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US Central Command confirms defensive strikes in southern Iran, crypto markets shed $300M in liquidations

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US Central Command confirmed that American military forces carried out defensive strikes against Iranian missile and drone launch sites in southern Iran on May 7-8. The operation targeted military infrastructure after Iranian forces launched unprovoked missile and drone attacks against three US Navy guided-missile destroyers transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

The crypto market’s response was swift and predictable. Roughly $300 million in futures liquidations hit the books as Bitcoin experienced intraday price dips, with traders scrambling for the exits in a textbook risk-off reaction.

What happened in the Strait of Hormuz

The strikes came after Iranian forces targeted three US Navy destroyers: the USS Truxtun (DDG 103), USS Rafael Peralta (DDG 115), and USS Mason (DDG 87). All three ships were transiting the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway through which a significant share of the world’s oil supply flows daily.

CENTCOM stated that US forces struck missile launch sites, drone launch sites, and command-and-control locations in southern Iran. The military framed the operation explicitly as self-defense, not escalation.

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No US assets were damaged during either the Iranian attacks or the subsequent American strikes. The Iranian military, for its part, disputed the American account and accused US forces of violating a ceasefire agreement.

This latest exchange didn’t happen in a vacuum. It follows a broader conflict that kicked off when US and Israeli forces initiated operations against Iranian military targets on February 28, 2026.

How crypto markets reacted

Following the strikes, Bitcoin dropped intraday and triggered approximately $300 million in crypto futures liquidations. That number captures both long and short positions getting wiped out as volatility spiked.

Oil prices rose alongside the military action. Higher energy costs feed into inflation expectations, which in turn make risk assets less attractive.

No specific crypto-native protocols or tokens were directly implicated in the strikes or the surrounding activity. On-chain activity related to prediction markets ticked up, as it typically does during geopolitical uncertainty.

What this means for crypto investors

When US and Israeli forces struck Iranian targets in late February, crypto markets initially sold off before stabilizing.

For leveraged traders, the math is brutal. A $300 million liquidation event means that positions built on the assumption of stability got destroyed in hours.

Sanctions dynamics add another layer of complexity. Iran has long been subject to comprehensive US sanctions, and any escalation in military conflict tends to tighten enforcement and expand the scope of those restrictions. For crypto markets, this means increased scrutiny on transaction flows, potential additional compliance requirements for exchanges, and the risk that stablecoin issuers or other infrastructure providers get caught in the crossfire of sanctions enforcement.

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