Washington and Tehran agreed to halt offensive operations on Monday 29 June, a verbal understanding rather than a signed text 1. The US announced that commercial vessels could "move freely" through the Strait of Hormuz, yet Brent Crude barely moved on the news 2.
A day later, on Tuesday 30 June, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner landed in Doha for talks on implementing the MoU (Memorandum of Understanding) signed on 16 June 3. Qatar's foreign ministry confirmed there was no direct US-Iran meeting: both delegations sat separately with Qatari and Pakistani mediators, the same shuttle format that produced the earlier Switzerland round 4. Kushner's prior Gulf work was the 2020 Abraham Accords, the normalisation deals between Israel and four Arab states, not the Iran war; sending a family envoy raised the round's political weight without putting an American across the table from an Iranian.
Across the whole window, no new Iran executive order, sanction or military authorisation was signed 5. The one standing instrument, General License X (GL X), which authorises Iranian oil sales through 21 August, predates this week . Trump had promised on 21 June to hit Iran "very hard again, only harder" ; his government degraded ten targets, then stood down and sent mediators. Set against that, the two strikes read as calibration rather than passivity, and the stand-down lets Trump claim a win without signing anything that would bind him.
