Steve Bannon's master plan for the White House may have just been shared with the internet.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, a contributor to Breitbart News, paid a visit to the White House on Tuesday in honor of Israel's Independence Day.

Afterward, the rabbi shared a selfie he took with the White House senior adviser on Twitter.

The two posed for the photo in front of the whiteboard in Bannon's office where he keeps his "master plans," according to Mashable. You can see it in the background of the picture.

With @SteveBannon in the White House on #israelindependenceday. Steve is a great, stalwart friend of the Jewish State pic.twitter.com/PFxSCK7blc — Rabbi Shmuley (@RabbiShmuley) May 2, 2017

With Steve Bannon and Debbie at the White House on #IsraelIndependenceDay2017. Thank u Steve for your love of Israel pic.twitter.com/xrU4nLUyYU — Rabbi Shmuley (@RabbiShmuley) May 2, 2017

According to Axios, visitors say that the "ominous" whiteboard is covered in campaign promises, and Bannon checks them off once they are accomplished. A list of the items on his so-called master plan has not been released to the public until now.

Here are some of the visible points on the whiteboard:

"Repeal and replace Obamacare"

"Eliminate the estate tax"

"Sunset our visa laws so that Congress is forced to revise and revisit them"

"Suspend immigration from terror-prone regions"

"Triple the number of ICE agents"

"Build the border wall and eventually make Mexico..."

"Suspend the Syrian Refugee Program"

This is not the first time that hard copies of important documents have been accidentally released to the public in a photo.

During Trump's November meeting with Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who was being considered for a position in the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the two posed for a photo outside of Trump's New Jersey golf course.

The camera caught a clear picture of Kobach's planning pages, which included his plans to begin "extreme vetting" for immigrants and start a de-facto Muslim registry.

Kobach was never offered a position at the White House, and a judge last month ordered him to release the notes as part of a lawsuit over Kansas' voting laws.

See photos of Bannon: