Trump says US-Iran ceasefire on ‘massive life support,’ crypto markets brace for fallout

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President Donald Trump declared on May 11 that the US-Iran ceasefire is on “massive life support,” giving it a “1% chance of living” after dismissing Iran’s latest peace proposal as “stupid” and “a piece of garbage.” The month-old truce now looks like it’s hanging by a thread, and crypto markets are watching closely.

The rejection comes amid hints from Trump about reviving “Project Freedom,” a military initiative aimed at securing the Strait of Hormuz, and the possible resumption of bombing campaigns.

The sanctions-crypto pipeline keeps growing

On April 24, the US Treasury froze $344 million in cryptocurrency assets tied to Iranian entities. Back in February, the Treasury sanctioned crypto exchanges Zedcex and Zedxion for facilitating Iranian transactions. These platforms were allegedly serving as on-ramps for Iranian entities looking to move money outside the reach of traditional banking sanctions.

Iran has pursued national cryptocurrency initiatives since 2018, all designed to sidestep US economic pressure. As of 2026, Iran accounts for approximately 4.5% of the global Bitcoin hashrate, using its cheap energy resources to generate digital currency that’s harder for Washington to freeze than dollars sitting in a correspondent bank.

What military escalation means for markets

The Strait of Hormuz angle matters enormously here. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes through that narrow waterway. If Trump follows through on Project Freedom and military operations intensify in the region, oil prices spike. When oil prices spike, inflation expectations shift. When inflation expectations shift, central banks get nervous. When central banks get nervous, risk assets, including crypto, tend to sell off before they recover.

The DeFi wildcard and privacy tokens

Iran’s persistent investment in Bitcoin mining infrastructure and national digital currency projects reflects a broader trend of sanctioned nations building parallel financial systems using blockchain technology. The $344 million Treasury freeze is proof of both the activity and Washington’s growing ability to track it.

Privacy-focused tokens could see a demand surge as this dynamic plays out. When governments get better at tracing and freezing crypto, the market for harder-to-trace alternatives grows. The Treasury’s recent actions suggest that any exchange or protocol that facilitates sanctions evasion is going to end up in the crosshairs.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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