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Canada mulling $1B membership to Trump’s Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ 

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says while he’s accepted Donald Trump’s invitation on principle to join the president’s “Board of Peace” to oversee next steps in Gaza, it’s just unclear now what the $1 billion permanent membership fee is for.

“The president raised it with me a few weeks ago,” he told reporters in Doha, Qatar on Sunday, adding he has yet to absorb all its details including how the Trump-led initiative will be structured and how financing would work.

“Canada wants money to have maximum impact,” Carney said, laying out a condition for Canadian involvement. “We still do not have unimpeded aid flows, humanitarian aid flows at scale to the people in Gaza. … That is a precondition for moving forward on this.”

The White House announced Friday a cadre of leaders who will be led by Trump, the board’s inaugural chair, to oversee the transitional governance of Gaza.

Carney said Trump’s “Board of Peace” came up in his conversation with Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani where the pair had an “exchange of views” on the topic.

“I found that we were very aligned about what needs to happen, how it needs to work in order for this to be consistent with a positive outcome,” he said.

Carney is the first sitting Canadian leader to visit Qatar — marking a shift in Canadian foreign policy to deepen trade and defense relations in the Gulf, prompted by an ongoing trade war with the United States that escalated in the past year.

The aggression and unpredictability of Trump 2.0’s global agenda has forced America’s allies to turn to rewrite their foreign policies as the president continues to wield tariffs as a cudgel to push his “America First” agenda on world leaders.

Trump announced new sanctions against eight of America’s closest European allies on Saturday in a bid to use economic coercion to acquire Greenland.

Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland will face a 10-percent levy on Feb. 1 on “any and all goods sent to the United States of America,” Trump said in a Truth Social post. The rate increases to 25 percent on June 1 if Greenland is not in American hands by then.

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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