Trump mixes diplomacy and flattery at peace board meeting

President Donald Trump attends the inaugural Board of Peace meeting at the Institute of Peace in Washington, Thursday. Trump greeted world leaders on the board with fanfare and personal flattery.

President Donald Trump attends the inaugural Board of Peace meeting at the Institute of Peace in Washington, Thursday. Trump greeted world leaders on the board with fanfare and personal flattery. (Kevin Lamarque, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • President Donald Trump hosted world leaders at the inaugural meeting of the Board of Peace in Washington on Thursday.
  • He mixed flattery with diplomacy, avoiding criticism of attendees' human rights records.
  • Trump aims for the board to rival the U.N., though the focus will initially be on Gaza reconstruction.

WASHINGTON — World leaders who accepted the invitation of President Donald Trump to join his new peace board were greeted ​in Washington on Thursday with a mix of fanfare and personal flattery.

While the president has been chummy with world leaders in the past, he has typically leaned in to a good-cop-bad-cop routine, alternating between praise and threats as his interests ‌dictate. On Thursday, those in attendance saw Trump at his most convivial.

There was no hint of the criticized human rights records of some attendees. It was only those who did not ⁠attend the inaugural meeting of the board in Washington who received ​an ominous warning: "You can't play cute with me," Trump said.

A number ⁠of key allies have declined to join the forum set up by Trump in September for Gaza reconstruction but which he hopes ‌can become a global conflict-resolution body. Critics ‌say it risks interfering with the work of the United Nations.

As leaders huddled for a group photo, the ⁠event's soundtrack set the tone, as James Brown's 1966 song, "It's a Man's Man's Man's World," ⁠blared overhead.

Gaza is the board's first priority, but the Middle East conflict was not discussed in detail by Trump until 25 minutes into his welcome speech, as he focused first on complimenting the world leaders on the event stage, rating some of them on their good looks, wealth and strength.

Trump recited the names of the world leaders in attendance, as well as FIFA President Gianni Infantino, who were all seated on both sides of him on stage, some with red MAGA hats in front of them ‌on the table.

"President (Santiago) Pena, of Paraguay, is here," Trump said, pointing out the 47-year-old leader, "Young handsome ​guy. It's always nice to be young and handsome. Doesn't mean we have to like you. I don't like young, handsome men. Women I like. Men, I don't have any interest."

Nonetheless, his interest in the male physique was apparent. At one point, he told the crowd to look at the "tough" face of Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.

Trump also told stories in which he portrayed himself as having coerced leaders into doing what he wanted. He told the crowd how he had used threats of tariffs to pressure some countries, such as India and Pakistan, into ending conflicts. India has firmly rejected this assertion.

Beautiful people

The president suggested that his new board could ​overtake the United Nations in prominence.

"The Board of Peace is going to almost be looking over the United Nations. ... They need help," Trump said, digressing to recount his ‌visit last year ‌when he and first lady ⁠Melania Trump were stuck on an escalator in the U.N. headquarters in New York.

"I was lucky my movie-star first lady was in front of me, because I put my hand on a certain part of her body," Trump said of the escalator incident.

In total, the president used the term "beautiful" at least 14 times in his speech to praise his administration's work and the event space, which was named after him.

He said it ‌was Secretary of State Marco Rubio's idea ​to "surprise" him by renaming the Institute of Peace, where Thursday's event was ‌held, in his honor.

"I didn't know the ⁠surprise," Trump said, "I thought maybe ​they were going to give me a lot of money or something, maybe cash."

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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