War broke out in the Middle East — again — and Bitcoin did exactly what Bitcoin does: it panicked. Iran launched a pre-emptive strike on Israel on February 28, 2026, and within minutes, crypto markets lost $128 billion in value. Bitcoin cratered to $63,000. Ethereum fell 9%, hitting $1,841. Half a billion dollars in liquidations. Nearly all of it long positions. Brutal.

The chaos didn’t stop there. Joint US-Israeli strikes killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iran confirmed it. Declared mourning. Then hit back — missiles struck Dubai, targets across the Gulf, US bases possibly next. President Trump announced the US was joining Israel for full combat operations. So yeah, not exactly a calm weekend.

Bitcoin’s reaction was almost predictable at this point. The initial drop to $63,000 marked the third time in February 2026 that price touched that base zone. Then came a sharp weekend rebound to $67,000 after Khamenei’s death was confirmed — briefly spiking above $68,000. Apparently markets decided a dead Supreme Leader meant shorter odds on the war wrapping up fast. Maybe. That’s the generous interpretation. Short sellers paid dearly for betting against that move, with approximately $303 million in short positions forcibly liquidated as Bitcoin climbed back through $65,000.

Bitcoin hit $63,000 three times. Then Khamenei died — and markets briefly decided that was bullish.

Meanwhile, gold rallied. Because of course it did. Bitcoin, which some people still insist is digital gold, took a detour through extreme fear territory instead. Bitcoin’s limited supply of 21 million coins is a key reason some investors view it as a store of value comparable to gold during times of crisis.

Experts pointed to $63,000 as the make-or-break level. A bearish flag pattern was already forming. Break below $63,000 and analysts warned of a potential slide to $45,000. For context, Bitcoin was trading near $125,000 in October 2025. That’s more than a 50% haircut.

Real price discovery was expected Monday once US equity markets and Bitcoin ETFs reopened. ETF investor exits could push prices back below $63,000 fast. Strait of Hormuz closure fears, Iran’s messy succession battle, and the risk of more countries getting dragged in kept sentiment firmly in the gutter. Altcoins were hit just as hard, with BNB, Solana, XRP, and Dogecoin all posting 9-10% corrections across the board.

Volatility isn’t going anywhere. Sudden liquidation waves — both long and short — remain highly likely. The conflict is unresolved. Markets hate that. Bitcoin especially.

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