21-08-2025 09:54 AM
By Michael Jansen- Donald Trump and his aides are campaigning hard to win the Nobel Peace Prize. As his second term in office reached six months, Trump claimed, "I've stopped six wars—I'm averaging about a war a month." He and aides have cited his efforts to end disputes between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Cambodia and Thailand, and Ruanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo and halt hostilities between Iran and Israel. Trump did the last by bombing Iranian nuclear reactors rather than negotiating a ceasefire.
So far, he has failed to secure ceasefires in Russia's war on Ukraine or Israel's war on Gaza. He has imposed sanctions on Russia but instead of exerting pressure on Israel to halt its deadly and devastating offensive in Gaza, he has provided Israel with the weapons to pursue it.
In June he complained bitterly on his website, Truth Social, "No, I won't get a Nobel Prize no matter what I do, including Russia/Ukraine, and Israel/Iran, whatever their outcomes may be, but the people know, and that's all that matter to me." At present, however, his domestic approval rating stands at 38 per cent down from 47 per cent in January when he took office for the second time.
During his visit to the White House in April, Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre was asked about Trump’s chances of securing the award, which his predecessor Barack Obama won as his first term began. "On that prize, there is a committee taking care of that which is completely working on its own terms, and I cannot comment on that,” Støre replied. Trump's name is not even up for consideration by the Nobel Committee which resists political pressure and cannot be bought. The list of nominees remains secret. The award will be announced on October 10th.
Four US presidents have received Nobel Peace Prizes: Theodore Roosevelt in 1906 for mediating an end to the Russo-Japanese War, Woodrow Wilson in 1919 for founding the League of Nations, ex-President Jimmy Carter in 2002 for humanitarian and diplomatic work through the Carter Centre, and Obama in 2009 for his early-term diplomacy and coalition-building oefforts. Among other US officials who have been awarded the prize was former Vice President Al Gore for his work on climate change.
In his will, Norwegian industrialist and inventor of dynamite Alfred Nobel stated that the prize should be conferred on those “who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations.” Trump has done the opposite. On the foreign and domestic fronts Trump has undermined US democracy by excluding Congress by imposing policy changes with edicts. He has alienated neighbours Canada and Mexico and key allies by imposing stiff tariffs on imported goods. He shaken the longstanding world order by proposing US annexation of Greenland, Canada, and the Panama Canal.
Trump's hankering for awards has turned to nominations for the John F. Kennedy Centre awards for 2025. He remarked, “I wanted one. I was never able to get one. It’s true, I would have taken it if they would’ve called me. I waited and waited and waited, and I said to hell with it, I’ll become chairman, and I’ll give myself an honour. Next year we’ll honour Trump, OK?” In the event, instead of proposing high-brow cultural icons who are meant to be honoured, he has gone for low-brow pop. He chose rock band Kiss, Gloria Gaynor who sang "I will survive," Rambo actor Sylvester Stallone, country music star George and actor/singer Michael Crawford.
Throughout his life Trump his been motivated by his father, Fred Trump's command never to be a "loser." In marriage, business, golf, television, and politics, Trump has striven to be a winner and has been braggart. Uncertain of his ability to avoid becoming a loser, he is assertive, aggressive, angry, unprepared to take advice on issues he has not mastered, uncaring of less fortunate folk and sycophantic when meeting confident leaders like Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.
Trump's slogan, "Make America Great Again," is driving policies which he believes will reflect well on him while not necessarily serve US interests. His imposition of tariffs caused chaos at a time world commerce was characterised by low or no tariffs and free trade. Although US the unemployment rate is a low 4.2 per cent, he claimed his tariffs would provide jobs for the US workforce in sectors where imports dominated. This would take time. To make the switch firms would have to be formed, equipment installed, and workers trained. Domestic production could eventually penalise consumers by raising prices for clothing, computers, smart phones, spare parts, vehicles, household appliances and other items manufactured abroad. "America First" is not necessarily "American is best."
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