On the eve of his 2017 inauguration, Donald Trump made what might have been one of his boldest declarations to date—and that includes the one about how he invented the phrase “prime the pump.” Speaking at a black-tie dinner, the president-elect told the assembled group that despite decades of strife and years of failed attempts by people with deep expertise on the matter, he’d finally found the guy who was going to bring peace to the Middle East: his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, of the New Jersey Kushners. “If you can’t produce peace in the Middle East, nobody can,” Trump told his favorite kid’s husband. “All my life, I’ve been hearing that’s the toughest deal to make, but I have a feeling Jared is going to do a great job.” Given Kushner’s utter lack of foreign-policy experience, his deep financial ties to Israel, and his inability to secure a security clearance without his wife’s father demanding it, the idea that he would be the Middle East’s saving grace was initially met with a mixture of bewilderment and the sort of double-over laughter that typically precedes the question, “You’re shitting me, right?”

Two years later, that feeling has only intensified, given that 1) the relevant stakeholders have been totally kept in the dark on the particulars of Kushner’s plan, and 2) the details that have leaked are completely insane. To which Kushner has said: please, let’s not prejudge.

Speaking to about 100 ambassadors from across the globe at Blair House on Wednesday, Kushner urged the group to keep an “open mind” about his plan, which could be unveiled in June. “We will all have to look for reasonable compromises that will make peace achievable,” Kushner said, according to Reuters. You might forgive the assembled diplomats for not being super jazzed about what Kushner’s got in store. During a closed-door meeting with members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last month, King Abdullah II of Jordan—which borders the West Bank and has a majority-Palestinian population—reportedly told lawmakers that he’d been given “zero visibility into the most fraught part of the plan,” i.e., how it proposes to divide Israeli and Palestinian territory. (You know, minor details.) According to two sources who spoke with Axios, the king “seemed dissatisfied with the level of consultation and was pessimistic about the plan’s prospects,” having “privately told people he is frustrated by the fact that despite having numerous meetings with senior Trump administration officials, he’s never been given any detail about the core political issues, in which Jordan has a huge interest.”

Keeping key parties in the dark appears to be by design; last December, top Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said in an interview that he hadn’t met with Kushner in over a year and called the Boy Prince of New Jersey little more than a glorified real-estate agent, which, to be fair, is more or less accurate. Indeed, based on drafts of the plan that have leaked, Kushner appears to view this whole peace thing as little more than another real-estate deal. According to journalist Vicky Ward, whose book Kushner, Inc. was released last month, Kushner’s plan to end conflict in the Middle East allegedly involves requiring “the Saudis and Emiratis to provide economic assistance to the Palestinians” and a series of Byzantine land swaps.