UNITED NATIONS — President Donald Trump's ambition for the ''Board of Peace'' to play a role in global conflicts beyond Gaza appears to be the latest U.S. attempt to sidestep the U.N. Security Council, raising new questions about the relevance of the 80-year-old world body and uncertainty about its future as a primary force in brokering peace worldwide.
Trump is establishing the board, to be composed largely of invited heads of state, as the U.N. has embarked on major reforms intended to modernize an organization founded on the ashes of World War II and make it a more viable global player in the 21st century.
A decades-long reform effort gained new impetus after the Trump administration last year set out to eliminate billions of dollars in funding to international organizations and humanitarian assistance at large.
Cutting life-saving humanitarian efforts, consolidating major agencies and moving personnel out of New York headquarters are just a few of the changes the U.N. has made as it courts continued support from the U.S., traditionally its largest donor.
Trump and his allies have blasted the organization for not reaching its full potential and accused it of having ''bloated'' and redundant agencies that push ''woke'' ideology. The U.S. refused to pay its mandatory dues to the U.N. last year.
The Security Council — the U.N.'s most powerful body with the clout to authorize military action — has failed in recent years to end wars, including in Gaza and Ukraine. It's a point Trump has hit on since the beginning of his second term and he did so again several times this week.
''The U.N. just hasn't been very helpful. I'm a big fan of the U.N.'s potential, but it has never lived up to its potential,'' Trump told reporters during a White House press briefing. ''The U.N. should have settled every one of the wars that I settled. I never went to them. I never even thought to go to them.''
Despite his complaints, he added that ''I believe you got to let the U.N. continue, because the potential is so great.''