Donald Trump posted on Truth Social on Saturday ordering the US Navy to "begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz." He told reporters separately that the ceasefire was "holding well" and that Iran's "whole navy is under water." The two statements, issued hours apart, describe different wars.
After 45 days of conflict, the White House presidential-actions page shows zero Iran-related executive instruments . The pattern has repeated across five Hormuz ultimatums, the ceasefire declaration, and now the blockade . Each action was announced by social media rather than signed instrument. The legal gap is not accidental; it avoids congressional oversight triggers, allied consultation requirements, and judicial review.
Under international law, a blockade of a sovereign state's ports without formal legal authority exposes every interdicted vessel to UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea) arbitration. Flag states whose ships are stopped have grounds to file immediately. The legal void extends to every approaching deadline. GL-U (General License U) lapses 19 April , the ceasefire window closes around 22 April, and the WPR (War Powers Resolution) clock approaches its statutory limit near the end of the month. No signed presidential instrument backs any of them.
