Claims circulating online assert that eight Islamic countries' foreign ministers, including Arab states, welcomed an invitation from United States President Donald J. Trump to join a Board of Peace. Our review finds this claim to be false, misleading, and unverified. There is no credible primary source?no White House press release, no State Department briefing, and no major outlet reporting such an invitation or the existence of a Board of Peace. Official accounts do not corroborate any of these statements. The assertion relies on a single, unverified post or rumor rather than verifiable documentation. Editors should require named sources and official documents before reporting on high-stakes diplomacy.
Why Indian media and some social accounts linked the incident to Pakistan? Analysis shows misattribution and sensationalism. Certain Indian outlets and social profiles circulated the claim with provocative headlines and generic references to an Islamic bloc, using miscaptioned images or vague captions to imply Pakistani involvement. This documents an classic misinformation tactic: attribution drift and engagement-driven framing. There is no evidence that Pakistan was involved or even mentioned in any credible source.
How should readers verify? Check official channels (White House, State Department) and established wire services for contemporaneous reporting and named sources. Be wary of posts lacking authors, dates, or primary documents. Until credible documentation emerges, treat this as misinformation. The claim should be debunked and dismissed pending verifiable proof.