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Trump's Board of Peace for Gaza draws cautious international response
Summary
Around 60 countries were invited to join President Trump's proposed Board of Peace to start with Gaza; Hungary accepted publicly while many governments reacted cautiously and diplomats warned the plan could undermine the United Nations.
Content
President Donald Trump sent invitations to roughly 60 nations proposing a "Board of Peace" he would chair, saying it would begin by addressing the Gaza conflict. Only Hungary gave an unequivocal public acceptance, while many other governments were cautious or declined to speak openly. Diplomats told Reuters that elements of the draft charter and the board's stated ambitions could undermine the United Nations' work.
What is known:
- The invitation's draft charter says Trump would chair the board for life and that it would start by focusing on Gaza.
- About 60 countries were invited; Hungary publicly accepted and others were circumspect in their responses.
- Several diplomats expressed concern that the board's terms and potential expansion beyond Gaza could weaken the United Nations' role.
- The White House named initial members and said the board would convene in the near future; the U.N. Security Council's mandate on Gaza remains in place through 2027.
Summary:
Diplomatic responses have been cautious because officials and diplomats question how the new board would relate to existing U.N. mandates and multilateral processes. The White House has announced some initial members and indicated the board will meet soon, while concrete details and wider government decisions remain undetermined at this time.
