Welcome to Balance of Power, bringing you the latest in global politics. If you haven’t yet, sign up here. In US President Donald Trump’s mind, the announcement that the Nobel Peace Prize has again been given to someone else is certain to register as the latest ignominy in a lifetime of rejection by elites. The question for the rest of the world is how he might register that indignation given he made no secret of his desire for the award. Instead, it went to banned Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado “for her tireless work promoting democratic rights.” María Corina Machado. Photographer: Juan Barreto/Getty Images It was an astute move from the selection committee, which chafed at the heat coming from Trump. It will be hard for him to object to their decision given his own hard-line approach against the Maduro regime. The award – globally recognized and synonymous with excellence – is iconic in a way that Trump, an obsessive arbiter of brand strength, keenly appreciates. The fixation grew when Trump’s original political nemesis, Barack Obama, won the Nobel in 2009, just months after taking office. For Trump, the recognition revealed a rigged game, where prestige was reserved for those already accepted by a global order that had dismissed him as a brutish outsider. That frustration has only deepened since his return to the presidency. In Trump’s first term, he leveraged his relationships with Israeli and Arab leaders to strike a series of agreements thawing relations across the Middle East. But the world overlooked his achievements. Since returning to office, he has relentlessly pursued peace agreements. Some of the wars Trump claimed to end actually concluded hostilities years ago, others continue to see outbursts of violence. Yet this week’s announcement that the US and partners had brokered a hostage-release deal in the two-year conflict between Israel and Hamas was a genuine accomplishment. He’s travelling to the Middle East next week to welcome home the hostages. Should peace hold, there’s always next year’s Nobel. — Justin Sink Obama during the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo in December 2009. Photographer: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images |