Daily Bangla Times :
Published : 2025-10-12 01:20:41
Opinion by Zahid F. Sarder Saddi
“While the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to María Corina
Machado, history may yet judge Donald Trump’s global diplomacy as the true
triumph for peace in an age where politics too often overshadows principle.”
President Donald J. Trump did not win the Nobel Peace Prize. But if that omission tells us anything, it is not about the value of his record — it is about the declining meaning of the prize itself.
Over the past century, the Nobel
Peace Prize has honored figures from Theodore Roosevelt to Jimmy Carter. Some
of them changed history; others were celebrated more for symbolism than
substance. Barack Obama received it only months into his presidency, largely
for offering the hope of a new direction — not for any measurable peace
achieved.
In contrast, President Trump’s
record speaks for itself — where others delivered promises, he delivered peace.
A
Record That Redefined Diplomacy
During his first term, Trump
brokered four historic Arab-Israeli peace agreements — the Abraham Accords —
the first in more than 25 years. These breakthroughs between Israel and nations
like the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco reshaped the Middle East and upended
decades of failed assumptions.
The foreign policy establishment long insisted that no Arab state could make peace with Israel without resolving the Palestinian conflict. Trump proved that wrong. He moved the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, stood firm against Iran’s aggression, and forged partnerships based on strength rather than concession. The result was genuine progress — not just photo opportunities or promises on paper.
A
Global Impact Beyond the Middle East
Trump’s pursuit of peace did not end
in the Middle East. His administration helped mediate an end to long-standing
conflict in Central Africa, bringing together the Democratic Republic of Congo
and Rwanda after years of bloodshed. He pushed for calm between India and
Pakistan, helped end hostilities between Thailand and Cambodia, and personally
facilitated talks that produced a peace framework between Armenia and
Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.
Even more remarkably, Trump’s firm
hand helped prevent an Iran–Israel war in less than two weeks, following his
decisive operation to dismantle Iran’s nuclear program. He intervened to defuse
potential wars in Serbia and Kosovo, and between Egypt and Ethiopia over the
Nile River. These were not isolated diplomatic gestures — they were sustained
efforts to stabilize regions long ignored by previous administrations.
Achievements
Without Recognition
Perhaps the most recent example came
with the successful negotiation to free hostages from Hamas and end the Gaza
conflict — an accomplishment that brought hope to thousands of families across
the Middle East. Trump’s comprehensive 20-point plan for reconstruction and
peace in Gaza won broad support from Israel and much of the Arab world,
isolating Hamas and forcing it to accept responsibility for its actions.
These are precisely the kinds of
achievements that should define a Nobel Peace laureate. Yet the committee in
Oslo chose not to recognize them. The silence raises an uncomfortable question:
What is the value of the Nobel Peace Prize if genuine progress in ending wars
and saving lives no longer meets its standard?
If the Nobel Committee truly places
politics over peace, then perhaps the prize would be better suited for others
who have endured tremendous sacrifice in the name of democracy. Consider
Bangladesh’s former three-time Prime Minister — and the country’s first female
leader — Begum Khaleda Zia. As the head of Bangladesh’s largest political
party, she has spent the past 17 years resisting an increasingly autocratic
regime. She has endured imprisonment, denial of medical care, and even alleged
attempts on her life through poisoning, yet she has never wavered in her
commitment to democracy and to the nearly 200 million people of Bangladesh. To
many, she is revered as the Mother of Democracy.
And if politics truly outweighs
peace in the Nobel Committee’s decisions, then perhaps recognition should also
extend to those who have acknowledged the truth about President Trump’s
contributions to global stability. Even this year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner,
María Corina Machado — a courageous champion of democracy and freedom —
dedicated her recognition to the suffering people of Venezuela and to President
Donald J. Trump, acknowledging that genuine peace is not forged through
applause, but through principle and conviction.
Leadership
Measured by Results, Not Medals
Donald Trump’s legacy was never
meant to be written in medals or ceremonies. It is written instead in a
stronger America, safer families, and freedom defended across the world. His
diplomacy proved that peace is not achieved through weakness or apology, but
through strength, resolve, and the courage to act when others hesitate.
The Nobel Peace Prize may have lost
its way, but the cause of peace has not. Awards fade. History endures. And
history will record that President Trump pursued peace not for prestige, but
for principle — because he believed that a world guided by strength and mutual
respect is a world more likely to remain at peace. That is the true meaning of
leadership.
The Nobel Prize went elsewhere — yet
Trump’s diplomacy changed the world forever. If the Nobel Committee cannot see
that, the world still can. From the Middle East to Asia, from Eastern Europe to
Africa, the results of his actions speak louder than any prize ever could.
The measure of a leader is not in
the recognition he receives, but in the lives improved, the wars prevented, and
the hope restored because he chose to act when others would not. By that
measure, Donald J. Trump has already earned something greater than the Nobel
Prize — the gratitude of nations that now stand more secure because of his
leadership.
Author:
Zahid F. Sarder Saddi is a Bangladeshi politician in exile, humanitarian, and
U.S.–Bangladesh relations expert, as well as an advocate for democracy and
religious freedom. A former foreign advisor to Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, he
has testified before the U.S. Congress and worked with American policymakers
and international institutions for over two decades to promote democracy,
protect vulnerable communities, and combat extremism.
Visit www.ZahidFSarderSaddi.com or contact info@zahidfsardersaddi.com for more information.