The White House presidential-actions register recorded no new Iran, sanctions or Middle East instrument for a full week to 7 July, and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), the US Treasury's sanctions bureau, named no Iranian, IRGC or Hezbollah target in the same window 1. OFAC issued fresh designations instead across six programmes: narcotics, terrorism, Cuba, Russia, Sudan, Venezuela and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Six other programmes drew action in the same fortnight, so the Iran gap reflects a decision about Iran specifically, not a Treasury or White House pause. It extends a documented inaction the topic has tracked since President Donald Trump demanded cheaper petrol while signing nothing on Iran , and since Washington, Tehran and Doha gave three irreconcilable accounts of the same talks .
Trump supplied The Week's only Iran line himself, telling reporters he would either negotiate or 'finish the job' militarily and signing no order alongside it 2. Read one way, a week of holding paper is deliberate restraint while the funeral runs and the Doha channel stays paused. Read another, it is a superpower issuing threats it does not convert into instruments while the other side converts its threats into missiles.
