President Trump's Board of Peace, launched in January 2026 at Davos to oversee Gaza reconstruction and peacekeeping under UN Security Council auspices, secured 25 founding members by its February 19 Washington summit, including Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Indonesia, Pakistan, Hungary, and several Balkan and Central Asian states. No new countries have joined in the past 30 days amid diplomatic pushback from EU nations like France, Germany, and the UK, which have declined invitations citing concerns over the board's structure and exclusivity. With the March 31 deadline approaching, official White House or board announcements could trigger last-minute accessions, though trader consensus reflects low expectations for additions from remaining invitees such as Brazil, India, Russia, or Western holdouts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$3,340,485 Vol.
India
2%
Brazil
2%
U.K.
1%
Spain
1%
Belgium
1%
Sweden
1%
Italy
1%
Switzerland
1%
France
1%
Finland
1%
Russia
1%
Germany
1%
Norway
1%
Denmark
<1%
Netherlands
<1%
Palestine
<1%
China
<1%
Ukraine
<1%
$3,340,485 Vol.
India
2%
Brazil
2%
U.K.
1%
Spain
1%
Belgium
1%
Sweden
1%
Italy
1%
Switzerland
1%
France
1%
Finland
1%
Russia
1%
Germany
1%
Norway
1%
Denmark
<1%
Netherlands
<1%
Palestine
<1%
China
<1%
Ukraine
<1%
This market will resolve to “Yes” if the listed country joins the Board of Peace by March 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
A country will be considered to have joined the Board of Peace if either of the following conditions are met:
- That country's government publicly and definitively announces that the country will join the Board of Peace as a founding member, permanent member, or as any other type of member state.
- Official information from the country’s government or a consensus of credible reporting demonstrates that the listed country has formally joined the Board of Peace (e.g. an authorized representative has signed the charter of the Board of Peace).
Only statements or announcements which are definitive in their expression of intent to join the Board of Peace will qualify (e.g. “we agree to join the board of peace,” “we accepted an invitation to the board of peace,” etc.). Statements which are not definitive in their expression of intent to join (e.g. “we agree in principle”, “we will join pending further details”, “we are ready to do our part in working for the reconstruction of Gaza” etc.) will not count.
Qualifying announcements within this market’s timeframe will count regardless of when the relevant country intends to join the board of peace, or whether or not they ultimately join.
Statements from Donald Trump or the US government will not alone qualify.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the government of the listed country; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: Jan 21, 2026, 2:29 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will resolve to “Yes” if the listed country joins the Board of Peace by March 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
A country will be considered to have joined the Board of Peace if either of the following conditions are met:
- That country's government publicly and definitively announces that the country will join the Board of Peace as a founding member, permanent member, or as any other type of member state.
- Official information from the country’s government or a consensus of credible reporting demonstrates that the listed country has formally joined the Board of Peace (e.g. an authorized representative has signed the charter of the Board of Peace).
Only statements or announcements which are definitive in their expression of intent to join the Board of Peace will qualify (e.g. “we agree to join the board of peace,” “we accepted an invitation to the board of peace,” etc.). Statements which are not definitive in their expression of intent to join (e.g. “we agree in principle”, “we will join pending further details”, “we are ready to do our part in working for the reconstruction of Gaza” etc.) will not count.
Qualifying announcements within this market’s timeframe will count regardless of when the relevant country intends to join the board of peace, or whether or not they ultimately join.
Statements from Donald Trump or the US government will not alone qualify.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the government of the listed country; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...President Trump's Board of Peace, launched in January 2026 at Davos to oversee Gaza reconstruction and peacekeeping under UN Security Council auspices, secured 25 founding members by its February 19 Washington summit, including Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Indonesia, Pakistan, Hungary, and several Balkan and Central Asian states. No new countries have joined in the past 30 days amid diplomatic pushback from EU nations like France, Germany, and the UK, which have declined invitations citing concerns over the board's structure and exclusivity. With the March 31 deadline approaching, official White House or board announcements could trigger last-minute accessions, though trader consensus reflects low expectations for additions from remaining invitees such as Brazil, India, Russia, or Western holdouts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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Frequently Asked Questions