Trump’s “Board of Peace” was pitched as a bold shortcut around slow global institutions, with a $1 billion price tag for permanent membership and Washington firmly in charge. Some governments signed on. Many others, including key U.S. allies, quietly declined. The Vatican watched, waited, and measured not only the proposal itself, but what it would mean to stand beside it. When Cardinal Pietro Parolin finally spoke, the message was unmistakable: peace, especially in places like Gaza, must be pursued through inclusive, established institutions such as the United Nations, not through exclusive clubs built on financial entry and national leadership.
By refusing, Pope Leo preserved something the Holy See values more than access or influence: moral and diplomatic independence. The Vatican signaled that true peacemaking demands neutrality, shared responsibility, and protection of the vulnerable over political theater. Trump’s initiative may still move forward with willing partners, but it will do so without the moral cover Rome could have provided. In global diplomacy, that absence speaks as loudly as any speech.