Trump to review latest Iran proposal, but ‘can’t imagine it would be acceptable’

Published May 3, 2026 1:49am ET | Updated May 3, 2026 11:25am ET



President Donald Trump told reporters on Saturday afternoon that he will review Iran’s latest 14-point proposal before saying on Truth Social that he “can’t imagine that it would be acceptable.”

The comments followed Tehran’s submission of a 14-point plan to the United States, according to Iran’s Tasnim news agency, a media outlet affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, according to CNN.

Trump spoke to reporters before boarding a plane in Palm Beach, Florida, where he was asked about the latest updates regarding the Iran war.

“We’re doing very well with regard to Iran,” Trump said. “They want to make a deal.” When asked specifically about the latest 14-point plan, the president said. “I’m looking at it,” and “I’ll let you know about it later.”

Trump said he would “soon be reviewing the plan that Iran has just sent to us” in a Truth Social post before claiming that a deal is unlikely since “they have not yet paid a big enough price for what they have done to Humanity, and the World, over the last 47 years.”

Tasnim reported that Iran rejected a proposed two-month ceasefire from the U.S., instead stating that “the issues should be resolved within 30 days” and stipulating that negotiations between the two countries must focus on ending the war rather than an extended ceasefire.

Key points of the plan include:

  • The release of frozen Iranian assets.
  • The removal of sanctions.
  • The introduction of a “new mechanism for the Strait of Hormuz.”
  • An end to fighting in Lebanon.

Other demands include “guarantees against future military aggression, the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iran’s periphery, an end to the naval blockade, payment of reparations, [and] the lifting of sanctions,” NPR reported.

Trump’s comments came the day after he was quoted as saying that the U.S. may “be better off not making a deal.” He also sent a letter to Congress claiming that hostilities with Iran had been ‘terminated’ as a 60-day deadline for congressional approval loomed via the War Powers Resolution of 1973.

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The Iranian leadership in Tehran has consistently refused to give up its pursuit of nuclear weapons since the start of the conflict on Feb. 28. Trump also gave an update on the blockade, stating that “nobody’s even challenging it.”

The plan was submitted through an intermediary in Pakistan, Tasnim reported.