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Showing posts from March, 2026

Bitcoin Holds $71,000: Two Weeks of War and Crypto Refuses to Break

 The Resilience That Surprised Everyone Two weeks ago — the day before Operation Epic Fury began — Bitcoin was trading at approximately $70,000 per ounce. Sixteen days of the most intense geopolitical crisis since the 2003 Iraq War later, Bitcoin is trading at approximately $71,000. It has not gone up dramatically. It has not crashed. In the context of a war that sent oil prices up 70% at its peak, South Korea's stock market down 7% in a single day, global equities into their worst weekly performance since COVID, and the VIX to four-month highs, Bitcoin's effective lateral movement is a form of outperformance that has changed the conversation among institutional investors about the asset's role in a crisis portfolio. The path to get here was not smooth. Bitcoin touched a war low of approximately $63,000-65,000 on the conflict's most acute days — specifically during the hours when oil futures were briefly trading above $120, US equity futures were down nearly 2%, and the...

Bitcoin at $66,400, Gold at $5,059: War Divides the Safe-Haven World

The Great Safe-Haven Divergence In normal financial crises, safe-haven assets move together: gold up, Treasury bonds up, Swiss franc up, Japanese yen up. Bitcoin — which crypto advocates have long positioned as 'digital gold' — should, in theory, also rise during periods of geopolitical stress. The Iran war has produced a more complicated and revealing picture. Gold surged from approximately $5,173 per ounce before the war to a peak of over $5,400 during the war's early days — then pulled back to approximately $5,059 on Monday as some investors took profits. Bitcoin, meanwhile, has bounced between $63,000 and $72,000 over the ten days of the conflict, with no clear directional trend and a current price of approximately $66,400. The divergence tells a story about how institutional investors are thinking about these two assets in a genuine geopolitical crisis. Gold's behavior is exactly what its role as the world's oldest safe-haven asset would predict. When geopoliti...

Beirut Under Siege: Israel Opens a Devastating Second Front and Half a Million People Flee

 The City That Has Survived Too Much — Now Faces Its Worst Crisis in a Generation Beirut has survived a civil war that lasted fifteen years. It survived the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah. It survived the catastrophic port explosion of August 2020, which killed more than 200 people, injured 6,000, and left 300,000 homeless in a single day. It survived the economic collapse of 2021, the worst in any country in peacetime since the mid-nineteenth century according to the World Bank. But on the morning of Friday, March 6, 2026, the Lebanese capital woke to something that may test its limits even further: Israeli evacuation orders covering entire southern Beirut neighborhoods housing more than half a million people, followed by strikes on residential high-rise buildings, Hezbollah command centers, and civilian infrastructure across the city's southern suburbs. Israel's military chief confirmed the IDF is pushing 'deeper into Lebanon' as part of the declared 'next ...

Day 7: The Heaviest Bombing Yet — America and Israel Escalate as War Enters Its Second Week

The Night That Changed the Scale of the War Seven days into Operation Epic Fury, the United States and Israel delivered what Al Jazeera's correspondent inside Tehran described as 'the heaviest bombardment we have witnessed — heavier than any previous night.' The shockwaves from strikes near the Al Jazeera bureau were strong enough to rattle windows kilometers away. Thick clouds of smoke choked the Iranian capital from before dawn, as fighter jets roared overhead and enormous explosions lit up the city skyline. It was not the beginning of a wind-down. It was an escalation. Israel's military chief confirmed late Thursday that the IDF had now conducted 2,500 strikes with more than 6,000 weapons against Iran and Lebanon combined since the operation began. He announced the military was moving to 'the next phase' of the war — a phrase that sent alarm bells ringing across diplomatic capitals and military command centers from Washington to Beijing. What the 'next ph...

Bitcoin Surges to $68,000 After Khamenei Death Confirmed: War, Relief Rally, and the Road Ahead

 The Most Dramatic 24 Hours in Crypto History In the space of less than 24 hours, Bitcoin experienced one of the most violent and then one of the most dramatic recoveries in its history. On Saturday morning, as US and Israeli bombs fell on Tehran, Bitcoin plunged from approximately $66,700 to below $63,000 — a drop of more than 5% in hours, driven by pure geopolitical panic. Crypto, once again, failed to behave as the 'digital gold' safe-haven that its advocates promised during a genuine crisis. Like equities, it was sold first and questioned later. Then came Sunday morning's confirmation of Khamenei's death — and everything changed. Within hours of Iranian state media confirming the supreme leader had been killed, Bitcoin surged from approximately $64,000 to $68,000 — erasing nearly all of Saturday's losses in a single move. By early Sunday morning, Bitcoin was at $66,843, up 5.2% over 24 hours. The broader market followed: Solana surged 10.8% to $86.42, Ethereum r...

Can the Islamic Republic Survive? The 5 Paths Iran Could Take — and What They Mean for the World

 The Question That Defines the Next DecadeForty-seven years ago, the Islamic Republic was born from the ashes of revolution, confounding the many observers who predicted it would quickly collapse. It survived the Iran-Iraq war, which killed hundreds of thousands of its citizens. It survived the death of its founder, Khomeini, in 1989. It survived crippling sanctions, mass protests, the destruction of its proxy network, the obliteration of its air defenses, and two rounds of military strikes on its nuclear facilities. Now, with its supreme leader dead and its military under sustained attack, the question that was once theoretical has become urgently real: can the Islamic Republic of Iran survive?The honest answer is: we don't know. What we can do is map the five most plausible paths forward — and assess what each would mean for Iran, the Middle East, and the world.Path 1: The IRGC Stabilizes — 'Khamenei-ism Without Khamenei'The most likely short-term outcome is that the IRGC...

The Man Who Ruled Iran for 36 Years: An Obituary of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

The Unlikely Supreme LeaderBorn on April 19, 1939, in Mashhad, the second holiest city in Iran, Ali Hosseini Khamenei came from a family with deep clerical roots. His father, Javad Khamenei, was a mid-level cleric. The young Ali showed intellectual promise early, pursuing religious studies at the seminaries of Mashhad and later Najaf in Iraq — the historic center of Shia scholarship — under some of the most influential clerics of the 20th century, including Ayatollah Hossein Borujerdi and, crucially, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.It was his relationship with Khomeini that would define and elevate Khamenei's entire career. When Khomeini was exiled by the Shah's government, Khamenei remained in Iran as a key organizer of revolutionary opposition. He was arrested six times by SAVAK, the Shah's feared secret police, enduring imprisonment and torture that deepened both his revolutionary convictions and his personal bond with Khomeini. When the 1979 Islamic Revolution swept away th...

Confirmed: Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Is Dead

 The Headline That Changed HistoryHe ruled Iran for 36 years, 8 months, and 26 days. He survived assassination attempts, proxy wars, mass protests, and decades of crippling international sanctions. He outlasted six US presidents, built one of the most sophisticated ballistic missile programs in the world, and guided the Islamic Republic through its most turbulent decades. But Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — the 86-year-old Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran — could not survive the combined military might of the United States and Israel.At approximately 2:00 AM Tehran time on Saturday, February 28, 2026, US and Israeli strikes hit the compound district surrounding Khamenei's residence and office in downtown Tehran. According to Iran's Fars News Agency, the Supreme Leader was at his office within his residence when the strikes occurred. By Saturday evening, Iranian state media — in a broadcast that reduced the anchor to tears on live television — confirmed the death of the m...