The White House presidential-actions index recorded zero Iran-related signed executive instruments as of Day 59 of the war on 27 April 1. The most recent items in the index are the 20 April energy-sector Presidential Determinations and an 18 April executive order on mental-illness treatment. Across the 59-day window, Trump has signed Enbridge pipeline permits and a budget sequestration order; OFAC (the Office of Foreign Assets Control inside Treasury) has signed nothing for Iran. The signing pen has been demonstrably available all week, for everything except the war being run.
The public line and the private aside contradict on substance. Trump told journalists at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner on Saturday 25 April that Iran had sent a "much better" proposal 2; he added the offer arrived within ten minutes of his cancelling the Witkoff and Kushner Islamabad trip and that negotiations would now be conducted "over the phone". Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Sunday 26 April that there had been only "some progress from the Iranian side in the last couple of days". The Federal Register test is the cleanest one available: a Truth Social post becomes policy when OFAC writes it down, and on this war neither Treasury nor CENTCOM has done so. Trump's verbal shoot-kill order against Iranian mine-layers sits in spoken English; the toll line he posted to Truth Social on 12 April was not picked up by the operational order. Posts have not crossed into paper.
Cole Allen, 31, was arrested at the WHCA dinner after the same evening's shooting; the arrest is the small administrative detail that frames the 25 April "much better" remark, made on-the-record to journalists rather than as a private aside. The contradiction between Trump's framing and Leavitt's sanitised public read is what put the rhetoric/policy gap in plain view.
