A Lowdown audit of the Federal Register and the White House presidential-actions index found exactly one Iran-mentioning presidential document since 1 March 2026: the statutory annual "Continuation of the National Emergency With Respect to Iran", dated 5 March, a once-a-year renewal under the National Emergencies Act that would have issued regardless of events 12. That extends the zero-instruments finding logged at 40 days .
The presidential instruments Trump has issued between 1 and 10 April, in order, are: "Ensuring Citizenship Verification and Integrity in Federal Elections" on 3 April; "Adjusting Imports of Pharmaceuticals", "Strengthening Actions on Aluminum, Steel, and Copper", "Urgent National Action To Save College Sports", "Sequestration Order for Fiscal Year 2027", and "Continuing the Suspension of Duty-Free De Minimis Treatment", all on 9 April; and "Continuation of the National Emergency With Respect to Somalia" on 10 April 3. Seven instruments in ten days, none Iran-related. Previous US presidents conducting active Middle East conflicts issued Iran-related executive instruments at roughly one per week during escalation phases, from Obama's JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) era, through Trump's own post-JCPOA-withdrawal period, to Biden's maritime-interdiction window.
The pattern extends to sanctions policy. OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) has not published a single Iran-related action since 20 March, when it issued General License U . That is 22 days of silence during an active war. In the same window OFAC amended Russia General Licenses twice, on 30 March and 8 April, and issued new Venezuela licenses on 27 March 4. The inaction on Iran is not administrative neglect; OFAC is actively maintaining three other sanctions programmes.
GL-U expires on 19 April, eight days from Saturday, and no renewal signal has been issued. When GL-U lapses, every Iranian-origin crude cargo currently in transit becomes sanctioned again at the moment of expiry: marine insurers withdraw war-risk and sanctions-risk cover, port states refuse access, and the oil cannot be legally offloaded anywhere regardless of whether it can physically move.
