UNITED NATIONS — President Donald Trump's latest attempt to sidestep the United Nations through his new Board of Peace appears to have inadvertently backfired after major world powers rejected U.S. aspirations for it to have a larger international mandate beyond the Gaza ceasefire and recommitted their support for the over 80-year-old global institution.
The board chaired by Trump was originally envisioned as a small group of world leaders overseeing his plan for Gaza's future. But the Republican president's ambitions have expanded to envisioning the board as a mediator of worldwide conflicts, a not very subtle attempt to eclipse the Security Council, which is charged with ensuring international peace and security.
The board's charter also caused some dismay by stating Trump will lead it until he resigns, with veto power over its actions and membership.
His secretary of state, Marco Rubio, tried ease concerns by saying the board's focus right now is only on the next phases of the Gaza ceasefire plan.
''This is not a replacement for the U.N., but the U.N. has served very little purpose in the case of Gaza other than the food assistance,'' Rubio said at a congressional hearing Wednesday.
But Trump's promotion of a broadened mandate and his floating of an idea that the Board of Peace ''might'' replace the U.N. has put off major players. In Security Council statements, public speeches and behind closed doors, U.S. allies and adversaries have dismissed Trump's latest plan to overturn the post-World War II international order with what he describes as a ''bold new approach to resolving global conflict.''
''The U.S. rollout of the much broader Board of Peace charter turned the whole exercise into a liability,'' according to the International Crisis Group's Richard Gowan, a U.N. watcher and program director. ''Countries that wanted to sign on to help Gaza saw the board turning into a Trump fan club. That was not appealing.''
''If Trump had kept the focus of the board solely on Gaza, more states, including some more Europeans, would have signed up,'' he said.