Trump Says He Deserves Nobel Peace Prize After Claiming He Ended Eight Wars
Trump repeated the claim while boasting he ended eight wars, but there is no evidence for his assertion that 15 million people were beheaded.
9 Articles
9 Articles
Trump says he deserves Nobel Peace Prize after claiming he ended eight wars
Donald Trump again insisted he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize, claiming he ended eight wars, including one he said resulted in the beheadings of 15 million people. During a press gaggle aboard Air Force One, Trump told reporters, “Think of the wars I settled. Eight. Wars that were going on for 30 years. Even if you look in the Congo. The Congo vs. Rwanda. I settled it after 14 years and about 15 million people had their heads chopped off. I sett…
Is Trump Lying? POTUS Claims He Ended a 14-Year African War Where '15 Million Had Their Heads Chopped Off'
Donald Trump told reporters he single-handedly ended a war that beheaded 15 million people, a figure that outstrips the real death toll of the Rwanda-DRC conflict by roughly two-and-a-half times. He made the claim aboard Air Force One on 8 July 2026, returning from the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, listing it among eight wars he says he has personally settled. Checked against the US State Department's own record of the conflict, the death toll,…
As he bombs Iran, Trump demands Nobel Peace Prize for ending a war where 15 million were ‘beheaded’
Donald Trump spent Wednesday defending his claim that he deserves a Nobel Peace Prize, even as U.S. forces continued striking Iran and the ceasefire he spent weeks bragging about appeared to collapse. Flying home aboard Air Force One, Trump once again presented himself as the great global dealmaker, claiming he had ended eight wars and arguing that his supposed peace record made him more deserving of the award than anyone who has ever received i…
The majority of U.S. voters claim that President Donald Trump lacks a clear plan in the Iran war and many doubt that he is achieving the goals set. According to a poll published by the specialized political media, support for the military offensive is only 38 percent of Americans, a figure that has hardly changed since the offensive began on March 28. Most respondents claim that the war does not benefit the American people, and a plurality still…
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