What if Donald Trump were to receive the Nobel Peace Prize? The very idea seems so magnificently audacious that one might, not without a touch of dark humor, compare it to awarding the adult film star Rocco Siffredi the Nobel Prize for virtue. And yet, looking past the initial satire, this deeply controversial candidacy raises profound and urgent questions for the entire world. It places the Norwegian Nobel committee before a monumental geopolitical dilemma, a true "Gordian choice" from which there is no easy escape. To award him the prize would be to legitimize a worldview many find alarming; to deny him would be to risk the unpredictable wrath of a volatile global leader. Hedy Belhassine explores the portrait of a president whose diplomacy is described as little more than "racket disguised as diplomacy," a brand of extortion so potent it would allegedly make Al Capone look like an amateur. For sure, there are growing concerns surrounding his cognitive capacities, which have led to a darkly comic scenario where European leaders are reportedly advised to manage him with flattery rather than facts. In this explosive context, an unexpected figure emerges as a potential key player: Melania Trump. Could she, in the manner of a modern-day Eleanor Roosevelt, become the quiet, stabilizing force behind an erratic presidency? Could she be the one to discreetly influence the destiny of Europe and Ukraine, saving them from what some fear could be a shameful and catastrophic sell-off?