Trumps Iran Bomb Warning Puts Oil, Bitcoin And Crypto Risk Back In Play

Trump’s threat of “lots of bombs” if the Iran ceasefire lapses feeds straight into Bitcoin’s war‑driven volatility and the debate over its safe‑haven role.

Summary

  • Trump warns “lots of bombs start going off” if the U.S.–Iran ceasefire lapses this week
  • Markets eye Strait of Hormuz and oil at $90 as key drivers for Bitcoin and macro risk assets
  • Iran’s move to charge tankers $1 per barrel in Bitcoin makes any escalation a direct crypto story

U.S. President Donald Trump has warned that “lots of bombs start going off” if a fragile ceasefire with Iran expires this week, a threat that immediately drags oil, Bitcoin and broader crypto markets back into geopolitical crossfire.

Speaking in a phone interview with PBS News reporter Liz Landers, Trump said that if the truce ends on Tuesday, “then lots of bombs start going off,” even as a U.S. delegation prepares for another round of talks that may take place in Islamabad.

Asked whether Iran would attend, he replied, “I don’t know. I mean, they should show up. It’s arranged. We’ll see if they come. If they don’t come, that’s okay,” before reiterating that his bottom line for any deal is that “Iran absolutely cannot have nuclear weapons.”

The comments land after months in which the Iran conflict has repeatedly rattled risk assets, with Bitcoin swinging between drawdowns and sharp rebounds on each round of strikes and ceasefire headlines.

Reporting from outlets such as Time and The Hill has documented how Trump has threatened to “decimate” every bridge and power plant in Iran and to “start dropping bombs again” if Tehran does not accept his terms, putting direct military pressure on infrastructure around the Strait of Hormuz.

Any renewed bombing campaign in or around the Strait would likely push crude back toward or above $100 per barrel, a level Barclays and other banks have previously highlighted as plausible if shipping lanes remain blocked, with knock‑on effects for inflation expectations and Federal Reserve policy.

For Bitcoin, that feedback loop has already been visible.

Earlier phases of the conflict saw BTC (BTC) drop below $66,000 on ETF outflows and “risk‑off” sentiment before recovering toward the $70,000–$75,000 band as the “digital gold” narrative reasserted itself, according to market commentary tracked by MEXC and regional crypto media.

More recently, on‑chain data and exchange flows show Bitcoin selling off by roughly 8% after U.S.–Iran negotiations collapsed, triggering about $890 million in liquidations in six hours, before stabilizing as traders reassessed path‑of‑war scenarios.

Those price swings now intersect with a much more direct link between Iran and crypto markets.

As first reported by Yahoo Finance, Tehran has begun charging oil tankers a fee of $1 per barrel in Bitcoin to cross the Strait of Hormuz, making it the first state to demand BTC for a major trade route and effectively hard‑wiring the Bitcoin price into the cost of global energy logistics.

Iran’s choice of Bitcoin came after stablecoin issuer Tether blocked more than $3.3 billion in wallets, including those tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, illustrating why a censorship‑resistant asset is attractive in a sanctions‑heavy environment.

In a previous crypto.news story on tokenized real‑world assets and the rise of dollar‑linked stablecoins as settlement rails, analysts argued that geopolitics, energy prices and crypto liquidity are increasingly fused, a point now underscored by a U.S. president warning that bombs — and by extension oil and Bitcoin volatility — are back on the table if diplomacy fails.

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