By Janelle Powell, Opinion Contributor
Let’s just call it what it is: hypocrisy on a global scale. While Donald Trump continues to broker peace deals across continents – from the Middle East to Africa – the Nobel Peace Prize committee once again chose to ignore his impact and hand its shiny participation trophy to someone else.
The same media that once obsessed over every Trump tweet can’t seem to find the time to report on his actual diplomacy. Apparently, it’s easier to hate the man than to admit that he’s succeeded where decades of career politicians have failed.
Under Trump’s leadership and influence, Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire deal that included phased Israeli withdrawal, humanitarian aid, and the release of hostages. It’s not a photo op – it’s a real, working framework that saves lives.
Then there’s Africa. Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo signed a peace accord this summer under direct U.S. diplomatic pressure. And that’s not all – there were quiet efforts to prevent a full-blown war in Ethiopia. If you blinked, you missed it, because our “watchdog” press didn’t think it was worth covering.
This is the same man who brought the Abraham Accords to life, normalized relations between Israel and Arab nations, and calmed North Korea long enough for the world to breathe again.
Yet in 2025, after more proof that his methods actually work, Trump is treated as if his peacemaking doesn’t count.
Once upon a time, the Nobel Peace Prize meant something. It honored those who achieved tangible, measurable peace – not those who simply had the right political optics. Today, it’s little more than a progressive virtue signal, handed out like a participation trophy for whoever fits the narrative of the moment.
This year’s award went to María Corina Machado, a Venezuelan opposition leader. No doubt she’s brave and committed – but let’s not pretend this wasn’t a political statement. The Nobel Committee could have recognized a leader who actually prevented wars and brokered peace between nations, but that would have required acknowledging Donald Trump.
And in today’s woke world, truth is the one thing more dangerous than war.
You can bet that if Barack Obama had brokered a ceasefire or prevented a conflict in Africa, CNN would have broadcasted it 24/7 and Netflix would already be working on a documentary.
But, when Trump does it? Crickets.
Our so-called journalists are more interested in gossip than geopolitics, more eager to repeat talking points than report facts. They are allergic to stories that contradict their narrative. And nothing rattles that narrative more than Trump – a man they mocked as a warmonger – actually delivering peace. If it doesn’t fit their “orange man bad” storyline, it simply doesn’t exist.
One day, the truth will cut through the noise. History won’t remember the hashtags or the headlines – it will remember the outcomes. And when that day comes, it will show that Donald Trump did more to advance peace than most presidents combined.
He didn’t start wars. He ended them. He didn’t bow to global elites. He outsmarted them. And for that, the establishment will never forgive him.
The Nobel Peace Prize may have been denied, but the world knows who the real peacemaker is.
And here’s what they really don’t want you to know – there’s a peace deal in Africa that barely made a blip in Western media. A historic agreement, quietly brokered under Trump’s influence, that helped prevent another regional war. You won’t find it on CNN, MSNBC, or even buried in the back pages of the New York Times – because it doesn’t fit the script.
I’ll be covering that one in my next column. The truth deserves the spotlight, even when the media refuses to turn it on.