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Iran Conflict 2026
9APR

Trump strikes Iran with no war authority

3 min read
11:02UTC

Donald Trump ordered missiles onto Iranian soil with no AUMF and no UN notice, days after both chambers of Congress moved to constrain him.

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Key takeaway

Trump executed an act of war while every document that would normally authorise it stayed unsigned.

Donald Trump ordered strikes on sovereign Iranian territory with no Article 51 notification to the UN Security Council and no new AUMF (Authorisation for Use of Military Force), the statute Congress would normally pass to sanction a war 1. He acted as both chambers moved against him. The House voted 215-208 on 3 June to wind down US involvement , and Senate cloture on a parallel war-powers resolution fell ten votes short . Congress voted to limit the president; the strike order on 9 June bypassed that vote within days of it.

Washington's legal defence rests on Article II self-defence: a president may protect US forces under fire without prior congressional authorisation, and the downed AH-64 Apache supplies the trigger 2. Critics will counter that striking radar sites across four locations on Iranian soil exceeds the immediate defence of one aircraft's crew, both of whom had already been recovered. Whether "self-defence" describes the rescue or the retaliation is the hinge on which the whole claim turns.

The self-defence framing matters because it sidesteps the AUMF question entirely. A defensive strike needs no fresh authorisation, so the recovered Apache crew become the legal pivot rather than a vote on the floor. Trump spent 100 days pairing optimistic deal talk with an unsigned MOU; his first instrument of consequence on Iran arrived as ordnance, not a signature. That distinction is the point. An act of war was executed while every document that would normally precede it stayed unsigned, which leaves Congress legislating against a fact already on the ground.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In the United States, Congress has the power to declare war. Since 1973 there has also been a law called the War Powers Resolution that says the President must notify Congress within 48 hours of starting a military operation and must stop within 60 days unless Congress approves. President Trump ordered the 9 June strikes without asking Congress for permission, without notifying the United Nations, and days after the House of Representatives voted 215-208 to tell him to wind down the Iran conflict. The administration's legal argument is that the President can order strikes in self-defence as Commander-in-Chief without needing Congress. Critics, including Georgetown Law professors, argue that argument has never been tested in a case where Congress had just voted against the action.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three converging structural conditions made the legal collision on 9 June inevitable. First, the Trump administration's deliberate policy of keeping all Iran-related authority on the verbal track rather than signed paper meant that when it needed a legal basis for strikes, Article II was the only instrument in the field. An AUMF would have required specifying objectives and constraints Congress could hold the administration to.

Second, the War Powers Resolution's own enforcement gap, demonstrated across three consecutive lapse cycles at Days 60, 72 and 93, signalled to the executive that Congress lacked both the votes and the institutional will to constrain it. A resolution that lapses unremedied three times becomes, in practice, a dead letter regardless of its statutory force.

Third, the House 215-208 margin was too thin and too recent to survive a Senate cloture test. With ten senators absent from the cloture count, the administration calculated, correctly in the short term, that no enforcement mechanism would activate before the strikes could be executed.

First Reported In

Update #123 · Trump orders strikes on Iranian soil

Al Jazeera· 10 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
Markets
Markets
Brent crude rose 2.2 per cent to $96.34 on 10 June, reversing a 7 per cent weekly decline built on deal optimism, as the overnight exchange repriced the Strait of Hormuz risk premium in a single session. The move reflects transit-risk repricing rather than supply shock: Iran's exports had already collapsed to below 300,000 barrels per day.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan's Naqvi channel, the only mediation track carrying both civilian and military buy-in, was stress-tested by live ordnance within 48 hours of the 6-7 June Tehran visit. Whether Washington informed Islamabad of the imminent strike plan while Naqvi was in Tehran remains undisclosed, putting the channel's neutrality under scrutiny.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait hosted the third Iranian strike on its soil since the 3 June airport drone attack, with Ali Al Salem airbase targeted in the three-country salvo. Its recent $1.98 billion Anduril Anvil counter-drone purchase signals it is rearming rather than reconsidering its hosting posture.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain absorbed the IRGC barrage via PAC-3 intercepts with its magazine already at 87 per cent depletion and no resupply before 2027. Sounding air-raid sirens over Manama, it faced the intercept burden with the thinnest defensive stack in the Gulf coalition.
Jordan
Jordan
Jordan reported all five incoming missiles intercepted with no injuries and no damage, a clean defensive performance that strengthens Amman's case for staying in the Western coalition without escalating its own posture. It now sits on Iran's target list for the first time despite not being a party to the Abraham Accords confrontation.
Iran / IRGC
Iran / IRGC
Foreign Minister Araghchi posted on X that US forces should 'leave our region if you want to be safe' and framed the exchange as a US defeat, while the IRGC claimed 21 targets hit and an F-35 hangar destroyed. The claims serve a domestic and Arab-audience framing rather than a verified battle-damage assessment.