Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
4JUN

OFAC issues GL-W on same Friday

3 min read
11:25UTC

Hours after Trump's letter declared hostilities ended, OFAC dispatched General Licence W, three new SDN designations, and a Hormuz toll alert enforcing the war the letter says is over.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

OFAC's same-day GL-W enforces against the war Trump's letter says has already ended.

OFAC, the Office of Foreign Assets Control inside the US Treasury, issued General Licence W on Friday 1 May, designated three Iranian foreign exchange houses and the Panama-flagged tanker NEW FUSION to the SDN (Specially Designated Nationals) list, and published a sanctions alert naming the Iranian Red Crescent Society, Bonyad Mostazafan and Iranian embassy accounts as prohibited Hormuz toll payment channels 1. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's name is on the alert: OFAC will 'relentlessly target the regime's ability to generate, move, and repatriate funds' 2.

GL-W is the sixth Iran General Licence of the war and the first dispatched after the briefing's first Russia-only OFAC day on 29 April . It draws its authority from Executive Orders 13902 (Iran additional sectors) and 13224 (counterterrorism), routed through Treasury bureau action rather than presidential signature. The package is the enforcement counter-text to Mojtaba Khamenei's 30 April reassertion of Iranian sovereignty over the Strait .

The contradiction with the WPR letter Trump signed earlier the same Friday is not rhetorical. Each instrument is a real US government document dated 1 May 2026. One declares hostilities terminated; the other enforces against the regime's wartime conduct. A correspondent bank running Iran-exposed compliance now has two signatures of equal legal weight pointing in opposite directions, and the sanctions alert lists charity rails as toll routes for the first time, which means a transfer to the Iranian Red Crescent Society is now a designated payment channel rather than a humanitarian exception.

The alert's choice of channels matters at the operational level. Naming charity, embassy and FX-House routes simultaneously closes the workarounds bank compliance teams had been quietly using to keep humanitarian-tagged flows moving. The ladder from this alert to a second tier of designations, against named recipients of toll payments rather than the categories, is the next visible step on the enforcement track.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OFAC is the US Treasury office that enforces economic sanctions: essentially a list of people, companies, and ships that Americans and most international businesses cannot deal with. On 1 May, OFAC added three Iranian money-exchange companies and one oil tanker called NEW FUSION to its blacklist. It also published a warning naming specific Iranian organisations, including the Red Crescent charity, as channels that cannot be used to pay Iran's Hormuz shipping toll fees. The package landed on the same day as Trump's letter declaring the war over, leaving international banks with two contradictory US government instructions dated the same day.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OFAC's cadence reflects a structural decision made early in the war: use sanctions as the primary coercive instrument because executive orders authorising kinetic operations have not been signed.

Treasury can issue general licences and SDN designations under pre-existing executive orders (E.O. 13902 and E.O. 13224) without new presidential authority. The result is that sanctions have been the one continuously escalating track throughout the conflict, even on days when the diplomatic and military tracks stalled.

The inclusion of Bonyad Mostazafan (a foundation with a $95 billion asset base per its own reports, which has served as an IRGC financial vehicle since the 1979 revolution) reflects Treasury's assessment that the toll-enforcement architecture relies on foundation transfers to avoid direct government-to-government payment flows that would be instantly sanctionable.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The same-day WPR termination letter and OFAC sanctions package leave compliance officers at international banks holding two contradictory US government signals dated 1 May, with no OLC guidance clarifying which takes precedence.

  • Risk

    Naming the Iranian Red Crescent Society as a prohibited channel (even for toll payments only) may reduce international NGO willingness to transfer funds through Iranian humanitarian organisations, damaging civilian relief capacity inside the country.

First Reported In

Update #86 · Trump signs paper. The paper ends the war.

Bangor Daily News· 2 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
China
China
Beijing's MOFCOM Blocking Rules constrain OFAC enforcement on the mainland; China has not corroborated Trump's verbal account of any bilateral summit, and the rial's failure to hold its Rubio bounce, combined with the IRGC's stablecoin rail closure, increases Chinese yuan-denominated oil-payment exposure through Hormuz.
Israel
Israel
IDF Chief Zamir said on 3 June there is no ceasefire for his forces even as Israel signed the Washington Lebanon framework requiring Hezbollah withdrawal south of the Litani; a UNIFIL peacekeeper was killed by mortar near Marjayoun on the same day, exposing the gap between the diplomatic framework and a ground advance that has not stopped.
Bahrain
Bahrain
The IRGC struck Bahrain on 3 June as its sirens sounded and its PAC-3 magazine neared exhaustion; excluded from Rubio's 2 May emergency resupply, Bahrain received a 50-round Federal Register notice on 1 June on an 18-month delivery timeline, meaning it is defending the US Fifth Fleet headquarters on the last rounds it has.
Qatar
Qatar
Qatar offered $6bn under OFAC Licence L-2 restrictions and sent Ghalibaf's delegation home empty-handed; the $6bn ceiling is a legal constraint, not a negotiating floor, and Rubio's no-sanctions-relief testimony means Qatar cannot revise it without White House action that has not been requested.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait expelled two Iranian diplomats within 24 hours of the airport strike, the strongest and fastest Kuwaiti diplomatic move of the conflict, while keeping the full mission in place to preserve a communication channel; it has now invoked Article 51 self-defence, filed a formal protest, and expelled diplomats, exhausting its formal toolkit short of full rupture.
United States
United States
Trump narrated a weekend deal while the channel Rubio described under oath, Khamenei's written-only couriers with a 3-to-5-day lag, cannot answer at that speed; CENTCOM called the airport strike deliberate, calculated and unjustified. The House 215-208 vote gave Congress its first on-record war-powers position against the deployment Trump has run without a signed instrument for 96 days.