The globalist establishment just got served a massive wake-up call, and the corrupt United Nations is scrambling to remain relevant.

President Donald Trump announced this week that 59 countries have officially signed on to his revolutionary Board of Peace initiative, with member states including Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, UAE, Morocco, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, and Kuwait pledging more than$7 billiontoward Gaza relief and reconstruction efforts.

Let that sink in, Patriots. Not American taxpayer dollars—real commitments from real nations stepping up because they recognize what actual leadership looks like.

Before we get to the diplomatic earthquake reshaping global politics, let's talk about what the legacy media deliberately ignored: the most successful hostage rescue operation in modern American history.

When Trump took office in January 2025, there were 251 hostages. Under his relentless diplomacy, 168 came home alive. The remaining 83 bodies were returned to grieving families so they could bury their loved ones with dignity.

Steve Witkoff, who worked closely with the President on hostage affairs, revealed a stunning detail about Trump's character that destroys the media's "heartless" narrative. Every single time a hostage family showed up at the White House—never scheduled, never announced—Trump dropped everything to meet with them.

This is the man the mainstream media calls cold and uncaring. The receipts say otherwise.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio—whom Trump playfully praised as perhaps "the best secretary of state in United States history"—didn't mince words about what the Board of Peace represents.

And failed they have. Remember Biden's embarrassing Gaza flotilla disaster? The floating pier fiasco that cost taxpayers $50 million and collapsed after two days? Compare that to Trump's approach: peace through strength, real commitments, and actual results.

Indonesia has committed 8,000 troops for an international stabilization force. The UN Security Council—yes, even those globalist bureaucrats—approved the framework unanimously, 13-0, on what Ambassador Mike Waltz called "the most contentious issue the United Nations has ever faced."

Source: Next News Network