White House: Trump Threw Iran’s Plan In the Garbage | DISCUSS

On Wednesday, April 8, 2026, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt clarified that President Trump has officially rejected the public 10-point peace plan proposed by Tehran.

While the President had earlier characterized a proposal from Iran as a "workable basis" for talks, Leavitt stated that the specific document released to the public by the Iranian government was "literally thrown in the garbage" by the President.


The Conflict Over the "Two Plans"

The confusion stems from the existence of two different versions of the 10-point proposal:

The Public Plan (Rejected): This version, released by Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency, included demands that the U.S. previously labeled as non-starters, such as a total U.S. military withdrawal from the Middle East and Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz.

The "Workable" Plan (Negotiable): Leavitt suggested that the plan the U.S. is actually considering—delivered via Pakistani mediators—is significantly different from the public version. This second plan focuses on a 15-to-20-day negotiation window and an immediate reopening of the Strait.

No Lebanon Deal: The White House emphasized that neither plan includes a ceasefire in Lebanon, despite claims from the Iranian Foreign Ministry that the truce must cover all fronts.

Strategic Objectives vs. Iranian Demands

FeatureIran's Public 10-Point PlanTrump's Negotiating Basis
Status"Thrown in the Garbage"."Workable Basis".
U.S. ForcesDemand for total withdrawal.U.S. presence to remain.
Strait of HormuzIran to collect transit fees.Must be open and free.
SanctionsImmediate lifting of all sanctions.Subject to "definitive agreement".
Nuclear ProgramGuaranteed "right to enrich"Rollback and IAEA monitoring.

Next Steps for Friday's Summit

Despite the harsh rhetoric, the Islamabad Summit is still scheduled to proceed this Friday:

Framework: Negotiations will be based on a U.S. 15-point framework, not the Iranian 10-point public plan.

Deadline: The two-week ceasefire remains in effect until Tuesday, April 21, after which the U.S. has threatened to resume strikes on Iran's power grid if no deal is reached.

Mediator Role: Pakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif is currently working to reconcile the two vastly different proposals to prevent a collapse of the truce.

“The President is not working from Iran's list of demands. He is working from a position of strength and expects a definitive agreement on our terms.” — Karoline Leavitt.

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