The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated Globe International SPC of Muscat on 18 June, naming the firm as a financial node in the network of Hezbollah facilitator Alaa Hamieh 1. The action was a counter-terrorism designation, not Iran sanctions relief, and it accompanied OFAC's same-day move against Hezbollah figures Sleiman Frangieh and Mahmoud Qamati . Through 21 June, OFAC issued no Iran general licence and delisted no Iranian entity 2.
Oman is mediating the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), hosting the territorial-waters lane that now carries the strait's traffic, and now hosting an entity Washington has just sanctioned. The same week Muscat became the strait's practical gatekeeper, it also became a sanctions target's registered address.
For Iran itself, OFAC has issued no instrument at all. the MOU's sanctions-relief and blockade provisions were meant to land within 48 hours of the 16 June signing . Five days on, The White House Presidential Actions register carries nothing on Iran 3. Washington ended its 66-day naval blockade on 18 June as promised , the cheapest of its obligations to fulfil, and left every costly one to a final agreement it has not drafted.
OFAC can move fast when it wants to designate, as the Globe International action shows, yet has issued not a single licence to deliver the relief Iran was promised. That gap, action against Iran's allies but no action for Iran, hangs over the Switzerland table and gives Tehran its argument that the deal runs one way.
