The verdict from Oslo is in, and it is unequivocal: consensus trumps coercion. The 2025 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to María Corina Machado, a master of consensus-building, over Donald Trump, a practitioner of coercive diplomacy, is a clear statement of the committee’s preferred path to peace.
Machado’s entire Nobel-winning achievement was her ability to persuade a fractured opposition to find common ground. Her power is the power of dialogue and compromise.
Trump’s diplomatic style, often described as “peace through strength,” relies on the threat of coercion, whether through economic sanctions, tariffs, or military power. He brings parties to the table by creating leverage and applying pressure.
The White House statement celebrated this coercive power, lauding his “sheer force of will” to make things happen.
The Nobel committee, however, has endorsed a more sustainable model. A peace agreement forged through willing consensus is more likely to last than one forged under duress. By honoring Machado, they have honored the difficult but ultimately more durable work of building a peace that everyone can agree on.