Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent issued General License X on 22 June 2026, the first Iran oil-sanctions instrument Washington has signed in 116 days of war. The licence authorises the production, sale and delivery of Iranian crude, petrochemicals and petroleum products, and, in a clause with no precedent in this conflict, permits US dollar payments to sanctioned Iranian entities 1. A general licence is an administrative authorisation from the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), the US Treasury bureau that runs Iran sanctions. This one also authorises the vessel services that move oil, insurance, flagging, classification, salvage and bunkering, runs until 12:01am EDT on 21 August 2026, and quietly amends the Russia-related General License 134.
For 116 days the ledger had not moved. Trump declared the war over and ordered the Strait of Hormuz reopened , yet produced no executive order, proclamation or OFAC action behind any of it. The prior briefing logged Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi claiming sanctions relief with no register entry to corroborate it . GL X corroborates that claim in part, reversing the OFAC silence that held when no waiver issued through 18 June .
The paper rewards what the words never could. GL X gives Iran 60 days of oil revenue and the dollar rails to bank it, and its own recitals state that Iran agreed to reopen Hormuz and admit nuclear inspectors. Iran's actions over the next two days contradicted both claims. The instrument is also cheaper to reverse than to issue: OFAC can let it lapse on 21 August with no vote and no further signature, which is why the 60-day clock matters more than the authorisation.
