strengthening. The African Union’s peace and security architecture, regional
economic communities and development agendas demonstrate that sustainable
solutions are most effective when they are locally informed and collectively
owned.
These initiatives recognise that peace cannot be separated from
development, dignity and fairness. They also align more closely with the spirit
of multilateralism than unilateral schemes dressed up as innovation.
The choice facing the Global South is therefore not a
lack of options, but a question of direction. One path leads toward fragmented
global governance dominated by unilateral power plays, where ‘peace’ becomes a
tool for enrichment and control.
The other path, though more complex and
demanding, seeks to uphold justice, fairness and shared responsibility through
inclusive institutions and cooperative development.
Trump’s ‘board of peace’ may sound appealing in
rhetoric, but in substance it represents a step backward. It weakens the UN,
undermines the rules-based order and risks turning peace into a commodity.
China, Africa and other developing regions should resist such shortcuts and
instead invest in strengthening multilateral alternatives that reflect their
interests and values.
In a world already facing deep divisions, true peace
will not come from unilateral schemes or transactional diplomacy. It will come
from cooperation rooted in fairness, respect and shared development—a vision
the Global South must continue to defend and advance.