Friday, January 23, 2026

FOR GOD'S SAKE, DON'T INVITE THE FOX INTO THE HENHOUSE

Trump considers including Palestinian Authority in Board of Peace

Sources told Sky News Arabic Arab states and other countries are pressing the Trump administration not to exclude the Palestinian Authority from managing the Gaza Strip. The sources added that Israel has set "impossible conditions" for reopening the Rafah crossing, including the establishment of an Israeli inspection point.

 

by Shachar Kleiman 

 

Israel Hayom

Jan 23, 2026

 

 

US President Donald Trump, left, and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas pose for a photograph during a joint press conference at the presidential palace in the West Bank city of Bethlehem on May 23, 2017. (AFP/Mandel Ngan)

US President Donald Trump and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas 
 
 
Sky News Arabic reported on Thursday, citing its sources, that discussions were underway between American and Palestinian officials about including the Palestinian Authority in the Board of Peace. 
 
According to the sources, the move faces "Israeli and American obstacles." They said Arab states and other countries are exerting pressure on the Trump administration to ensure the Palestinian Authority is not sidelined from the administration of the Gaza Strip under the new international framework.

The sources also said Israel has imposed what they described as "impossible conditions" for reopening the Rafah crossing, including the creation of an Israeli inspection point after the Palestinian one. A Palestinian source claimed Israel wants such a checkpoint in order to have "the final say" over who leaves Gaza and who remains.

Sky News Arabic further reported that Israel has demanded a two-month timeframe before the Rafah crossing is reopened, while the Trump administration is pushing for it to open in the coming days.

TRUMP SHOULD NOT ALLOW PUTIN TO USE FROZEN ASSETS IN THE US

Putin meets Abbas in Moscow, pledges to secure Palestinian interests in Board of Peace

Russian President Vladimir Putin said frozen assets in the United States would be used to pay the $1 billion fee. 

 

JNS

Jan 22, 2026 


Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Russian President Vladimir Putin Mikhail Metzel/Russian Presidential Press and Information Office/TASS
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet in the Kremlin on January 21, 2026.
 

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday during a meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the Kremlin that he will accept President Donald Trump’s invitation to join the Board of Peace (BoP) and meet the $1 billion requirement.

Trump’s 20-point plan to end the Gaza conflict calls for the establishment of a transitional administration to govern the Gaza Strip, of which the Board of Peace is to be a critical part.

A $1 billion fee is required for member countries to secure a permanent seat. Russia said it would pay using frozen assets in the United States, which would require U.S. action to unblock.

Putin made clear he was joining the BoP to secure Palestinian interests and will pay the $1 billion “first and foremost to support the Palestinian people and to direct those funds to the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip and, in general, to resolve Palestinian problems,” according to TASS, Russia’s state-owned news agency.

Trump launched his Board of Peace at a ceremony on Thursday on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

The board, which will initially focus on solidifying the ceasefire with Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip, “can do pretty much whatever we want to do” once it is “completely formed,” said Trump.

Representatives of at least 18 nations attended, including Argentina, Hungary, and Morocco, among others.

Israel has also joined the Board of Peace, though it has expressed its disapproval at the inclusion of others due to their support for Hamas, such as Turkey, Qatar and Pakistan.

Russia also has extended a hand to Hamas, repeatedly inviting representatives from the terror group to Moscow.

RICHMOND, CALIFORNIA, CITY COUNCIL REFUSES TO CENSURE ITS MAYOR FOR HIS JEW-HATRED

Bay Area mayor ought to resign for sharing Jew-hatred posts, some local leaders say

“When a public figure has engaged in antisemitic conduct, and they are truly sorry, they don’t pick and choose the remedy,” Seth Brysk, regional director at the American Jewish Committee, told JNS. 

 

By Aaron Bandler 

 

JNS

Jan 22, 2026 



An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Eduardo Martinez speaks at Anti Chevron Day

Eduardo Martinez, mayor of Richmond, California, is pictured wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh.
 

Eduardo Martinez, mayor of Richmond, Calif., avoided censure for the second time this month at a City Council meeting when the body voted, on Tuesday, to again postpone such a resolution and instead passed a measure, which the mayor put forward, stating that he would undergo voluntary Jew-hatred training.

The council voted 6-1 on Tuesday in favor of a “restorative process” between the mayor and the city’s Jewish community, after Martinez shared posts on LinkedIn that referred to the antisemitic mass shooting in Bondi Beach, in Sydney, as “Israel’s false flag attack” and asked if the shooter was a former Israeli soldier.

The council voted that Martinez will meet with Rabbi Julie Saxe-Taller, of Temple Beth Hillel, an 80-year-old Reform congregation in Richmond, in the Bay Area, at least two more times and will apologize at a future council meeting and in a local newspaper.

Saxe-Taller is associated with the progressive group J Street and, in prior roles, reportedly signed a December 2022 letter saying certain Israeli officials weren’t welcome to speak at her synagogue, wrote that she wept “tears of relief” when the Reform Jewish movement voted to push for reparations for slavery and was quoted saying that the Trump administration is only aiming to deport pro-Hamas agitators because it is anti-immigration.

The Richmond temple states that it is guided by social justice and, “whether you’re single, married, interfaith, LGBTQ+, a Jew by birth or by choice, you’re fully welcome here.”

Experts told JNS that Martinez appeared to be getting off lightly.

Seth Brysk, regional director at the American Jewish Committee, thinks that the mayor’s response is “not sufficient.”

“We would still maintain that he’s unfit to hold public office, and to be able to represent the city in an effective way when he’s unable to really take the necessary steps to learn, to make amends, to use this as a teachable moment, to truly and genuinely apologize, not to say ‘I’m sorry that you feel that way,’ but rather to understand and acknowledge the wrong that was done,” he told JNS. “That really only comes through the educational process, and then he can make a genuine and full apology, and we can move forward.”

“In similar situations, when a public figure has engaged in antisemitic conduct, and they are truly sorry, they don’t pick and choose the remedy,” he added. “They are asked to undergo training by a qualified provider, who delivers these kinds of trainings, and that’s fallen far short here.”

It’s good for Martinez to “engage in serious conversation with local Jewish leadership” and to apologize to the community, but “his offense has gone far beyond that,” Brysk said. “To put it on social media—it affects Jews throughout the Bay Area and elsewhere, who have seen it.”

Martinez must meet with mainstream Jewish organizations, like Brysk’s employer, which have “professionally developed programs to instruct and inform people about what is antisemitism” and “can explain to him the history, the meaning of antisemitism, the history, the meaning of what it is that he has said, and then he can make a genuine apology based on an understanding of what he has learned.”

“We have seen people who have engaged in antisemitism go through that kind of process in the past, and it is something that can work,” Brysk told JNS. “We’ve also seen people who seek to make something uncomfortable go away. This seems to be more of the latter.” (JNS sought comments from the mayor and the synagogue.)

Rabbi Yitzchok Wagner, co-director of the Chabad of Richmond, told JNS that most of the local Jewish community thinks that the City Council must say something.

Most local Jews feel “very, very strongly” that this wasn’t an isolated incident and the council should have censured the mayor, or “at least to call it out and to recognize antisemitism where it is,” Wagner said. These community members think that “for him to get out of it by saying ‘I’m sorry. I’m going to take a training,’ is not necessarily acceptable,” according to the rabbi.

Some community members see things differently, according to Wagner. These local Jews think that the mayor apologized, did his part and is ready to “move on and push forward,” and don’t think that there are enough votes on the City Council to ever pass a censure, the rabbi said.

“My goal and focus is to try to bring together unity and light and positivity,” he said.

Wagner told JNS that there are an estimated 2,000 to 2,500 Jewish households in Richmond. He said that a large percentage of the Jews affiliated with his synagogue and the temple think that the mayor looks like he could get off too easily.

Tali Klima, spokeswoman for the Bay Area Jewish Coalition, told JNS that the call for censuring the mayor “was absolutely justified.”

“Mayor Martinez has a history supporting rabidly antisemitic rhetoric online and passing anti-Israel city resolutions that are extreme even for the Bay Area,” Klima said. “He must be held accountable for crossing the line, excluding and endangering Jewish residents and setting a dangerous regional precedent that normalizes Jew hatred.”

‘Mayor must resign’

Jeremy Russell, director of marketing and communications at the Jewish Community Relations Council Bay Area, told JNS that the “JCRC continues to believe Mayor Martinez must resign.”

“The mayor did not provide genuine acknowledgment of harm in his public comments, which took place more than a month after his latest antisemitic posting was discovered,” he said. “We are grateful that Temple Beth Hillel has agreed to work on restorative steps with the mayor, though we remain rightfully skeptical of his intentions due to his continued disappointing conduct.”

Russell’s employer “will continue to monitor the situation at City Hall and will provide ongoing support to the Richmond Jewish community at this vulnerable time,” he told JNS.

The council meeting, which began at 6 p.m., ran for five hours—one hour past its scheduled end time, due to the large number of people who wanted to speak. As the meeting drew to a close, a vote to amend the “restorative process” and to censure the mayor failed, 3-4.

A separate item on the agenda to censure the mayor for “antisemitic conduct and for actions inconsistent with the duties and standards of the office” was tabled indefinitely.

During the previous council meeting on Jan. 6, an emergency item to put a censure resolution on the agenda failed 2-5 after multiple councilmembers said that they didn’t have enough time to review it.

At the meeting on Tuesday, the council agreed that most of its members would undergo the Jew-hatred training as part of the “restorative process.”

One council member, Jamelia Brown, said at the meeting that it’s “commendable” that the rest of the council wanted to join the mayor in the training, but that the council must also “name the harm” that the mayor caused and set “clear boundaries for the unacceptable conduct that took place.”

The only way to do that is via censure, Brown said at the meeting, although her hunch was that the only reason the “restorative” measure was put on the agenda was to avoid censuring the mayor. The whole council attending the training sounds “as if we’re going on a field trip,” she told the council.

She was the only one on the council to vote against the “restorative” measure. (JNS sought comment from Brown.)

Before public comment started on the measure, the mayor said he has already “made several apologies,” but the problem is that “everyone needs to hear something different.”

“It’s like making apology after apology after apology,” Martinez said.

He then read a formal apology, stating that he owes “a clear, unambiguous apology” to the Jewish community in Richmond and “our broader community.”

“Antisemitism is real,” he said. “It is not abstract or theoretical. It creates fear, isolation and danger for Jewish people, including right here in Richmond. As mayor, my words carry weight, and in this instance, I failed to meet the responsibility my position requires.”

STOP FUNDING THE UN AND KICK IT OUT OF THE USA

Why replacing the United Nations is not a scandal, but a necessity

Since the 1960s, it has functioned first as an instrument of Soviet domination, then as a factory of anti-Americanism, and ultimately as a systematic de-legitimizer of Israel.


By Fiamma Nirenstein 

 

JNS

Jan 23, 2026 

 

Palestinian President President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly via video, Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Palestinian Authority, addresses the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly via video, Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025. 
 

Is it really so shocking that the new organization for Gaza appears to be an attempt—however imperfect—to replace the United Nations? Are we so emotionally attached to the U.N.’s greenish corridors that we forget what they have represented for decades?

Since the 1960s, those corridors have served as the backstage of Third-Worldist ideology, later repackaged as “woke,” a comfortable home for overt and covert supporters of the world’s worst dictatorships. Dozens upon dozens of commissions were created to legitimize a moral inversion in which Iran could sit for 24 years on the Human Rights Commission—chairing it in 2001—and preside over the U.N. Human Rights Council’s Social Forum as recently as 2023, while a U.N.-appointed rapporteur decides whether the Palestinians are “right” and Israel perpetually wrong.

Is it truly a tragedy that Donald Trump is trying to retire a billion-dollar organization funded largely by American taxpayers, after realizing that, since the 1960s, it has functioned first as an instrument of Soviet domination, then as a factory of anti-Americanism, and ultimately as a systematic de-legitimizer of Israel?

It is far from clear whether the so-called Board of Peace assembled in Davos—some 60 countries, an executive council and a technocratic commission—will succeed in anything meaningful under Trump’s heavy hand. Its task is Herculean: to rebuild Gaza while mediating constant quarrels, holding together democracies and autocracies, resolute Christians and militant Islamists. One cannot even be sure that the Palestinian technocratic committee will remain technocratic, rather than sliding—as history suggests—toward a jihadist derailment.

Turkey and Qatar seated alongside Israel; Pakistan and Hungary at the same table. Strange? Perhaps. But still less surreal than the United Nations. At least here the rules are explicit: attacking the United States and Israel is not permitted, nor is demonizing Europe—at least not the Europe that has not fully surrendered to Macron-style anti-Americanism.

The real test, however, is linguistic and moral. Will anti-imperialism finally lose its status as the U.N.’s universally authorized vocabulary? Will we stop passing resolutions like the infamous 1975 declaration that “Zionism is racism,” the poisonous seed from which much of contemporary antisemitism has grown?

Since Nikita Khrushchev’s arrival in New York in 1960, the U.N. steadily abandoned the democratic values for which it was founded. They were replaced by an ideology of anti-colonial hatred disguised as pacifism. During the Vietnam War, the U.N. became a motor of global anti-American movements. The Non-Aligned Movement consolidated into a bloc that still flirts with Russia and China, while the Arab narrative became institutional orthodoxy. Terrorism was rebranded as “national liberation.”

Israel, meanwhile, became the U.N.’s permanent defendant. The post–Six-Day War resolution on “disputed territories” was transformed into an accusation of systematic violations of international law. UNRWA became the only refugee agency in the world whose mission is to perpetuate refugee status indefinitely—while its employees participate directly in terrorism.

After Oct. 7, the U.N. could not bring itself to issue a clear and immediate condemnation of Hamas. Instead, it unleashed investigative mechanisms against Israel—the victim—rather than against the terrorists. This moral collapse explains why the United States has withdrawn from 31 U.N.-affiliated bodies, why Trump walked away from the Human Rights Council, UNRWA, UNHCR, UNESCO—which absurdly declared Jerusalem an exclusively Islamic heritage site—and other agencies devoted less to peace than to defamation.

Is this radical? Yes. Is it easy? No. Is it necessary? Absolutely.

If the international system is to have any credibility, it must turn the page. What Trump has begun may be messy, incomplete and controversial, but after decades of institutionalized hypocrisy, it is a beginning worth making.

THEY MAKE HOLSTERS FOR A REASON

By Bob Walsh

 

Risk Factors for Accidental Discharges


There was an interesting incident at a Chipotle restaurant in Green Township Ohio this last Sunday.  It involved the negligent discharge of a firearm.

People were eating there about 2 p.m. when there was a loud bang resulting in somebody picking up a leg injury.  Originally it was reported as a small explosion, resulting in the bomb squad showing up.

After a brief investigation it became obvious that a firearm had discharged down into the floor, throwing some bullet fragments, one of which injured someone.

The man responsible left the restaurant immediately thereafter without copping to the incident, but was later located and arrested.  He had gone home and changed his jacket but kept the jacket, with the bullet hole in it and the discharged cartridge still in the pocket.  The firearm was recovered.

The idiot reported that there was nothing in the pocket but the gun, with a trigger mounted safety.  (i.e. Glock.)  He placed his hand in the pocket and unintentionally pulled the trigger.  The idiot has not been charged.  Yet.

SEEMS KIND OF STUPID TO ME

By Bob Walsh

 

 

 

As you may be aware it looks like Hawaii may lose the Vampire Rule, one of it's favorite anti-2A laws.  It seems that now the Democrats who run their government are working at something else.  Theoretically this is at the legislative proposal stage, and may even be complete BS.

That being said, the story says that Hawaii wants to mandate by law that any person who is in fact carrying a concealed weapon in public must wear an orange arm band at least 4" wide to indicate plainly that they are carrying a concealed weapon.

I wonder if it would also be illegal to wear an orange arm if you are NOT carrying a concealed weapon? 

The REAL point of this, IMHO, is that it is obvious that our political masters will continue to act out against honest, law-abiding gun owners until they are slapped down hard.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

GOV. GREG ABBOTT: 'RADICAL ISLAMIC EXTREMISM IS NOT WELCOME IN TEXAS - AND CERTAINLY NOT IN OUR SCHOOLS'

Gov. Greg Abbott demands Cy-Fair ISD cancel Islamic Games event: 'Not welcome in Texas'

 

ByElizabeth Sander and Haajrah Gilani
 
Houston Chronicle 
Jan 21, 2026
 
 

JACK SMITH TESTIFIES THAT TRUMP WILLFULLY BROKE THE LAW

Former US prosecutor Smith says Trump 'willfully broke' laws in bid to keep power

 

 
Reuters
Jan 22, 2022
 
 
  
Former special counsel Jack Smith, testifies before the House Judiciary Committee about his investigations into President Donald Trump, in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, January 22, 2026.

WASHINGTON - Former U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith, who unsuccessfully prosecuted President Donald Trump, told a House of Representatives panel on Thursday that Trump was "looking for ways to stay in power" following his defeat in the 2020 election as he confronted Republican criticism of his investigation.
 
Smith fielded questions from the Republican-controlled House Judiciary Committee about his two criminal cases, which he dropped after Trump won the 2024 presidential election. One case accused Trump of conspiring to overturn his defeat in the 2020 election, while the other accused him of unlawfully holding onto classified documents.
 
The hearing marked the first time the American public heard at length from Smith, whose historic prosecutions dominated Trump's years out of power and helped fuel the Republican president's quest for retribution since returning to office. Smith told the panel he expected Trump's Justice Department to try to bring criminal charges against him.
 
"President Trump was charged because the evidence established that he willfully broke the very laws that he took an oath to uphold," Smith told the House panel. "If asked whether to prosecute a former president based on the same facts today, I would do so, regardless of whether that president was a Democrat or a Republican."
 
After the hearing, Trump reiterated his calls for Smith to be prosecuted, writing on social media that he had "destroyed the lives of many innocent people."
 

REPUBLICANS ALLEGE BIAS

 

Republican lawmakers sought to discredit Smith's investigation and buttress Trump's claims that the probes were an abuse of the legal system. Republicans focused particular attention on Smith's decision to seek limited phone records from former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and several Republican senators, along with court orders that barred lawmakers from being notified of the subpoenas.
 
Trump allies have argued that the records show Smith’s investigation was overzealous and aimed at the political opposition.
 
"It was always about politics," Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio, the Republican chair of the Judiciary Committee, said at the start of the hearing. "To get Donald Trump, they were willing to do just about anything."
 
Smith said the records were necessary to examine Trump’s efforts to pressure Republican lawmakers to block certification of the election. He said he had "grave concerns about obstruction of justice in this investigation, specifically with regards to Donald Trump."
 
Smith’s testimony focused primarily on the case that accused Trump of using false voter fraud claims to obstruct the certification of election results following his 2020 defeat to Democrat Joe Biden. He told lawmakers that Republican witnesses, especially those who informed Trump that his fraud claims were not true, would have formed the core of the case had it gone to trial.
 
"Our investigation revealed that Donald Trump was not looking for honest answers about whether there was fraud in the election," Smith said. "He was looking for ways to stay in power."
 
A federal judge has barred the Justice Department from disclosing many of the details surrounding Smith’s second case, which accused Trump of stashing highly sensitive government documents at his Mar-a-Lago residence following the end of his first term in 2021.
 
Trump pleaded not guilty to all charges and has repeatedly argued the charges were improperly aimed at damaging his 2024 campaign.
 
Neither case reached trial and Smith dropped them after Trump won reelection, citing a Justice Department policy against prosecuting a sitting president.
 
The Trump administration has fired dozens of Justice Department lawyers, FBI agents and staffers who worked on the investigations.
 
Democrats defended Smith as an apolitical career prosecutor who was guided by the evidence in building his cases against Trump.
 
Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the panel, said Trump has assailed Smith "not because you did anything wrong, but because you did everything right."
"You had the audacity to do your job," Raskin added.

JARED MUST BE SMOKING TOO MUCH FUNNY TOBACCO ..... MY PLAN IS TO LET GAZA REMAIN IN RUBBLE AS A MONUMENT SHOWING THE COMSEQUENCES OF SUPPORTING TERRORISTS, AND IT WON'T COST AMERICA'S TAXPAYERS ONE RED CENT

Jared Kushner shows off vision of 'New Gaza' coastal resort with high rises as he reveals work already underway on rebuilding city reduced to rubble

 

By Eliana Silver 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 22, 2026 

 

 

Kushner spoke alongside a presentation showing generated images of the Gaza coastline with skyscrapers and yachts

Kushner spoke alongside a presentation showing generated images of the Gaza coastline with skyscrapers and yachts

 

President Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner showed off a Gaza master plan Thursday that includes 'coastal tourism' corridors with high rises as he revealed work is already underway on rebuilding the war-torn area.

Kushner gave a PowerPoint presentation amid the president's Board of Peace ceremony at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Ivanka Trump's husband and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff have been leading negotiations for the US to end the Gaza war.

In his presentation, Kushner revealed that 100,000 permanent housing units will be built in Gaza and 500,000 jobs created in construction, agriculture, manufacturing, services and the digital economy industries.

He said they will start with Rafah, adding that demolition and removal of rubble is already underway.

Speaking alongside a presentation showing generated images of the Gaza coastline with skyscrapers and yachts, Kushner said: 'We think this can be done in two, three years.' 

Kushner said the plan will be conducted in phases, including 100% employment and 'opportunity for everyone'. 

Kushner explained that, initially, they planned to create a 'free zone' and a 'Hamas zone' to divide up Gaza. 

 

Kushner said the plan will be conducted in phases

Kushner said the plan will be conducted in phases

He said they will start with Rafah, adding that demolition and removal of rubble is already underway

He said they will start with Rafah, adding that demolition and removal of rubble is already underway

 

'And then we said, you know what? Let's just plan for catastrophic success,' he told the crowd. 

'Hamas signed a deal to demilitarize. That is what we're going to enforce.'

He revealed that Hamas's 'heavy weapons' will be decommissioned immediately, while small arms will be decommissioned by sector by the new Palestinian police, which could include members of Hamas after 'rigorous vetting.'

Kushner added that reconstruction will only begin in sectors with full disarmament, however also said that members of Hamas will be 'rewarded with amnesty and reintegration, or safe passage'.

Trump concluded the event by noting how he's a 'real estate person at heart.'

'And it's all about location,' he said of Gaza. 'And I said, look at this location on the sea. Look at this beautiful piece of property, what it could be for so many people.'

'It'll be so, so great. People that are living so poorly are going to be living so well. But it all began with the location.'

Kushner's master plan is not unlike Trump's initial pitch of making the Palestinian territory the 'Riviera of the Middle East.' 

 

Trump said people in Gaza living 'so poorly' will be 'living so well'

Trump said people in Gaza living 'so poorly' will be 'living so well'

Kushner added that reconstruction will only begin in sectors with full disarmament

Kushner added that reconstruction will only begin in sectors with full disarmament

Kushner's master plan is not unlike Trump's initial pitch of making the Palestinian territory the 'Riviera of the Middle East'

Kushner's master plan is not unlike Trump's initial pitch of making the Palestinian territory the 'Riviera of the Middle East'

 

In February of last year, Trump stated: 'The US will take over the Gaza Strip, and we will do a job with it too.'

He then posted a 35-second video to his Truth Social account that began with the question: 'Gaza 2025: What's Next?' 

The AI-generated video - in a series of bold, gaudy images - showed a Trump hotel, a giant golden statue of Trump, and a child holding a Trump balloon among resplendent beach-front resort complexes.

Elon Musk was seen tossing around cash to visitors and children, while Trump danced with a belly dancer and drank cocktails with Netanyahu.

The White House told the Daily Mail in a statement: 'President Trump is a visionary, and his plan to have the United States involved in Gaza's rebuilding will allow for Palestinians to resettle in new, beautiful communities while improving conditions in the region for generations to come.' 

 During his speech in Davos, Trump claimed the war in Gaza is 'coming to an end' and now consisted of 'little fires'.

He said that there was a ‍commitment ‍to ensure Gaza ⁠was demilitarised and 'beautifully ⁠rebuilt'.

Trump signed the charter of his 'Board of Peace,' with other founding members in Davos on Thursday.

According to the charter, the Board of Peace will be 'an international organization that seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict'.

Originally intended to help end the devastating Gaza war, the President now sees the board as having a wider role that Europe and some others fear will rival or undermine the United ​Nations.

KRISTI NOEM, THE BITCH WHO SHOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN CHOSEN TO HEAD THE DHS, OUGHT TO BE SENT PACKING ALONG WITH HER LOVER COREY LEWANDOWSKI

Kristi Noem's 'evil' plot to oust Trump's veteran border boss sparks Cabinet war

 

By Katelyn Caralle 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 22, 2026

 

 

 No alternative text description for this image

ISRAEL HAS GOOD REASON TO DESPISE ERDOGAN

Erdogan emerges as Israel's next strategic threat

Whether it falls or not, the Iranian threat as Israel knews it is no more, but that certainly does not mean we can beat our swords into plowshares. There is growing assessment that Erdogan will seek to take Khamenei's place and build a Muslim Brotherhood proxy army around Israel. 

 

by Amit Segal  

 

Israel Hayom

Jan 22, 2026

 

 

Hyperpresident Erdogan Hyperpresident Erdogan

TRUMP: 'WE'RE GOING TO HAVE PEACE IN THE WORLD' ..... WATCH OUT SO YOU WON'T GET HIT BY SHIT FROM THOSE FLYING PIGS

Trump launches Board of Peace in Davos ceremony

Leaders and representatives of at least 18 nations were on stage. 

 

JNS

Jan 22, 2026

 

 

President Trump holds up his signature on the founding charter during a signing ceremony for the Board of Peace at the World Economic Forum on Thursday in Davos, Switzerland. The final makeup of the board has not been confirmed. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

President Trump holds up his signature on the founding charter during a signing ceremony for the Board of Peace at the World Economic Forum on Thursday in Davos, Switzerland.

 

U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday launched his Board of Peace at a ceremony on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, attended by representatives of at least 18 nations.

Leaders and representatives from Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bulgaria, Hungary, Indonesia, Jordan, Kosovo, Mongolia, Morocco, Pakistan, Paraguay, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and Uzbekistan were among those on stage as Trump spoke during the signing ceremony, The Guardian reported.

The board, which will initially focus on solidifying the ceasefire with Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip, “can do pretty much whatever we want to do” once it is “completely formed,” said Trump in remarks.

“And we’ll do it in conjunction with the United Nations,” he added.

“I’ve always said the United Nations has got tremendous potential, has not used it, but there’s tremendous potential in the United Nations, and you have some great people at the United Nations,” the president said.

“You know, on the eight wars that I ended, I never spoke to the United Nations about any of them,” he went on. “They tried, I guess, in some of them, but they didn’t try hard enough.”

The Board of Peace can be “something very, very unique for the world,” Trump continued. “The first steps toward a brighter day for the Middle East and a much safer future for the world are unfolding right before your very eyes.”

The new body will seek to end “decades of suffering, stop generations of hatred and bloodshed, and forge a beautiful, everlasting and glorious peace for that region and for the whole region of the world,” he said.

“We’re going to have peace in the world,” the president declared.

As the signing ceremony got underway, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt declared, “The charter is now in full force, and the Board of Peace is now an official international organization.”

Steve Witkoff, U.S. special envoy for peace missions, told attendees that Trump “created a sense of hope for what the future can bring in Gaza and in all other places where the Board of Peace will operate.

“I remember when the president asked Jared [Kushner], I, and of course our great secretary of state [Marco Rubio] to work on something that the world thought was impossible and unattainable,” the envoy said in his speech. “But the president—on this peace deal for Gaza, as on all other deals we work on his behalf—said we had to try and, of course, we were inspired by that.

“We have achieved a peace deal in Gaza. We have brought the hostages home all of the bodies, except for one, and we will bring that body home too,” Witkoff vowed.

Witkoff thanked “my good friend from Qatar,” Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others.

During the event, Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and a Middle East real estate developer, presented plans to disarm Hamas and develop the Gaza Strip into a free market hub for tourism with an airport and seaport after U.S.-backed reconstruction efforts conclude by 2035.

Netanyahu on Wednesday accepted Trump’s invitation to join the Board of Peace. While the body’s efforts will initially focus on Gaza, it “is like a new United Nations,” Netanyahu told Knesset lawmakers on Monday.

Speaking in Davos on Wednesday, Trump acknowledged that the Board of Peace has “some controversial people. But these are people that get the job done. These are people that have tremendous influence. If I put all babies on the board, that wouldn’t be very much.”

He continued, “I think the Board of Peace will be the most prestigious board ever, and it’s going to get a lot of work done that the United Nations should’ve done. And we’ll work with the United Nations, but the Board of Peace is going to be special. We’re going to have peace.”

Trump went on to mention the U.S. military strikes against Iran’s nuclear project in June as the platform that facilitated peace in the Middle East.

“It started off with Gaza in the Middle East. We’ve got peace in the Middle East. Tremendous peace in the Middle East. Nobody thought that was possible. And that happened by taking out the Iran nuclear threat. Without that, it could’ve never happened,” said Trump.