In Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, under the sharp, thin air of the Swiss Alps, we witnessed what may be the final curtain call for the post-1945 international order. President Donald Trump, flanked by a curious mélange of Middle Eastern monarchs, South American populists and high-finance titans, held up a signed leather-bound folder. With that flourish, the “Board of Peace” was no longer a rhetorical flourish from the campaign trail but an official international organization and arguably the most radical disruption to global governance in 80 years.
It establishes a “might-makes-right” alternative to the United Nations.
What began as a localized mechanism to manage the reconstruction of a shattered Gaza, has in the span of a few months, morphed into something far more ambitious. The charter signed at the World Economic Forum doesn’t just outline a plan for Palestinian demilitarization, but it also establishes a “might-makes-right” alternative to the United Nations. By inviting nations to a “pay-to-play” model of diplomacy, where a permanent seat reportedly requires a $1 billion entry fee, Trump is attempting to do to global stability what he once did to the New York skyline: privatize it, brand it and center it on his own persona.
To understand the appeal of Trump’s board, one must first acknowledge the profound paralysis of the United Nations. For decades, the U.N. Security Council has been a graveyard of good intentions, hamstrung by the veto power of rival superpowers. The “strong” point of Trump’s venture is its hyper-transactional efficiency. The inclusion of figures such as Tony Blair and World Bank head Ajay Banga alongside billionaires such as Marc Rowan suggests a “CEO approach” to conflict resolution. For countries such as Pakistan, Egypt and the UAE, who were among the first to sign Wednesday, the promise of a nimble body that actually moves money and rebuilds infrastructure is undeniably seductive.
Yet this efficiency comes at the cost of democratic norms. While the U.N. relies on the agonizingly slow process of building consensus among 193 nations, the Board of Peace would operate on the principle of the “inner circle.” In this new paradigm, geopolitical influence is no longer inherited through post-war treaties but purchased through capital commitments. By explicitly linking permanent membership to a 10-figure check, Trump is effectively issuing shares in global stability. Shareholders, if you will, will decide the fate of subsidiaries, the subsidiaries being the small, resource-poor nations that will inevitably find themselves on the board’s agenda.
However, the weaknesses of this new architecture are glaring and potentially fatal to the concept of international law. First, the board creates what amounts to a paywall of diplomacy. The $1 billion price tag for permanent membership turns global stability into a luxury good. Second, the governance is breathtakingly autocratic. The draft charter names Trump as “Chairman for Life” with the exclusive authority to modify the board’s entities. This isn’t a multilateral treaty; It is a corporate takeover of geopolitics.








