The IRGC launched retaliatory attacks on military installations in Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman, escalating a conflict that's already rattling crypto and commodity markets.
Iran just took the kind of swing that rearranges geopolitical furniture. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps struck US-affiliated military targets across five countries on July 8-9, marking the widest geographic spread of Iranian military action in the current conflict cycle.
The targets spanned Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman, hitting everything from fuel depots to satellite antennas. Ten ballistic missiles were launched at the Azraq base in Jordan alone. Gulf state defense systems intercepted most of the incoming projectiles, limiting casualties.
The Iranian strikes were a direct response to US airstrikes on roughly 90 Iranian military sites along the country’s southern coast, including installations near Bandar Abbas. Those US strikes, in turn, were retaliation for Iranian attacks on commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz.
A ceasefire memorandum established in June 2026 was meant to cool tensions. Renewed attacks on shipping lanes ruptured that agreement.
Specific targets in the latest Iranian response included the Arifjan and Ali Al Salem bases in Kuwait, military infrastructure in Bahrain, and a satellite antenna facility in Qatar.
During earlier phases of this conflict, Bitcoin briefly dipped below $64,000 as traders de-risked across the board. Substantial outflows from Iranian crypto exchanges accompanied those moves, suggesting that domestic instability drives selling pressure regardless of any “safe haven” narrative.
Bitcoin and Ethereum historically see heightened volatility during these windows. Some traders pile into crypto as a hedge against fiat currency instability in affected regions. Others dump positions to raise cash or move into traditional safe havens like US Treasuries and gold.
Roughly 20% of the world’s oil passes through that chokepoint. Iranian attacks on commercial vessels there were the trigger for the US strikes that preceded this retaliation. If shipping disruptions intensify, energy prices spike. When energy prices spike, inflation expectations shift. When inflation expectations shift, central bank policy gets repriced.
During previous Middle Eastern escalations, USDT and USDC volumes on exchanges serving the Gulf region spiked as local investors sought dollar-denominated stability without relying on banking infrastructure that might face disruptions.
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