
Bitcoin spiked to $64,200 after Donald Trump told Netanyahu to stand down and declared “I call the shots,” then retraced to $62,990 after Israel struck Iranian territory anyway – a sequence that reveals how directly crypto is now pricing geopolitical risk in real time.
Key Takeaways
- 74% of 24-hour liquidations hit short positions, not longs.
- BTC rallied on diplomacy, not military de-escalation.
- Largest single liquidation: $12.10M BTC-USDT on Binance.
- 80% of 6.5M CoinMarketCap voters remain bullish on Bitcoin.
The trigger was an Israeli airstrike on a Hezbollah stronghold in the southern suburbs of Beirut, bypassing a fragile regional ceasefire that had been in place since April. Iran, which demands Lebanon be included in any broader regional peace framework, responded hours later with a salvo of ballistic missiles fired by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps directly at northern Israel.
The missile exchange brought the conflict to a scale that drew immediate intervention from Washington. Trump called Netanyahu after the Iranian barrage and told him to stand down, according to Axios reporting, stating the US was “close to doing something good in terms of a deal.” Netanyahu initially appeared to comply, with US officials describing a “pseudo-agreement” to hold off on immediate military action.
Trump’s Remarks and the Bitcoin Spike
The market moved on Trump’s public statements before any military outcome was confirmed. Speaking to the Financial Times, Trump was direct about the chain of command: “Netanyahu won’t have any choice but to accept whatever peace agreement Washington finalizes with Tehran. I call the shots. I call all the shots. He doesn’t call the shots.”
According to the Guardian, Trump also told reporters: “You’ve shot your missiles, that’s enough – make a deal.”
Those remarks pushed Bitcoin from the $62,000 range to an intraday high of $64,200. The move was rapid and driven by short liquidations – CoinGlass data shows $467.14M in short positions closed in the past 24 hours, accounting for approximately 74% of total liquidations, the reverse of the long-dominated liquidation pattern that characterized last week’s selloff.
| Timeframe | Total Liquidations (Rekt) | Long Liquidations | Short Liquidations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Hour | $4.59M | $676.85K | $3.92M |
| 4 Hours | $40.68M | $32.43M | $8.26M |
| 12 Hours | $474.09M | $101.90M | $372.19M |
| 24 Hours | $627.97M | $160.83M | $467.14M |
Source: CoinGlass, data processed on June 8, 2026 • Compiled by the Coindoo Editorial Team
The price behavior is analytically significant. Bitcoin did not sell off on the initial Iranian missile strike against Israel. It rallied on Trump’s peace remarks. That sequencing suggests the market is pricing the probability of a diplomatic resolution rather than reacting mechanically to military escalation.
Israel Struck Iran Anyway
Hours after the apparent phone agreement, the Israeli Air Force launched air-launched ballistic missiles into Iranian territory, directly defying Trump’s demand for restraint. Israeli jets struck military radar systems in Tehran, Isfahan, and Tabriz. The most economically significant target was a major petrochemical facility in Mahshahr near the Persian Gulf, directly threatening Iranian oil infrastructure and sending crude prices sharply higher.
Trump responded by stating the new strikes would not affect the peace deal process, a comment that may have limited the Bitcoin downside. BTC retraced from $64,200 to $62,990 following confirmation of the Israeli strikes, a pullback of approximately 1.9% from the spike high.
Where Bitcoin Stands Now
At $62,990 at time of writing, Bitcoin is holding the majority of the gains triggered by Trump’s remarks despite the Israeli escalation. The 1-hour chart shows price consolidating between $62,400 and $63,600 since the spike, with the RSI at 57.87 and the signal line at 57.26, both in neutral territory, confirming neither overbought conditions from the spike nor renewed selling pressure from the geopolitical development.

The 12-hour liquidation data confirms the dominant market dynamic of the past half-day has been short covering rather than fresh buying. That distinction matters: a rally driven by short covering can fade faster than one driven by new spot demand once the covering is complete.
Community sentiment data from CoinMarketCap, drawn from 6.5 million votes, shows 80% of participants registering as bullish on Bitcoin against 20% bearish. That reading is notable in the context of a market that touched $60,000 last week and is navigating active geopolitical escalation – the majority of retail participants appear to be treating the current price zone as an opportunity rather than a reason to exit.
The more important observation for the days ahead is behavioral. Bitcoin dropped to $60,000 during last week’s broad market selloff before recovering. It did not break lower on Iran’s initial missile strike. It spiked on Trump’s peace remarks and gave back only a small portion of those gains when Israel struck anyway. That sequence describes a market that is sensitive to diplomatic signals and more resilient to direct military escalation than prior geopolitical episodes suggested. Whether that resilience holds if the conflict deepens beyond the current exchange is what the coming days will determine.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.



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