BQQM: Trump’s post is the reveal of a new structure...
The “Board of Peace” is not UN language... it is a new governance layer placed on top of the old system, now publicly acknowledged by the UN...
By naming himself Chairman, Trump signals that the global stabilization framework already exists and is now being brought into the open...
The country list is the real indicator... China, Russia, France, the UK, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Korea, Pakistan, and others do not move in unity unless the upstream deal is already locked...
This is the peace-through-strength coalition he built through tariffs, energy realignment, military normalization, trafficking dismantlement, and intelligence coordination... the Board of Peace is the public face of that sovereign nations structure...
The deeper signal... Trump is stepping into the role of global stabilizer, not under the UN, but above it... the world is aligning under a sovereign peace arc with Trump as Chairman...
Look Mom, Trump is King of the World... 😇
--KEY POINTS--- ----->>>>>> "The country list is the real indicator... China, Russia, France, the UK, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Korea, Pakistan, and others do not move in unity unless the upstream deal is already locked..." ...."The deeper signal... Trump is stepping into the role of global stabilizer, not under the UN, but above it... the world is aligning under a sovereign peace arc with Trump as Chairman..."
On November 17, 2025, the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted (13-0, with Russia and China abstaining) a U.S.-drafted resolution endorsing President Donald Trump's 20-point peace plan for Gaza. This plan builds on a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that took effect on October 8, 2025, after two years of intense conflict. A key element of the resolution is the establishment of the Board of Peace, a transitional governance body designed to oversee Gaza's stabilization, reconstruction, and eventual handover to reformed Palestinian authorities. Trump himself will chair the board, which he has described as including "the most powerful and respected leaders throughout the world."
Background on the Plan
Origins: Trump's 20-point proposal emerged as a U.S.-brokered initiative to end the Israel-Hamas war, which began in October 2023. It includes phases for ceasefire enforcement, hostage releases, Israeli military withdrawal, and long-term governance reforms. The first phase—ceasefire and partial hostage exchanges—has held tenuously, but implementation has stalled without international backing.
UN Role: The resolution provides legal mandate under Chapter VII of the UN Charter for an International Stabilization Force (ISF) to deploy in Gaza. This multinational force (potentially including troops from Muslim-majority countries like Indonesia, Egypt, Azerbaijan, and Turkey, with Western special forces support) would demilitarize the territory, secure borders, and train a new Palestinian police force. It aims to prevent Hamas from rearming while facilitating humanitarian aid and rebuilding efforts amid Gaza's humanitarian crisis, including famine risks and winter flooding.
What is the Board of Peace?
The Board of Peace is envisioned as a temporary "transitional authority" to fill the governance vacuum in Gaza post-ceasefire. Its primary functions include:
Oversight and Coordination: Managing security, humanitarian aid delivery, and reconstruction priorities. It would work alongside the ISF and a "technocratic committee" of vetted Palestinian officials for day-to-day administration.
Economic Recovery: Raising funds from international donors for rebuilding Gaza's infrastructure, which has been devastated by the war.
Path to Palestinian Self-Determination: The board would monitor reforms in the Palestinian Authority (PA), which governs the West Bank. Once reforms are complete and Gaza's redevelopment advances, power would transfer to the PA, potentially paving the way for a "credible pathway to Palestinian statehood" and dialogue between Israel and Palestinians for "peaceful coexistence." However, the resolution does not guarantee statehood and ties it to conditions like disarming Hamas.
The board's composition remains unclear as of the vote—Trump announced that member names and further details would be revealed "in the coming weeks." It explicitly excludes direct Hamas involvement, focusing instead on a Hamas-free government, though Hamas has reasserted control in parts of Gaza since the ceasefire.
The UN Vote and Reactions
Outcome: The resolution passed with broad support from Security Council members, including France, the UK, Algeria, Denmark, Greece, Guyana, South Korea, Pakistan, Panama, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, and Somalia. U.S. Ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz called it a "lifeline" for Gaza, describing the territory as "hell on earth."
Trump's Response: In a Truth Social post, Trump hailed it as "one of the biggest approvals in the History of the United Nations," crediting countries like Qatar, Egypt, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Turkey, and Jordan for backing the effort. He framed it as "Peace through Strength" leading to global stability.
International Support: The Palestinian Authority welcomed the resolution and pledged cooperation, seeing it as advancing a two-state solution. Arab states' involvement marks a diplomatic win, potentially unlocking funding and troops.
Criticisms and Concerns:
Russia and China: Abstained, with Russia's ambassador Vasily Nebenzya criticizing it as giving "complete control" to an opaque U.S.-led body without clear modalities.
Hamas: Condemned it as an "imposition of international control," insisting on Palestinian internal decision-making and rejecting disarmament without statehood guarantees.
Israel: The Netanyahu government opposes references to Palestinian statehood, viewing them as premature.
Human Rights Groups: Some experts liken the board and ISF to "colonial oversight," arguing it sidelines Palestinian agency and risks classifying participants as occupying powers under international law.
Potential Impact and Challenges
If fully implemented, the Board of Peace could transition Gaza from active conflict to reconstruction by 2027 (when authorizations expire), fostering regional stability and economic ties (e.g., via Saudi Arabia's involvement). However, challenges include:
Ongoing violence between Israeli forces and Hamas militants.
Hamas's refusal to fully disarm.
Funding shortfalls for reconstruction, estimated in the tens of billions.
Geopolitical tensions, as the board's Trump-led structure raises questions about U.S. dominance in UN affairs.
This development represents a rare U.S. diplomatic success at the UN, where America has often been isolated on Israel-related issues. It could signal a broader "new dawn" for Middle East peace, as Trump claims, but success hinges on buy-in from all stakeholders. For the latest updates, monitor official UN statements or Trump's announcements on board membership.
Imagine decades from now our kids and grandkids looking at this time period, and the moves Trump made, and not understanding the total flustercuck we all lived through.
Gaddafi would finally be happy in his grave. He called out UN long before anyone and without mincing his words. This is what he wanted, an UN that was really about solving world problems and not creating more.
BQQM: Trump’s post is the reveal of a new structure... The “Board of Peace” is not UN language... it is a new governance layer placed on top of the old system, now publicly acknowledged by the UN... By naming himself Chairman, Trump signals that the global stabilization framework already exists and is now being brought into the open... The country list is the real indicator... China, Russia, France, the UK, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Korea, Pakistan, and others do not move in unity unless the upstream deal is already locked... This is the peace-through-strength coalition he built through tariffs, energy realignment, military normalization, trafficking dismantlement, and intelligence coordination... the Board of Peace is the public face of that sovereign nations structure... The deeper signal... Trump is stepping into the role of global stabilizer, not under the UN, but above it... the world is aligning under a sovereign peace arc with Trump as Chairman... Look Mom, Trump is King of the World... 😇 --KEY POINTS--- ----->>>>>> "The country list is the real indicator... China, Russia, France, the UK, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Korea, Pakistan, and others do not move in unity unless the upstream deal is already locked..." ...."The deeper signal... Trump is stepping into the role of global stabilizer, not under the UN, but above it... the world is aligning under a sovereign peace arc with Trump as Chairman..."
Nice. But :
I have no idea of how much support he may truly be receiving. Best not to underestimate
Who here knew Guyana was on the UN Security Council?
Such an important cog in world affairs how did I lose track of that? I must've got lost, somewhere down the line...
There are 5 permanent members, the rest are on rotation
Yeah, but I thought it was just one or two extra countries at a time. That charter has grown a lot when I wasn't looking.
Me too. At first reading the truth I thought t couldn't be correct, but what do you know, things have changed!
Same for Somalia.
Add Somalia to that question mark.
Grok disagrees...
On November 17, 2025, the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted (13-0, with Russia and China abstaining) a U.S.-drafted resolution endorsing President Donald Trump's 20-point peace plan for Gaza. This plan builds on a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that took effect on October 8, 2025, after two years of intense conflict. A key element of the resolution is the establishment of the Board of Peace, a transitional governance body designed to oversee Gaza's stabilization, reconstruction, and eventual handover to reformed Palestinian authorities. Trump himself will chair the board, which he has described as including "the most powerful and respected leaders throughout the world." Background on the Plan Origins: Trump's 20-point proposal emerged as a U.S.-brokered initiative to end the Israel-Hamas war, which began in October 2023. It includes phases for ceasefire enforcement, hostage releases, Israeli military withdrawal, and long-term governance reforms. The first phase—ceasefire and partial hostage exchanges—has held tenuously, but implementation has stalled without international backing. UN Role: The resolution provides legal mandate under Chapter VII of the UN Charter for an International Stabilization Force (ISF) to deploy in Gaza. This multinational force (potentially including troops from Muslim-majority countries like Indonesia, Egypt, Azerbaijan, and Turkey, with Western special forces support) would demilitarize the territory, secure borders, and train a new Palestinian police force. It aims to prevent Hamas from rearming while facilitating humanitarian aid and rebuilding efforts amid Gaza's humanitarian crisis, including famine risks and winter flooding. What is the Board of Peace? The Board of Peace is envisioned as a temporary "transitional authority" to fill the governance vacuum in Gaza post-ceasefire. Its primary functions include: Oversight and Coordination: Managing security, humanitarian aid delivery, and reconstruction priorities. It would work alongside the ISF and a "technocratic committee" of vetted Palestinian officials for day-to-day administration. Economic Recovery: Raising funds from international donors for rebuilding Gaza's infrastructure, which has been devastated by the war. Path to Palestinian Self-Determination: The board would monitor reforms in the Palestinian Authority (PA), which governs the West Bank. Once reforms are complete and Gaza's redevelopment advances, power would transfer to the PA, potentially paving the way for a "credible pathway to Palestinian statehood" and dialogue between Israel and Palestinians for "peaceful coexistence." However, the resolution does not guarantee statehood and ties it to conditions like disarming Hamas. The board's composition remains unclear as of the vote—Trump announced that member names and further details would be revealed "in the coming weeks." It explicitly excludes direct Hamas involvement, focusing instead on a Hamas-free government, though Hamas has reasserted control in parts of Gaza since the ceasefire. The UN Vote and Reactions Outcome: The resolution passed with broad support from Security Council members, including France, the UK, Algeria, Denmark, Greece, Guyana, South Korea, Pakistan, Panama, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, and Somalia. U.S. Ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz called it a "lifeline" for Gaza, describing the territory as "hell on earth." Trump's Response: In a Truth Social post, Trump hailed it as "one of the biggest approvals in the History of the United Nations," crediting countries like Qatar, Egypt, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Turkey, and Jordan for backing the effort. He framed it as "Peace through Strength" leading to global stability. International Support: The Palestinian Authority welcomed the resolution and pledged cooperation, seeing it as advancing a two-state solution. Arab states' involvement marks a diplomatic win, potentially unlocking funding and troops. Criticisms and Concerns: Russia and China: Abstained, with Russia's ambassador Vasily Nebenzya criticizing it as giving "complete control" to an opaque U.S.-led body without clear modalities. Hamas: Condemned it as an "imposition of international control," insisting on Palestinian internal decision-making and rejecting disarmament without statehood guarantees. Israel: The Netanyahu government opposes references to Palestinian statehood, viewing them as premature. Human Rights Groups: Some experts liken the board and ISF to "colonial oversight," arguing it sidelines Palestinian agency and risks classifying participants as occupying powers under international law. Potential Impact and Challenges If fully implemented, the Board of Peace could transition Gaza from active conflict to reconstruction by 2027 (when authorizations expire), fostering regional stability and economic ties (e.g., via Saudi Arabia's involvement). However, challenges include: Ongoing violence between Israeli forces and Hamas militants. Hamas's refusal to fully disarm. Funding shortfalls for reconstruction, estimated in the tens of billions. Geopolitical tensions, as the board's Trump-led structure raises questions about U.S. dominance in UN affairs. This development represents a rare U.S. diplomatic success at the UN, where America has often been isolated on Israel-related issues. It could signal a broader "new dawn" for Middle East peace, as Trump claims, but success hinges on buy-in from all stakeholders. For the latest updates, monitor official UN statements or Trump's announcements on board membership.
Imagine decades from now our kids and grandkids looking at this time period, and the moves Trump made, and not understanding the total flustercuck we all lived through.
OMG this is great! This looks like a huge step ahead and a way forward for humanity.
I wonder if pelosi just dumped all of her MIC stocks?
Proves the UN is fake as fuck.
Buckwheat you gotta match....LIGHT HER UP....Israel enters the room. Ya know it's coming right?
Gaddafi would finally be happy in his grave. He called out UN long before anyone and without mincing his words. This is what he wanted, an UN that was really about solving world problems and not creating more.
There's a certain small country missing from the list towards the bottom of his post. Interesting.
Funny that you got down voted for NOTICING that!