Macron declined to join the board, an initiative floated by Trump last year as part of his plan to mediate the Gaza war and, more broadly, global conflicts. Macron has not publicly endorsed the forum.

Trump lashed out publicly, mocking Macron’s political future and claiming the tariff threat would force compliance. “I’ll put a 200% tariff on his wines and champagnes and he’ll join,” Trump said—before adding that Macron “doesn’t have to join.”

What is the ‘Board of Peace’?

The Board of Peace was proposed by Trump in September as a high-level mediation platform. While initially linked to Gaza, it has since been framed as a broader global conflict-resolution body—without clear international backing.

Is this just rhetoric or a real policy threat?

For now, it’s a threat, not a signed order. But Trump has a track record of using tariffs as diplomatic leverage, especially against allies, making markets and governments take such statements seriously.

How does France fit into the broader dispute?

Despite tensions, Macron has continued outreach. He invited Trump for a post-Davos G7 meeting in Paris and suggested broader coordination on Syria, Iran and Ukraine while openly questioning Trump’s stance on Greenland.

What does this say about Trump’s approach to diplomacy?

It reinforces a familiar pattern: economic coercion over consensus, public pressure over private negotiation, and the blending of trade policy with personal and political grievances.

(ANI and yMedia are content partners for this story)

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