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    516 points pykello | 23 comments | | HN request time: 0.002s | source | bottom
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    madacol ◴[] No.45537701[source]
    Even if Venezuela goes to hell even deeper, she still deserves the prize for what she has already done!

    The way she, and her team, managed to convince venezuelans that the election mattered, and to prepare to gather the evidence of the elections under constant threats from the government, that we all knew they were going to steal, and do it entirely peacefully, was an extremely impressive achievement on its own.

    What an impressive act of coordination from MCM

    :standing-ovation:

    replies(3): >>45538013 #>>45540593 #>>45541062 #
    yostrovs[dead post] ◴[] No.45538013[source]
    [flagged]
    bmmayer1 ◴[] No.45538260[source]
    Who would you give the Nobel Peace Prize to?
    replies(3): >>45538481 #>>45538537 #>>45538865 #
    1. delichon ◴[] No.45538537[source]
    From the New York Times "The Daily" podcast today:

      Mark, what you've described and what we're seeing unfold is genuinely an impressive feat by Trump. To be able to capitalize on what seemed like this giant setback. Israel literally bombed the negotiators and the mediators. To turn that around and get a deal that Biden couldn't get done, that no other leader in the world had managed despite trying for two years straight. It is significant achievement. He was able to bring these sides together that had shown no willingness to end the war. And now they've come to this agreement. And it should also be said that one of the biggest things here is that he was willing to put pressure on Netanyahu in a way that President Biden was unwilling to do. Why do you think that's the case?
      I think there's a few reasons. First, I think Trump genuinely wanted to end the war. He campaigned on ending the war in Ukraine and in Gaza.
    
    Too late for this year, but if it holds it should be considered for next year.
    replies(9): >>45538697 #>>45538720 #>>45538779 #>>45538789 #>>45538879 #>>45538895 #>>45539106 #>>45539147 #>>45539380 #
    2. bobchadwick ◴[] No.45538697[source]
    "...he was willing to put pressure on Netanyahu in a way that President Biden was unwilling to do."

    Unwilling or unable? Netanyahu hated Biden and has done everything in his power to sabotage anything Democrats have done to try to help resolve the conflict, even prior to Oct 7.

    replies(2): >>45538736 #>>45539742 #
    3. raverbashing ◴[] No.45538720[source]
    Yeah it might be eligible but the academy won't change an upcoming winner in only a few days
    replies(1): >>45539529 #
    4. estearum ◴[] No.45538736[source]
    Not even sure there's evidence of the pressure? What pressure?

    Trump let Netanyahu run roughshod, and the proposed peace agreement (which almost certainly won't hold) is pretty... let's say vague... about the plan for Gaza post hostage-release.

    All that's happened here is another agreement to exchange hostages for prisoners, which has happened multiple times in this war already. Not much else is actually agreed to and obviously even less has actually happened.

    5. jeltz ◴[] No.45538779[source]
    Trump does not fit the criteria set out by Alfred Nobel. By increasing the NATO spending he worked against "the abolition or reduction of standing armies" and he has made the "fraternity between nations" a lot worse with random threats which I doubt would weight up his "promotion of peace congresses".

    I really hope they would not award someone the prize who works so blatantly against the word and spirit of the criteria in the will.

    replies(1): >>45538935 #
    6. thechao ◴[] No.45538789[source]
    This is like buying tickets to watch your favorite sports team win first place. It's good to support the boys, but you'd didn't do anything. The rest of Trump's thinly veiled autocratic tendencies — whether they're rhetoric aimed to rile up opponents or real goals — have done little to promote fraternity amongst nations & people.
    replies(1): >>45539749 #
    7. hopelite ◴[] No.45538879[source]
    Far more importantly, this might force Trump to continue the pressure on the Israelis, whose very nature is to be untrustworthy, not worth trusting, since they love not just violating agreements but also using agreements as a lever for abuse. There are all the typical Israeli fingerprints all over the current deal that the Israelis will likely use to bring the whole thing back down around Trump unless he can maintain pressure. This prize increases the slim likelihood that he will have to of he covers that prize as much as it seems he does. I do not think he can or will though, and the Israelis may just even persuade him that they have a far more juicy prize to offer him instead.

    I think Trump wanted to force the rather compromised committee to make a similarly foolish decision as giving Obama the prize, which would have then permitted immediate Israeli breach of the settlement.

    Not to take away from Machado’s work, but this year’s prize is at the very least political, to both appease Trump in line with the above and also send a message in the face of the war build-up against Venezuela. At the same time their decision also facilitates the American takeover through less than lethal means by CIA revolution and the combined pressure of it all on the Venezuelan government. Machado is in fact a CIA asset, whether she realizes it or not.

    replies(1): >>45539568 #
    8. d--b ◴[] No.45538895[source]
    It should be considered all right, but the committee is also going to look at the whole person and Trump isn't exactly the Gandhi-like figure you'd expect to win the prize.

    I think Trump genuinely doesn't like people being killed, but he's also driving a wedge in the US that can't be ignored. Sending American troops against its own citizen: not exactly Nobel-prize worthy.

    replies(2): >>45539596 #>>45540042 #
    9. Izkata ◴[] No.45538935[source]
    Those criteria sound like they should disqualify the person who actually got it.
    replies(1): >>45539162 #
    10. idiotsecant ◴[] No.45539106[source]
    It remains to be seen if this turns into anything. He deliberately misunderstood the Palestinians and made the proclamation that everything was fixed. The Palestinians have to give up some major things for this to work, things they were previously unwilling to do, and are probably still unwilling to do.
    11. chimprich ◴[] No.45539147[source]
    > To turn that around and get a deal that Biden couldn't get done,

    Biden had different pressures. E.g. I suspect that he judged that the knife-edge election he was facing didn't allow him enough leeway to put more pressure on Israel.

    In addition Netanyahu made it easier to force through a settlement given he'd manage to alienate practically everyone, including uniting the Arab world after that unbelievable strike on Doha.

    If you were a cynical person you could also ask whether this settlement owes anything to Trump's personal narcissist saviour complex or need to distract from domestic issues such as the Epstein files...

    Still, even despite some significant scepticism about Trump's motives, I think there is a reasonable case to be made for awarding him the prize. It was still a significant (maybe even brave) jump to break with American political orthodoxy to put this kind of pressure on Israel, and the practical result of this could be very significant in terms of saving lives and potentially long-term peace in the region. We also need to encourage these kind of acts, even (or especially) amongst unlikely peacemakers like Trump.

    Let's see what it looks like next year, though. Middle East peace deals don't have a great history of holding together.

    replies(1): >>45539961 #
    12. jeltz ◴[] No.45539162{3}[source]
    Perhaps, but I was talking about Trump now. He would be a pretty big violation of the spirit of the will even if he would not be the first such.

    I will personally try to refrain from commenting on the Venezuelan opposition since I do not know enough about them.

    replies(1): >>45539399 #
    13. Hikikomori ◴[] No.45539380[source]
    Biden wasn't even trying though.
    14. Izkata ◴[] No.45539399{4}[source]
    I hadn't heard of her either before today, I'm basing that on what people have said here - all good for sure, but unrelated to those criteria.
    15. lb1lf ◴[] No.45539529[source]
    The nominations for this year's prize closed January 31st; anyone doing anything worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize after that date may be considered for next year.
    16. Zigurd ◴[] No.45539568[source]
    Machado is in fact a CIA asset, whether she realizes it or not.

    If you think Eastern Europe was liberated without involvement from the CIA, which has a mixed history w.r.t. competent ops in that region, I've got a Nobel prize to sell you.

    17. dormento ◴[] No.45539596[source]
    > I think Trump genuinely doesn't like people being killed

    While I do understand this might be true in essence, things are a lot more complicated. He's said some heinous things that riled up actual loonies into a frenzy more than once. Deliberately. Not peace price material IMHO.

    (To be fair, I generally lean left, but I don't agree with Obama getting the prize in 2009 as well, what with the targeted assassination program and all)

    Its almost like there should be a Nobel "anti-prize" denouncing these people.

    18. Hikikomori ◴[] No.45539742[source]
    Unwilling. Biden has been a Zionist and Netanyahu/Likud supporter for decades. They put on a show in press briefings but did nothing behind closed doors, instead kept supplying them.
    19. day_visit ◴[] No.45539749[source]
    "I dedicate this prize to the suffering people of Venezuela and to President Trump for his decisive support of our cause!"

    -María Corina Machado 9:34 AM · Oct 10, 2025

    replies(2): >>45539957 #>>45539972 #
    20. thechao ◴[] No.45539957{3}[source]
    "Political expediency makes for strange bedfellows, news at 11!"

    I'm not even sure I'm against everything Trump is up to (it's unclear to me); I just don't like the autocratic moves: it's unamerican, and bad for democracy. It's setting a standard & an allowable behavior that could be exploited by bad people.

    21. specialist ◴[] No.45539961[source]
    I would love full transparency to the Biden Admin's dealings wrt Israel.

    I've wondered if one of the (under reported) pressures was the realpolitik geopolitical machinations of containing Iran. Especially wrt Iran's closer ties with Russia and China.

    But even with insight, I would not forgive.

    The whole thing just angers and saddens me. Neighbors killing neighbors. For nothing.

    So many missed opportunities, snafus. Imagine what could have been. Normalization between USA-Iran (post-9/11, pre- "Axis of Evil"). Some kind of accommodation for coexistence. Nurturing democracy and development throughout the middle east.

    And on and on. Going back decades, generations, ...

    22. ineedasername ◴[] No.45539972{3}[source]
    This is, as yet, being reported in contradictory ways when I went looking to see if it was correct so here’s the link to where she appears to do this, assuming the post is authentic (no reason to believe otherwise but these days…)

    https://x.com/MariaCorinaYA/status/1976642376119549990

    23. walls ◴[] No.45540042[source]
    > I think Trump genuinely doesn't like people being killed

    This is a strange thought considering his actions.

    Between drone strikes, mishandling of COVID, dismantling of foreign aid, defunding American health care, cutting off Ukraine support at several critical moments, encouraging and materially supporting Israel, he may actually end up (or already be) responsible for the most deaths of any president.