Iran claims to have struck 21 US military targets in retaliation as crypto markets reel
Iranian missile and drone strikes on US bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan triggered massive crypto liquidations and renewed volatility across digital asset markets.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 9, 2026Iran’s Revolutionary Guard says it launched missiles and drones at US military installations across three countries on June 3, 2026, claiming successful hits on 21 separate targets. The targets reportedly included the US Navy’s 5th Fleet headquarters in Bahrain along with air bases in Kuwait and Jordan.
US Central Command painted a different picture, reporting that most incoming projectiles were intercepted. Six of seven ballistic missiles were knocked down during one wave alone, with no confirmed American casualties or significant damage to personnel or assets.
What happened on the ground
At least four missiles and several drones were launched in what Iran characterized as a direct response to recent US strikes on Iranian locations. The specific trigger, according to Iranian officials, was a US attack on a facility on Qeshm Island in early June 2026.
AdvertisementIran’s claims of hitting 21 targets have not been independently verified.
Crypto markets took the hit investors feared
Digital asset markets responded exactly the way you’d expect when missiles start flying between major military powers. Liquidations swept through exchanges, with estimates ranging from $200 million to $1 billion wiped from positions. The damage fell disproportionately on long positions in Bitcoin and Ethereum.
Bitcoin’s price action during the broader conflict period tells the story of a market caught between panic and opportunism. The price fluctuated between $63,000 and $102,000 across various phases of the conflict, a range wide enough to destroy leveraged traders on both sides of the trade.
De-escalation signals that emerged in subsequent reporting periods did appear to stabilize prices.
The Treasury’s parallel offensive
US Treasury authorities reported seizures of approximately $1 billion and freezes of $344 million in digital assets linked to Iran.
No major crypto protocols or tokens were directly tied to the strikes themselves. The market reaction was driven by the broader geopolitical shock rather than any specific vulnerability within the crypto ecosystem.
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