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Trump’s $200B Iran war ask raises risk-off pressure on crypto markets

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Trump’s push for an extra $200 billion Iran war budget on top of record defense spending is forcing crypto markets to reprice geopolitical risk, debt, and the dollar in real time.

Trump’s reported push to have Arab states help bankroll a potential Iran war, alongside a fresh ~$200B Pentagon funding request, underscores the spiraling fiscal and geopolitical stakes that crypto markets must now price in. In an X post on Tuesday, Coin Bureau told followers: “$TRUMP EYES ARAB STATES TO HELP FUND IRAN WAR AS COSTS SURGE,” noting the ask comes “on top of an already record $900B annual military budget” and amid reports that Iran is demanding “full war reparations and compensation as part of any deal.”

🚨LATEST: $TRUMP EYES ARAB STATES TO HELP FUND IRAN WAR AS COSTS SURGE

This comes as the Pentagon prepares a ~$200B additional funding request, on top of an already record $900B annual military budget.

At the same time, Iran is reportedly demanding full war reparations and… pic.twitter.com/doBoKn8UHE

— Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) March 31, 2026

Commenters quickly seized on the contradiction; user @lynkrcrypto wrote that with a record $900B budget and another $200B on top, “sounds like someone’s running out of cash,” while @TKT_tobe called a military budget exceeding $1T “a risky financial game.”

According to AP, the Pentagon has formally requested about $200B in extra Iran war funding from the White House, a sum described by one senior official as “extraordinarily high” given prior supplemental packages. In comments to ABC News, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the department is going “back to Congress” for additional money, adding bluntly: “It takes money to kill bad guys.” Reporting in the Washington Post and TRT World suggests the funds would replenish precision munitions and expand production lines, potentially leaving U.S. deficits wider for longer if Congress ultimately signs off. Outgoing Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had already told the Office of Management and Budget in late 2024 that defense spending was on track to push “past $1 trillion in the years to come,” according to a letter seen by Bloomberg.

Market stress, safe-haven bids and bitcoin

For crypto, the immediate channel is macro. A U.S. war budget nudging toward or above $1T, with a new $200B supplemental layered over an existing ~$900B baseline, raises questions about debt sustainability, inflation risk and the long-run path of the dollar. Historically, episodes of geopolitical stress and aggressive fiscal expansion have produced periods of risk-off in equities and high-beta coins, even as some investors rotate into perceived hedges like bitcoin and gold; prior shocks have seen crypto sell off sharply before recovering as macro narratives reset. If markets conclude that Washington is “running out of cash,” as @lynkrcrypto put it, and that Arab partners are reluctant to absorb the tab, the squeeze on U.S. finances could strengthen the case for scarce, non-sovereign assets over time, even as short-term volatility spikes across digital assets.

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