Donald Trump built his career on “The Art of the Deal,” a philosophy of transactional, high-pressure negotiation. He brought this same method to the world stage, culminating in the Abraham Accords. However, experts argue that the art of making a deal is not the same as the art of making peace, and this distinction is why he is unlikely to win the Nobel Prize.
The art of the deal, as Trump practices it, is often about leveraging power to achieve a specific, tangible outcome that benefits the parties involved. The Abraham Accords fit this model: a series of bilateral agreements driven by shared strategic interests, particularly a mutual concern about Iran. It was a successful transaction.
The art of peace, as envisioned by the Nobel committee, is a much deeper and more complex process. It involves reconciliation, addressing historical grievances, building trust between peoples (not just governments), and creating institutions that can sustain peace over generations. It is less about a single transaction and more about a long-term transformation.
Historian Theo Zenou touched on this when he stressed the importance of “resolving the root causes of the conflict.” The Nobel committee wants to reward those who engage in the difficult, patient work of transformation, not just those who are skilled at transactional diplomacy. Critics argue the Abraham Accords, for all their benefits, did not transform the core dynamics of the Middle East conflict.
While Trump may be a master of the deal, the Nobel Peace Prize is not an award for the world’s best negotiator. It is an award for those who advance the cause of human fraternity. The committee’s history suggests they will continue to favor the patient artists of peace over the high-stakes masters of the deal.
The Art of the Deal vs. the Art of Peace: Why Trump’s Method Falls Short
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