Trump’s Nobel Peace chase clashes with past prize traditions


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Summary

President nominated several times

President Donald Trump, a Republican, isn’t a stranger to Nobel Peace Prize nominations. He received them in 2018, 2020 and this year.

Seven ‘unendable’ wars?

The claim at the crux of Trump’s quest is ending multiple wars across the globe, but his claims are mostly false.

Nomination for Israel-Hamas War

Several nominations were sent in for Trump to win the war over his efforts to secure a truce between Israel and Hamas to end the two-year-long war.


Full story

The winner for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize is to be announced in a few days, just as speculation grows if President Donald Trump’s name will be on the list after his repeated claims he ended “seven unendable” wars this year. The committee’s secretary is unfazed by Trump’s push and said award campaigns aren’t out of the ordinary.

So, could Trump win the Nobel Peace Prize? If his name appeared on the list of 338 nominees for the prize that the Norwegian Nobel Committee put together, then he could. But if his name doesn’t appear on this year’s list, he could be nominated for next year’s prize, which would be the award’s 125th anniversary.

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“Several campaigns are underway this year,” committee secretary Kristian Berg Harpviken told French newspaper Le Monde. “Some more sophisticated than others and therefore harder to detect, with people coming to Oslo to give lectures, visiting the Nobel Institute or trying to meet with committee members in hopes of promoting a candidate.”

And the committee has historically remained quiet about nominees.

“The Nobel Committee does not confirm the names of nominees, neither to the media nor to the candidates themselves,” according to its website. “There are cases where names of candidates appear in the media, either as a result of sheer speculation or because individuals themselves report to have nominated specific candidates.”

Self-nominations are not accepted. So someone else would need to recommend Trump to the committee. 

One person has added Trump’s name to the ring — U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif. He told the committee the president deserved the prize due to his alleged cooling of tensions in the Middle East with the Abraham Accords. Still, that agreement is in jeopardy with the ongoing Israel-Hamas War as several Arab nations voiced support for Palestinians and urged Israel to agree to a truce, Reuters reported in September.

Officials from those nations have amplified findings from scholars and the United Nations that said Israel is committing a genocide against Palestinians. Israel and Hamas are having indirect ceasefire talks in Egypt to end the conflict, which began two years ago on Oct. 7. About 1,200 Israelis and more than 67,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war.

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Four U.S. presidents have won the Nobel Peace Prize since its 1901 start: Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama.

No matter Trump’s eligibility, if he wins the Nobel Peace Prize at any point in his presidency, he’d join a small list of U.S. presidents who earned the honor. Former presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama have all earned the award.

Trump’s campaign for Nobel Peace Prize

The president’s quest to earn the highly sought-after award arose after he and his allies claimed that Trump ended seven wars without the U.N.’s help: Cambodia and Thailand; Kosovo and Serbia; the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda; Pakistan and India; Israel and Iran; Egypt and Ethiopia; and Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“In a period of just seven months, I have ended seven ‘unendable’ wars…” Trump said to the group. “No president or prime minister — and for that matter, no other country — has ever done anything close to that.”

But that’s not completely true:

  • Rwanda restarted violence in Congo since the June truce.
  • Serbia and Kosovo’s war ended in 1999 and Kosovo gained independence in 2008.
  • India has repeatedly rejected Trump’s claim to end the conflict with Pakistan.
  • An Ethiopian official made a similar objection.

Theo Zenou, a historian and journalist, told PBS that the committee has prioritized sustained peace over quick-success truces, which could be difficult to measure in Trump’s short time.

“There’s a huge difference between getting fighting to stop in the short-term and resolving the root causes of the conflict,” Zenou told the public media station.

However, Obama won the award in 2009, months into his first term for “strengthening international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples,” according to the award’s press release at the time.

Controversy about Trump’s policy may not even affect his nomination. England-based Nottingham Trent University Professor Matthew Mokhefi-Ashton told The Independent that former secretary of state Henry Kissinger won the award for ending the Vietnam War in 1973. Kissinger has been accused of war crimes for bombing campaigns in Cambodia and other claims.

“In a world where that can happen, then absolutely I think it is possible for Trump to win the Nobel Peace Prize,” Mokhefi-Ashton said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Trump in July that he nominated the Republican president for the prestigious award. But his July recommendation is ineligible for the 2025 prize, the Associated Press reported. Families of Israeli hostages also nominated Trump, but their bid is ineligible.

A campaign for the 2026 prize

The president could win the award in 2026. Along with Netanyahu’s nomination, several nations have told Trump they put his name in the hat.

That list included Pakistan, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Rwandan Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe and Gabonese President Brice Oligui Nguema, according to Newsweek.

Lawrence Banton (Digital Producer) and Alex Delia (Deputy Managing Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

Debate around President Donald Trump's Nobel Peace Prize nominations highlights ongoing evaluation of international diplomacy, efforts in conflict resolution and the complex criteria used for prestigious global recognitions.

Nobel Peace Prize process

Transparency and guidelines in the Nobel nomination and selection process influence both global perceptions of legitimacy and the recognition of political figures.

Politics and global recognition

The interplay between political initiatives, international endorsements and historical precedent raises questions about how peace achievements are evaluated and awarded on a global stage.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 37 media outlets

Context corner

The Nobel Peace Prize committee generally values long-term peace efforts, international cooperation and sustained diplomacy. The committee faced criticism in 2009 for awarding Barack Obama the prize early in his presidency, impacting how current nominees are considered.

Debunking

Experts cited in the articles state that Trump's claims of ending multiple wars are difficult to substantiate with available evidence and stress that ending conflict short term is not the same as achieving long-term peace.

Global impact

Trump's nominations for his involvement in the Abraham Accords and potential peace proposals in the Middle East signal that US foreign policy actions are observed internationally and can influence diplomatic developments globally.

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Transparent and credible

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100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Media landscape

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37 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Donald Trump has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize multiple times since 2018 for his role in brokering the Abraham Accords, according to U.S. Rep. Claudia Tenney's office.
  • Experts believe Trump's record and approach may hinder his prospects for winning the prize this year.
  • Theo Zenou, a historian, stated that Trump's diplomatic efforts have not proven to be long-lasting and do not align with the characteristics of previous Nobel winners.
  • Nobel veterans argue that the committee values sustained efforts over Trump’s quick diplomatic wins, implying his chances are low.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Friday, Oct. 3, U.S. President Donald Trump’s bid has drawn added attention to the annual Nobel guessing game as the Nobel Peace Prize will be announced Friday.
  • U.S. Rep. Claudia Tenney nominated Trump in December for brokering the Abraham Accords, while nominations from Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Prime Minister, and Pakistan's government came after the Feb. 1 deadline.
  • Nobel veterans note the committee's preference for sustained multilateral work, but Trump's disdain for multilateral institutions and climate change skepticism could hurt his chances.
  • Longtime Nobel watchers say Trump’s prospects remain remote despite high-profile nominations, and his repeated self-promotion may hurt chances as the Nobel committee avoids political pressure.
  • Trump says he `deserves` the prize and claims to have `ended seven wars`, and on Tuesday he suggested ending an eighth if Israel and Hamas accept his plan, though historian Theo Zenou said efforts lack lasting proof.

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Key points from the Right

  • Experts believe Donald Trump's chances of winning the Nobel Peace Prize this year are 'a long shot.'
  • Trump has been nominated several times since 2018 by U.S. And foreign politicians.
  • He claims to have 'ended seven wars' and insists he 'deserves' the prize.
  • The Nobel committee usually prioritizes sustainable peace and efforts that strengthen international cooperation.

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