1 Billion Dollar Membership Fee To Stay in Trump’s Board of Peace? Nice.

Trump’s “Board of Peace” Signals the End of US Global Dominance | Multipolar World Order Emerges

Donald Trump just signed the charter for the controversial “Board of Peace” at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. What was initially proposed as a reconstruction body for Gaza doesn’t even mention Gaza once in its 11-page founding charter. This is a watershed moment in global geopolitics that reveals how American hegemony is crumbling before our eyes.

Over 60 countries have been invited to join this exclusive club, with more than half already signing up. 19 nations sent representatives to Davos for Trump’s signing ceremony. Here’s the catch: membership is “free” for the first three years, but permanent membership costs $1 billion per country. To put this in perspective, the entire UN regular budget for 2026 is only $3.45 billion.

Russia’s response was pure geopolitical theater—they agreed to pay the membership fee, suggesting the US simply deduct it from their frozen assets. This exemplifies how nations are navigating the declining American empire with calculated diplomacy.

The Multipolar World Order Is Here

The Board of Peace isn’t replacing the UN—it’s revealing that America no longer controls it. Notice the symbolism: while the UN represents global humanity, the Board of Peace displays a map of only the Western hemisphere. Trump serves as chairman with full veto power, desperately trying to maintain American influence in a world that’s moving beyond US dominance.

This is the clearest sign yet of the shift from a unipolar world order to multipolarity. The US has become a declining superpower—still powerful, still wealthy, but no longer the undisputed global hegemon. Other nations are “playing along” because there’s strategic benefit in doing so, not because America commands absolute authority.

Expect China to establish its own parallel institutions focused on Asia, just as America has created this Western-centric body. The UN will continue to exist, but increasingly as a hollow shell—lots of talk, minimal action.

If you’ve been following geopolitical analysis over the past two years, this multipolar emergence shouldn’t surprise you. The question isn’t whether the old world order is collapsing—it’s how quickly the new one is taking shape.

This is news without the Western spin. This is how you understand the real power dynamics shaping our world.

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