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INDEPENDENTIran-US war latest: Trump says there is ‘no timeframe’ for ending conflict as standoff in Strait of Hormuz continuesTHE DIPLOMATWhere Is the China-Honduras Relationship Headed?LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUEKazakhstan's industrial and mining monotownsMAIL & GUARDIANMalawi’s hospital crackdown ignites legal firestormTHE DIPLOMATWhy Trump Should Make China-US Relations Great AgainTHE GUARDIANCharlize Theron joins chorus of disapproval over Timothée Chalamet’s ballet commentsTHE GUARDIANBritish woman died in Ghana trying to recoup money from scammers, inquest toldLE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUEKurdish women's struggle for gender equality – and much else besidesBRASIL WIREMinister warns of “industrial-scale” organized disinformation campaign, hindering disaster effortsTHE GUARDIANHeatwaves, floods and wildfires pose rising threat to democracy, report findsBRASIL WIRENathália Urban Presente!MAIL & GUARDIANA community reckoning on the Senqu Bridge launch on 22 April 2026THE INDEPENDENTUS Navy chief John Phelan ousted from Trump administration as Strait of Hormuz stand-off continuesTHE DIPLOMATHow Bonded Labor Fuels Illegal Organ Harvesting in PakistanBRASIL WIREAnalysis: NYT’s bizarre coverage and omissions of Bolsonaro’s murderous coup plotTHE INDEPENDENTFour people in critical condition after two trains collide in northern DenmarkMAIL & GUARDIANCapitec at 25: how scale, trust and practical innovation are reshaping access to financeTHE INDEPENDENTMan dies after being hit by bus at Dublin AirportBRASIL WIREBolsonaro Takes Stand in Coup Trial
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The Nobel Fetish: Trump and the Commodification of Imperial "Peace"

The Nobel Fetish: Trump and the Commodification of Imperial "Peace"

The recurring spectacle of Donald Trump’s obsession with the Nobel Peace Prize is often dismissed as a quirk of his personal vanity. However, viewed through the lens of critical geopolitics, this fixation reveals a deeper, more systemic rot: the complete collapse of international "peace" awards into instruments of imperial legitimacy and corporate branding. Trump does not want the Nobel because he values peace; he wants it because, in the contemporary global order, "peace" has been hollowed out and refashioned as a transactional asset—a trophy for those who successfully enforce stability through coercion.

1. Trump and the Politics of Recognition For Trump, the Nobel is the ultimate validation in a lifelong "politics of recognition." In his worldview, peace is not a condition of justice or the absence of structural violence; it is a "deal." Whether through the Abraham Accords or summits with adversarial leaders, Trump frames diplomacy as a high-stakes real estate transaction where the prize serves as the final receipt. This is the securitization of peace: the belief that stability is achieved not through international law, but through the "maximum pressure" of a hegemon who decides which actors are "normalized" and which are liquidated. By equating his signature on a piece of paper with the resolution of century-old colonial conflicts, Trump transforms the ethical imperative of peace into a spectacle of ego, demanding the Nobel as a "payoff" for his service to the imperial status quo.

2. A Legacy of Moral Bankruptcy Trump’s critics often claim he would "tarnish" the Nobel, yet history suggests the prize was tarnished long ago. The Nobel institution has a long-standing habit of rewarding power rather than principled peacebuilding: * **Henry Kissinger (1973): Awarded while overseeing the carpet-bombing of Cambodia and supporting military juntas in Latin America. * Barack Obama (2009): Handed an "advance" prize for his oratory, only to oversee a massive surge in drone warfare and the destruction of Libya. * The 2025 "Crisis": The recent awarding of the prize to figures like María Corina Machado—who has openly called for military intervention and sanctions against her own country—confirms that the Nobel Committee has abandoned even the pretense of non-violence. These precedents have created a vacuum of moral authority. Trump’s obsession is merely an honest reflection of what the prize has become: a tool for Western geopolitical alignment.

3. Tactical Endorsements: The Logic of Regional Actors It is a profound irony of modern diplomacy that figures within the "Axis of Resistance" or its periphery—such as Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi or Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ Al-Sudani—have been linked to the idea of a Trump Nobel. These are not moral endorsements; they are tactical maneuvers in a world of asymmetric power. For regional leaders, suggesting Trump deserves a prize for "not starting new wars" is a diplomatic gambit designed to: * Incentivize Restraint: Encouraging Trump’s vanity to prevent further military escalations or "maximum pressure" campaigns. * Expose Western Hypocrisy: By suggesting Trump is as "deserving" as Obama or Kissinger, they highlight the absurdity of the award itself. * Sanctions Politics: Framing peace as a transactional win for Trump provides him a "golden bridge" to de-escalate sanctions without appearing weak to his domestic base.

4. The FIFA "Peace Prize" Farce The absurdity reached its zenith with the creation of the FIFA Peace Prize in late 2025. Awarded to Trump by Gianni Infantino amidst the backdrop of the 2026 World Cup preparations, this "award" represents the final commodification of peace. When political institutions like the Nobel Committee fail to satisfy the ego of the hegemon, corporate and sporting bodies step in to provide a substitute. This "FIFA Peace" is a public relations product.

It ignores the displacement of populations, the expansion of surveillance, and the silencing of dissent, opting instead for a glossy video package that equates "unity" with the expansion of market shares. It is the ultimate dilution of the concept: peace as a luxury brand.

5. From Peace to Performance: The Global Disorder Trump’s Nobel obsession is the logical conclusion of a global governance system that has replaced accountability with optics. We no longer live in an era where peace prizes celebrate the cessation of violence; we live in an era where they reward the performance of power.

The crisis of the Nobel is the crisis of the liberal international order. When "peace" can be claimed by those who oversee genocides, enforce starvation sanctions, or utilize sports-washing to mask authoritarianism, the word itself loses all meaning. Trump is not the one who broke the Nobel Peace Prize; he is the one who recognized it was already for sale and simply asked for the bill.