Trump warned by conservative editor he surrendered to an 'ayatollah's wish list'
Politics

Trump warned by conservative editor he surrendered to an 'ayatollah's wish list'

April 8, 2026
Raw Story
Scroll

Donald Trump claims to have reached a successful but still evolving ceasefire agreement with Iran, but National Review editor Jim Geraghty has a different assessment: the president has been completely outmaneuvered and is poised to capitulate on nearly every significant demand.According to Geraghty's scathing analysis, Trump and Iran are describing fundamentally different agreements.

Trump warned by conservative editor he surrendered to an 'ayatollah's wish list'

The Iranian proposal includes concessions that represent a catastrophic setback for American national security interests.The Iranian demands include: Iran's continued control of the Strait of Hormuz, Iran's uranium enrichment right should be accepted, and Payment of compensation for damages inflicted on Iran.Trump celebrated the deal, writing: We received a 10 point proposal from Iran, and believe it is a workable basis on which to negotiate. Almost all of the various points of past contention have been agreed to between the United States and Iran, but a two week period will allow the Agreement to be finalized and consummated.Geraghty was not impressed. The first things that jumps out about President Trump and the Iranian government's statements is that the two sides seem to have a dramatically different sense of what they just agreed upon.His verdict on Iran's demands was withering: Your mileage may vary, but my answers to this list of demands would be 'depends upon how you define 'non-aggression'; no; no; heck no; hell no; [bad word] no; [even worse word] no; no [bad word]-ing way; absolutely no [bad word]-ing way; and you can stick this where the sun doesn't shine.'These are nine-and-a-half unreasonable and unrealistic demands, and a U.S. concession to just about any of them would represent a dreadful setback to American national security interests. This is an ayatollah's wish list, Geraghty wrote.The ceasefire is already unraveling, he noted with reporting that Bahrain claimed Iranian drones damaged homes after the announcement. The United Arab Emirates military said air defenses are actively engaging incoming Iranian missiles and drones. Israel declared its agreement to cease attacks on Iran doesn't include stopping strikes on targets in Lebanon. So far, this is a ceasefire in name only — a violent catastrophe dressed up as diplomacy, he suggested.

Raw Story
Raw Story

Coverage and analysis from United States of America. All insights are generated by our AI narrative analysis engine.

United States of America
Bias: left
You might also like

Explore More