HomeWorldWhy Trump thinks he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize and why it’s complicated

Why Trump thinks he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize and why it’s complicated

Trump’s diplomatic style, high-visibility, deal-oriented, and media-driven, has been markedly different from the quiet, years-long negotiations behind many past laureates.

June 21, 2025 / 13:51 IST
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The Nobel Peace Prize for 2026 will be announced in October of that year. Until then, Trump’s name joins a long and confidential list.
The Nobel Peace Prize for 2026 will be announced in October of that year. Until then, Trump’s name joins a long and confidential list.

In 1978, after 13 days of secret talks at Camp David, US President Jimmy Carter walked Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin into the White House Rose Garden. The moment marked the signing of the Camp David Accords, the first peace agreement between Israel and an Arab nation. Sadat and Begin were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize the following year. Carter, despite playing a crucial role, would only receive his Nobel decades later.

Fast forward to 2025. Donald Trump is putting himself forward for the same honour, but more openly. Repeatedly.

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In a recent Truth Social post, Trump expressed frustration that he hasn’t been recognised, despite claiming credit for several diplomatic breakthroughs. “I won’t get a Nobel Peace Prize no matter what I do,” he wrote. Then came a list: Congo and Rwanda, India and Pakistan, Serbia and Kosovo, Egypt and Ethiopia, Israel and Iran, and even Russia and Ukraine.

The latest of these, a reported peace agreement between Congo and Rwanda, is expected to be signed in Washington. Pakistan, meanwhile, has formally announced it will recommend Trump for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize, citing his “decisive diplomatic intervention” during the recent India-Pakistan standoff.