Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
15MAY

Murkowski holds AUMF for a paper plan

3 min read
13:51UTC

Senator Lisa Murkowski's Iran Authorisation for Use of Military Force remained unfiled on Monday 11 May as the Senate returned from recess. Her condition for filing, a credible White House plan with defined objectives and exit criteria, stayed unmet by Trump's verbal escalation.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Murkowski holds her Iran AUMF for a written White House plan; Trump's verbal week raises her leverage, not lowers it.

Alaska Republican Lisa Murkowski's Iran Authorisation for Use of Military Force (AUMF) remained unfiled on Monday 11 May as the US Senate returned from a week of recess. Her condition for filing, set on the floor on 30 April, was a credible White House plan with defined objectives, success metrics, exit criteria and congressional reporting. That paper threshold stayed unmet across the recess and into Monday's reopening.

Donald Trump's Oval Office statements on Monday (the ceasefire on life support, three Axios-leaked military options) do not satisfy a paper requirement; they extend the pattern Murkowski cited when she declined to file ahead of the 9 May deadline . She had flagged the same gap between Truth Social posts and presidential signatures in her floor remarks on the 8-9 May run . The verbal track makes her bar harder to clear, not easier: a credible plan requires a written instrument and a documented decision chain that the presidential-actions index has not produced in 74 days.

The legislative leverage runs the other way to most readings. If Trump signs nothing during the 13-15 May Beijing trip, Murkowski returns to a Senate that has watched a full week of verbal escalation against an empty paper trail, and her credible-plan demand carries more weight, not less. A signed Friday strike directive cuts the other way: an order arriving without prior congressional authorisation is the constitutional question Murkowski wanted to avoid, and she would lose the procedural lever to force a debate.

The institutional logic favours holding. Marco Rubio's closure of EPIC FURY on 5 May removed the executive's stated justification for further action; the absence of a follow-on signed instrument means the Senate cannot debate something that does not exist on paper. Murkowski's bar is procedural rather than political, and the longer the paper track stays empty, the more procedural ground she gains.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In the United States, major military actions are supposed to be authorised by Congress. Senator Lisa Murkowski has written a bill called an Authorisation for Use of Military Force; an AUMF; that would give the Iran war a proper legal basis. But she has not filed it yet. She said she will only do so if the White House gives Congress a clear written plan: what the goals are, how success will be measured, how Congress will be kept informed, and what the exit plan is. So far the White House has not provided that plan. Trump's tough statements on 11 May; war on 'life support', military options under review; are verbal, not written. Murkowski's four conditions require paper documentation, not press quotes. Until the White House produces that document, the AUMF stays unfiled.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Murkowski's four conditions; defined objectives, named success metrics, advance notice of objective changes, and an exit criterion; directly address the structural failure of the 2001 AUMF, which contained none of those elements and has been applied to 42 countries over 24 years.

The White House's verbal-only track creates a specific enabling condition for Murkowski's hold: without a signed instrument, there is no executive document to which the congressional conditions can be attached. The administration cannot meet her conditions without producing the paper it has deliberately avoided for 74 days.

Republican co-sponsor Todd Young remaining on the bill signals the hold is bipartisan within the Senate caucus, reducing the risk that Murkowski can be isolated as a solo obstructionist before the summit returns.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Each day Trump returns from Beijing without a signed Iran instrument, Murkowski's four-condition AUMF bar becomes harder to clear: the administration has demonstrated it can operate without the bill, reducing its incentive to produce the required paper.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Precedent

    Murkowski's four-condition hold is the most operationally specific AUMF pre-condition in US history. If it succeeds; if the White House produces a strategy document; it establishes a template for future congressional oversight of undeclared wars.

    Long term · 0.6
  • Risk

    If Murkowski files without conditions being met; under pressure from Republican leadership ahead of 2026 mid-terms; the resulting AUMF will have the same structural indefiniteness as the 2001 AUMF, authorising force without geographic or temporal limits.

    Medium term · 0.65
First Reported In

Update #95 · OFAC opens the Hong Kong door

Al Jazeera· 12 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Murkowski holds AUMF for a paper plan
Verbal escalation makes the credible-plan threshold harder to clear, not easier; if Trump signs nothing during the Beijing trip, Murkowski's leverage rises on the Senate's return the following week.
Different Perspectives
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India's BRICS chair draft communique frames the Iran conflict as a matter of 'safe, unimpeded maritime flows', a formula explicitly neutral on Iran's 'no obstacles' claim and short of endorsing IRGC maritime doctrine. Delhi has maintained separate tracks: a demarche on Iranian tanker firings at Indian-crewed vessels, silence on OFAC designations naming Indian firms.
International Energy Agency
International Energy Agency
The IEA's May 2026 Oil Market Report quantified the closure at 14.4 million barrels per day shut in, more than one billion barrels of cumulative supply loss, and a 246-million-barrel inventory draw in eight weeks, five times the monthly rate of the 2022 SPR release. The IEA projects a deficit through Q4 2026 even if Hormuz reopens in June.
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan's intermediary channel between Washington and Tehran remains active despite Trump's 'totally unacceptable' rebuff of Iran's 10-point MOU reply on 11 May. Islamabad carries the only direct US-Iran track and the only channel with both civilian and military buy-in on the Iranian side, but has not convened a second Islamabad round.
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Iran's state broadcaster reported on 14 May that the Supreme Leader has issued 'new and decisive directives' for military operations, the first such signal since the war began. Mojtaba has not appeared publicly since 28 February; the directives are paper instruments, not verbal statements.
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Beijing's official summit readout mentioned 'the Middle East situation' alongside the Ukraine crisis and the Korean Peninsula, without naming Iran or specifying any Iranian commitment. Chinese state media has not published the three red lines Trump described.
White House / Trump administration
White House / Trump administration
Trump told Fox News from Beijing that Xi had committed to three Iran red lines: no nuclear weapon, an open Hormuz, no military equipment supplied to Tehran. He described the summit as 'a big statement'. The White House issued its own readout confirming those commitments; the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs readout did not.