Trump Does Something The Nobel Committee Can’t Ignore

Lucas Parker
Lucas Parker

That weird week between Christmas and New Year’s? Most people spend it watching movies and eating leftovers.

President Trump is spending it trying to end two wars.

Mar-a-Lago is about to host back-to-back meetings with two world leaders. Ukraine’s Zelensky on Sunday. Israel’s Netanyahu on Monday.

Peace in Ukraine. Peace in Gaza. Both on the agenda. Both potentially within reach.

Zelensky Meeting Signals Real Progress on Ukraine

Trump previously said he wouldn’t meet with Zelensky until a deal was close.

The fact that this meeting is happening tells you something.

Zelensky teased it Friday on social media: “We have agreed on a meeting at the highest level — with President Trump in the near future. A lot can be decided before the New Year. Glory to Ukraine!”

He indicated Trump’s proposed peace plan had been “90% agreed to.”

Ninety percent. That’s not preliminary talks. That’s final negotiations.

“More Progress in Two Weeks Than the Last Year”

A U.S. official summarized the momentum:

“We’ve gone as far as possible with the Russians and the Ukrainians. We’ve made more progress in the last two weeks than the last year. We want to push the ball into the goal. We’re heading in the right direction.”

Two weeks of Trump diplomacy accomplished more than a year of Biden’s approach.

The difference: Trump wants the war to end. Biden wanted to support Ukraine indefinitely.

Kushner and Witkoff Have Been Crisscrossing the Globe

The groundwork didn’t happen by accident.

Trump advisors Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff have been meeting with all parties:

Ukrainian national security adviser Rustem Umerov in Miami.

European leaders across the continent.

Russian officials through back channels.

The Kremlin confirmed Friday that Putin’s chief foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov has been engaging with U.S. counterparts.

Everyone is talking. Everyone is negotiating. That’s how wars end.

Netanyahu Arrives Monday for Gaza Talks

One day after Zelensky, Netanyahu flies in.

The Israel-Hamas ceasefire in Gaza remains fragile. Phase two negotiations are ongoing. Major announcements are expected from Trump in January.

Kushner and Witkoff have been working this front too — holding talks with Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey to finalize agreements.

Phase two would include Hamas relinquishing its weapons and Israel pulling back its military.

U.S. Reportedly Frustrated With Netanyahu’s Pace

Not everything is smooth.

Reports indicate the U.S. is frustrated with what they see as Netanyahu “slow-walking” the peace process.

Israeli officials call the Monday meeting “crucial.”

One insider explained: “Bibi is trying to convince a one-man audience. The question is whether Trump will side with him or with his top advisers when it comes to Gaza. Who knows what Trump will choose?”

Trump has leverage. He’s using it.

Two Wars, One Week, One Negotiator

Think about what’s happening.

Sunday: Meeting with Zelensky to potentially finalize Ukraine peace.

Monday: Meeting with Netanyahu to push forward Gaza peace.

One president. One location. Two of the world’s most dangerous conflicts.

Biden held summits and photo ops for four years. The wars continued.

Trump is holding working meetings during his holiday break. The wars may actually end.

“The President of Peace”

Trump has claimed the title. Now he’s earning it.

“It’s clear that President Trump intends to prove that he truly does mean it when he says he’s the ‘president of peace.'”

The contrast with his media portrayal couldn’t be starker.

Critics called him reckless. Dangerous. Likely to start World War III.

Instead, he’s methodically working to end two wars that his predecessor let fester.

The Nobel Committee Will Have to Notice

The article makes a pointed observation:

“If he’s successful, even the Nobel Committee might find it difficult to ignore.”

Barack Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize for… getting elected.

Trump may end wars in Ukraine and Gaza and still be passed over.

But the snub would be so obvious that even the Committee’s bias would be exposed.

“A Lot Can Be Decided Before the New Year”

Zelensky’s words carry weight.

If Sunday’s meeting produces a breakthrough, 2026 could begin with a Ukraine peace framework in place.

If Monday’s meeting advances Gaza negotiations, January could bring major announcements.

Two wars that have killed hundreds of thousands, displaced millions, and destabilized entire regions — both potentially resolved through Trump diplomacy.

Mar-a-Lago: The White House of the South

The Florida estate has become a diplomatic hub.

World leaders come to Trump. He hosts them on his terms. Negotiations happen away from Washington’s leaks and bureaucratic interference.

It’s unorthodox. It’s effective.

Zelensky is coming. Netanyahu is coming. Peace might be coming too.

The Year-End Peace Push

Most presidents coast through the holidays.

Trump is working.

“We want to push the ball into the goal. We’re heading in the right direction.”

Sunday. Monday. Two meetings. Two potential breakthroughs.

If he pulls this off, even the Nobel Committee — which has spent years pretending Trump doesn’t exist — will have to acknowledge what happened.

The president of peace. Earning the title one meeting at a time.

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