OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) published Iran General Licence V in the Federal Register on 10 June (document 2026-11614), alongside fresh Iran SDN designations the same day. 1 OFAC is the US Treasury arm that writes and enforces sanctions, and a General Licence is the carve-out that lets specified transactions proceed without breaching them. GL V is the successor to GL U, which authorised Iranian crude loaded by 20 March through a 19 April expiry that has since lapsed; GL V extends that delivery and sale chain to a later cutoff.
The waiver plumbing now runs on two tracks simultaneously. Russia's General License 134C covers in-transit Russian crude only through 17 June , and Secretary of State Marco Rubio's 5 June line that Washington wants the Russian waivers ended as soon as possible framed that date as the binding event for the market. Yet OFAC extended a parallel Iranian authorisation a week before it, a move desks pricing the Russian clock alone have largely missed.
The GL 134 series and the Iran GL series run on independent calendars, so reading only the Russia leg misprices what stranded supply remains legally clearable after 17 June. If Iranian barrels stay in compliant transit while Russian cover expires, the supply withdrawn from the market is smaller than a single-clock reading implies. The exact GL V loading-cutoff and expiry terms were not retrievable while OFAC's pages were blocked, leaving the precise size of that residual window open. 2
