Trump invites Putin to join Gaza peace board, Kremlin says

Hungarian leader Viktor Orbán said he’d also been invited, and has accepted.

U.S. President Donald Trump invited Russian leader Vladimir Putin to join his “Board of Peace” to oversee next steps in Gaza, the Kremlin said Monday.

“Indeed, President Putin also received an offer through diplomatic channels to join this Peace Council. We are currently studying all the details of this proposal,” Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters in a media briefing.

“We hope for a contact with the American side so that we can clarify all the details,” he added.

Trump announced the establishment of the board — which he touted as “the Greatest and Most Prestigious Board ever assembled at any time, any place” — on Friday as a key part of his 20-point plan to end the war between Israel and Hamas. The committee, chaired by Trump, will oversee the transitional governance of Gaza.

The U.S. embassy in Brussels did not immediately respond to questions about the invitation.

Putin, for his part, has spent the last four years waging a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which has killed thousands of civilians, and demolished towns and cities. Trump also invited Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, was has supported the Kremlin’s war on Ukraine, to join the peace board, state media in Minsk reported.

Invitations to join the board were also addressed to countries including Argentina, Egypt, Albania, India and Turkey, among others. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has also received an invitation, as have Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Those who want a permanent membership beyond the three-year term will have to cough up $1 billion, Bloomberg first reported. Canada will join but won’t pay for the permanent seat, Carney said.

So far, the leaders of Hungary, Kazakhstan and Vietnam have accepted the invitation.

“Hungary’s efforts for peace are being recognised. President Trump has invited Hungary to join the work of The Board of Peace as a founding member. We have, of course, accepted this honourable invitation,” Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said.

An aide to Poland’s president Karol Nawrocki said Monday that he had also been invited and was considering his response, but pointed to Putin’s inclusion, noting that he was among leaders “seen at odds” with the Polish president. Prime Minister Donald Tusk subsequently posted on X that joining the board would require parliamentary approval, adding, “We will not let anyone play us.”

The executive committee of the board will include, among others, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and Ajay Banga, the head of the World Bank.

Politico report

Mezhova, in eastern Ukraine, in December. Ukrainian officials have likened their country’s recovery blueprint to the Marshall Plan, the U.S.-funded project to rebuild
Europe after World War I.