
An unexpected show of respect just came from one of Donald Trump’s oldest political rivals and it’s turning heads around the world.
In a surprising moment during her appearance on the Raging Moderates podcast with commentator Jessica Tarlov, Hillary Clinton said she would personally nominate President Donald J. Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. She added that this would only happen if he convinces Vladimir Putin to withdraw Russian forces from all invaded Ukrainian territory and rules out any territorial swaps.
“If he pulls that off…”
Speaking to political commentator Jessica Tarlov, Clinton acknowledged the stakes surrounding Trump’s upcoming summit with Vladimir Putin, which is set to take place at the Elmendorf-Richardson military base in Alaska.
“If we could pull that off, if President Trump were the architect of that, I’d nominate him for a Nobel Peace Prize,” she said.
But Clinton, ever the cautious diplomat, stressed that no territorial concessions to Russia could be part of the deal. “I don’t want to allow a capitulation to Putin,” she explained.
Still, the fact remains: Clinton is on record saying she’d support Trump for one of the world’s most prestigious honors, if he can deliver peace.
Global support building — and pressure rising
Behind the scenes, the White House is reportedly “very serious” about helping Trump secure the prize, per The Hill, seeing it as the ultimate capstone to how history will remember him.
And the momentum isn’t just domestic. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, and leaders from Pakistan, Rwanda, and Gabon have all publicly backed a Nobel nomination for Trump, following a series of ceasefires and peace deals brokered under his administration.
In fact, Trump has reportedly brokered about one peace agreement or ceasefire per month over the first six months of his second term, according to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt.
The summit, the stakes — and the optics
Trump’s high-stakes meeting with Putin will mark their first face-to-face in six years. Ahead of the summit, he made it clear that Russia faces “very severe” consequences if peace talks don’t progress.
Putin, meanwhile, is sending top brass, including foreign minister Sergey Lavrov, who drew attention by arriving in a Soviet-branded sweatshirt.
The summit’s location at a U.S. military base is being seen as a bold symbolic move that’s already drawing comparisons to historic meetings held in Anchorage, including Nixon’s 1971 sit-down with Japan’s Emperor Hirohito and Biden’s 2021 talks with Chinese officials.
A legacy moment in motion?
From bold warnings aboard Air Force One to public praise from past rivals, the moment is shaping up to be a defining test of Trump’s global leadership.
And for a president who’s long said he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize?
This might be his clearest path yet to claiming it.