The Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), a Washington think tank focused on Iran sanctions, found that General License X carries no escrow mechanism, no value cap, no approved-buyer list and no transaction reporting requirement 1. The licence is the OFAC instrument Treasury Secretary Bessent signed on 22 June , the first oil-relief paper of the war after 116 days of sanctions.
That absence of architecture changes what the licence does. Rather than relief for Iran, the FDD reads it as a 60-day safe harbour for the Chinese refiners and banks already buying Iranian crude through workarounds: it legalises the trade that was happening anyway, without recording who buys, how much, or at what price.
The revenue at stake makes the gap consequential. The FDD estimated roughly one-third of Iran's annual oil income, about $12.4 billion, flows to the IRGC and the armed forces, the same actors holding the nuclear file shut. No bank or trader had publicly disclosed a transaction under the licence as of 23-24 June. The signed paper exists; the enforcement that would make it accountable does not.
