On March 24, 2026, Trump told reporters there were “15 points” in a purported ceasefire plan and emphasized Iran “not” having a nuclear weapon as a top demand (per the article text).
On March 25, 2026, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters the White House “never confirmed” a full 15-point plan, said some reporting was “not entirely factual,” and warned against “speculative” plans attributed to anonymous sources (per the article text).
The article says reporting described U.S. demands including dismantling Iranian nuclear capabilities, curbing proxies, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, and limiting missiles to self-defense, while Iranian officials and state media characterized the proposal as excessive/unreasonable (per the article text).
The article describes indirect communications via Pakistan (as Iran’s interests section in the U.S.) and says Gulf intermediaries are constrained because they are dealing with Iranian attacks (per the article text).
Leavitt also delivered an explicit escalation threat (“unleash hell”) if Iran does not return to the negotiating table (per the article text).
The Pentagon confirmed deployments including elements of the 82nd Airborne Division and the 1st Brigade Combat Team to the Middle East (per the article text; corroborated by other reporting).