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Iran Conflict 2026
7JUL

A week, no US Iran order signed

2 min read
09:35UTC

For a full week to 7 July the White House signed no Iran instrument and OFAC named no Iranian target, even as Treasury issued fresh sanctions across six other programmes.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Washington signed nothing on Iran for a week while sanctioning six other programmes.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US government has a list of official actions it takes against countries, like freezing money or naming banned people and organisations. For a whole week, the Trump administration added zero new such actions against Iran, the IRGC or Hezbollah, even though it added plenty against six other countries and groups in the same period. At the same time, President Trump kept talking tough, saying he would either negotiate with Iran or 'finish the job' by force. But talking is not the same as signing something official, and this week Washington only did the talking.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    A documented week-long gap specifically on Iran, against a backdrop of six other active programmes, shifts the burden onto Washington to explain the omission as deliberate strategy rather than oversight.

First Reported In

Update #148 · Iran shoots the Hormuz route it rejected

US Treasury· 7 Jul 2026
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Different Perspectives
India
India
New Delhi has a national unaccounted for among GFS Galaxy's eleven-strong Indian crew, turning a standoff over transit rights into a consular emergency for a state with no seat at either table.
Oman
Oman
Muscat's 9 July arrangement to jointly manage Hormuz traffic with Iran, outside the frozen US channel, is overridden within days by Tehran's own unilateral closure and strike on GFS Galaxy.
Qatar
Qatar
Doha keeps mediating from an exposed position: Al Udeid hosts the CENTCOM strikes it is trying to broker a stand-down around, a week after a Qatari carrier was itself hit in the strait.
United States / CENTCOM
United States / CENTCOM
CENTCOM flew a third strike wave in a week, roughly 140 targets, killed Lieutenant Dehghani at Jask, and insists the strait remains open. It signed no instrument making that claim enforceable against Iran's closure.
Iran / IRGC
Iran / IRGC
Tehran struck GFS Galaxy and declared Hormuz closed, reasserting IRGC toll authority after its Oman-brokered management track failed to bind Washington to anything. The strike restores unilateral control after days of a negotiated alternative gaining ground.
Russia
Russia
Grossi's non-confirmation came from Kaliningrad, hours after Rosatom, the state agency that built and fuels Bushehr, hosted his talks. A refusal delivered from inside Russia's own nuclear orbit carries weight a Western capital could not manufacture, though Moscow itself made no statement on Iran's strike claim.