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Cambodia To Nominate Donald Trump For Nobel Peace Prize: What It Means

Cambodia To Nominate Donald Trump For Nobel Peace Prize: What It Means

NDTVa day ago
Cambodia will nominate US President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, Deputy Prime Minister Sun Chanthol confirmed on Friday. The announcement follows Trump's reported intervention in ending recent border clashes between Cambodia and Thailand.
Trump's call last week reportedly broke a diplomatic deadlock, leading to a ceasefire brokered in Malaysia. "He deserves to be nominated," Sun Chanthol said, as per Reuters.
Cambodia joins Pakistan and Israel in backing Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. In June, Pakistan credited his role in easing post-Pahalgam terror attack tensions with India. A day after Pakistan's announcement, Trump ordered airstrikes on Iran.
Last month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered a nomination letter to Trump during a meeting.
Earlier, in a Truth Social post, Trump wrote, "I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize for this... but the people know, and that's all that matters to me," referencing his role in multiple international peace efforts, including the Abraham Accords and de-escalations in Africa and the Middle East.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt last week called to "give him the Nobel Peace Prize." She said Trump brokered about one peace deal or ceasefire per month since January, citing conflicts including India-Pakistan and Cambodia-Thailand.
How The Nomination Works
The Nobel Prize is awarded through a confidential process. Only qualified individuals, such as lawmakers, professors, past laureates, and members of international organisations, can submit nominations by January 31.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee, a five-member body appointed by Norway's parliament, reviews all entries, consults experts, and prepares a shortlist. After thorough deliberation, the committee selects a winner by majority vote. The prize is announced in October and awarded on December 10, Alfred Nobel's death anniversary.
Self-nominations are not allowed.
Can A Country Nominate Trump For The Nobel Peace Prize?
A nation can effectively nominate someone like Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, but only through individuals authorised to do so under Nobel rules. Heads of state, members of national governments, and national assemblies are among those eligible to submit nominations for the Peace Prize. So, if a country's prime minister, president, or government official nominates Trump, it would be considered valid.
In 1939, a Swedish MP nominated Adolf Hitler, and the nomination was later withdrawn. The full list of nominees remains confidential for 50 years.
Presidents And Prime Ministers To Win The Nobel Peace Prize
Several presidents and prime ministers have won the Nobel Peace Prize for their roles in resolving conflicts and promoting peace. US Presidents Theodore Roosevelt (1906), Woodrow Wilson (1919), and Barack Obama (2009) were awarded for diplomacy and international cooperation.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev won in 1990 for helping end the Cold War.
In 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres, and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat received the prize for the Oslo Accords.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed was honoured in 2019 for ending the conflict with Eritrea.
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For Pakistan & US, it is back to doing business
For Pakistan & US, it is back to doing business

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For Pakistan & US, it is back to doing business

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President Trump's 2018 New Year Day tweet exemplified this view. The tweet underlined US foolishness in giving Pakistan billions of dollars in aid in return for deceit and lies! This was consistent with emergent US narratives about Pakistan, but that it was from the President himself made it doubly significant. Through the Biden tenure matters crystallised at a low plateau of bad blood and mutual recriminations. The US's final withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021 in disorder and disarray added another layer to the deep strategic mistrust and suspicion that now characterised the relationship. President Biden did not have even a telecon with Imran Khan during the time he was PM and Imran Khan in turn blamed the US for his premature ouster from power. In the meantime, most US military and security assistance was suspended. What perhaps hurt Pakistan the most was the impact this had on training programmes for Pakistan military officers in the US. All this happened also when the India-US relationship seemed effortlessly to go from strength to strength. This further highlighted the distance between Washington and Islamabad. The past few months appear quite different. The change was animated quite dramatically by Field Marshal Asim Munir being hosted by President Trump in June 2025 in the immediate aftermath of Operation Sindoor. It is most unusual — perhaps even unprecedented — for a US president to host a chief of a foreign military who is not a head of State or government. This shift also coincides with new ambiguities in the US-India interface — perhaps triggered by President Trump's constant reiteration of having prevented further escalation in the India-Pakistan conflict during Operation Sindoor. To many in Pakistan, this has 'internationalised' Kashmir and highlighted the importance of third-party intervention as equally that even the US was skeptical about India's claims and demands. There had been earlier indicators of change beginning with President Trump's acknowledgement of Pakistan's counter-terrorism assistance in his State of the Union Address in March 2025. The allocation of a significant financial package as assistance to Pakistan for maintaining its F16 aircraft despite an otherwise stringent foreign aid cutback, was another. Alongside, more even-handed references to the India-Pakistan dynamic, meetings and telephone conversations between the US secretary of State and senior Pakistan leaders further underlined this shift. The announcement of a US-Pakistan Trade Agreement, albeit with a 19% tariff on imports from Pakistan, and Trump's enthusiastic references to hydrocarbon exploration and investment, are but the latest in this trend. The trade agreement may not be the best deal Pakistan could have got, but it is not as bad as could have been, and in any case some deal was better than no deal as far as the government of Pakistan was concerned. It may well be argued that there is nothing particularly significant in these transitions, but for most Pakistanis they suggest a return of their country to the US's radar after a long period of being out in the cold. What explains this shift? Given the transactional frame of mind that dominates the US, there is always the temptation to look for a direct and material factor. Numerous reasons are, therefore, assigned for this shift in US policy. Pakistan's counter-terrorism potential and the assistance it can offer is one. That the US is keen to have some relationship with Pakistan given the growing spread of China in the region is another. There is also the view that recommendations of the US Central Command on Pakistan's military potential vis-à-vis Iran in terms of its geographical location and the value of its air bases may have registered on the Presidency amid the current situation in West and South West Asia. 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To think that the long downturn in US Pakistan relations would have simply continued or that the US would see developments from our perspective alone is, and never was, a realistic assessment. We should take this shift in our stride. If some in India feel betrayed or dismayed at this turn of events, they have only themselves to blame. TCA Raghavan is a former Indian high commissioner to Pakistan. The views expressed are personal.

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