Donald Trump boarded Air Force One for Beijing on the morning of 13 May 2026 without a signed Iran instrument on his way out. The White House presidential-actions index recorded zero Iran-related entries on 12 or 13 May; the only 12 May entry was a routine "Nominations Sent to the Senate" line 1. That extends the streak of zero signed Iran instruments to Day 75, past every modern wartime precedent for an active US blockade.
The departure timing matters. Pete Hegseth's 12 May Article 2 testimony before Senate Appropriations was the legal floor; Trump's physical exit with nothing in his red folder was the operational ceiling. The final pre-departure US action on Iran was Treasury, not the Oval Office: OFAC had designated 12 entities and individuals on 11 May, six of them Hong Kong-registered, plus Universal Fortune Trading LLC as a NIOC (National Iranian Oil Company) front 2. That package was Treasury-initiated, not a presidential executive instrument. The Hong Kong target list was deliberately calibrated to fit inside the summit window : it pressures Iran's oil-logistics network without forcing Xi Jinping to publicly invoke MOFCOM's Blocking Rules during the week he hosts the American president.
Trump's 11 May Oval Office remarks listed three military options (resuming bombing of the remaining identified targets, a Special Forces seizure of Iran's enriched uranium, and a ground takeover of part of the strait), all sitting alongside zero accompanying executive orders, deployment directives, or CENTCOM operational orders. Two days later he flew east with the same blank desk. Axios sources told the outlet they did not expect any Iran kinetic decision before he returns to Washington on 15 May. The Day 75 streak is now framed at one end by a cabinet officer's sworn defence and at the other by a presidential flight to the mediator country.
