Coming up this Friday, President Donald Trump is set to meet with Russian dictator Vladimir Putin to continue their talks on ending the war in Ukraine—a war claiming 5,000 lives every week, more than 20,000 each month. Despite multiple attempts, Trump hasn’t closed the deal yet, but his actions—not just his words—make it clear his administration will go anywhere, meet with anyone, and work tirelessly to get people to lay down their arms and come to the table of peace.
Say what you want about Trump—he’s a bully, he writes mean tweets, or the left’s favorite: he’s Hitler reincarnate—but the facts are the facts: he’s setting the world on a path to peace. In just seven months of his second term, he’s reshaped the globe with a series of peace deals that have brought stability to regions long torn apart, laying the groundwork for prosperity for generations to come. If that’s not Nobel Peace Prize territory, then what is?
Global stability isn’t some idealistic slogan—it’s the foundation for real, lasting growth. When nations aren’t trading gunfire, they can trade goods, ideas, and innovation. Families prosper, businesses grow, and fear gives way to hope. Trump gets this. He’s not chasing photo ops—he’s chasing results. And in these first 200 days, those results have been nothing short of historic.
The latest came on Friday, when after nearly 40 years of war, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a peace deal at the White House—an accomplishment that would earn almost anyone the Nobel Peace Prize, if politics didn’t so often outweigh honest evaluation. Bite #13 Not only did this end decades of hostility, but it also established the “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity,” a trade corridor connecting Azerbaijan to its Nakhchivan exclave through Armenia—backed by U.S.-led development in infrastructure, energy, and commerce.
Then there’s Cambodia and Thailand, where border clashes threatened Southeast Asian stability. Trump stepped in, brokered a ceasefire, and stopped the fighting cold. Cambodia’s Deputy Prime Minister Sun Chanthol was so impressed he pledged to nominate Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. And in Africa, Trump negotiated an end to the 30-year war between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo—another monumental achievement the legacy media pretends never happened.
And that’s just scratching the surface. The Trump White House has also stepped in to halt violence between Serbia and Kosovo, as well as broker peace between Egypt and Ethiopia. These successes barely rate a mention on NBC, CNN, or in the pages of The New York Times—because they’d rather dredge up Trump’s long-past connection to Jeffrey Epstein than acknowledge he’s bringing peace where others have failed.
But there’s still more work ahead, especially in Europe, where if Trump can get Russia and Ukraine to agree to terms, he could end one of the deadliest conflicts of the decade. Bite #7 Bite #6 Bite #14
The contrast with Barack Obama is stark. Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize nine months into his first term—without a single peace deal to his name—on “hope” and “vision” alone. Meanwhile, Trump has delivered signed agreements, lasting ceasefires, and new economic partnerships, yet gets only crickets from Oslo. Giving him the prize wouldn’t just honor his work—it would restore credibility to an award that’s drifted into political theater.
Global stability fuels prosperity, and Trump is delivering it at a pace no modern leader can match—averaging one peace deal a month, with nations lining up to nominate him. It’s time for the Nobel Committee to wake up, ditch the politics, and recognize results. If anyone’s proven peace isn’t just a dream but a deal you can sign, seal, and deliver—it’s Donald J. Trump. Let’s make it happen. Let’s make peace great again.
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Author: Steve Gruber
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