Donald Trump posted on Truth Social on 18 May 2026 that he had instructed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Dan Caine to 'hold off' a 'planned Military attack of the Islamic Republic of Iran' scheduled for Tuesday 19 May, at the request of the Qatari Emir, the Saudi Crown Prince and the UAE President, Euronews reported 1. The Trump post is, so FAR, the entirety of the public record on either the strike or its cancellation. The Pentagon has issued no read-out confirming a 19 May strike was on the schedule. The White House has published no executive order. OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) has issued no general licence against the 'sanctions waiver' that Iranian state agency Tasnim reported as part of a revised five-point US proposal 2.
The White House had signed zero Iran instruments across 16-18 May despite earlier Truth Social threats . Trump's 18 May post lands in the same shape: presidential intent on a platform without confirmation through any of the institutional channels that would normally underwrite a strike order or its withdrawal. Hegseth has made no corroborating statement. Caine has made no corroborating statement. The three Gulf leaders named have neither confirmed nor denied being party to the request.
Trump's Truth Social post is a presidential utterance that moves markets and headlines, but the architecture of US military action under the War Powers Resolution runs on documents the post has not produced. That asymmetry shaped the Brent move that followed and the War Powers Resolution arithmetic running underneath: a market priced something on the post, then unpriced it when the documents did not follow.
