$BTC According to BlockBeats, the Iranian government publicly declared on June 13: "An attack is impossible without coordination and permission from the United States." This brief statement immediately refocused global attention on this geopolitical powder keg.

Once the news broke, sensitive financial markets quickly sensed something unusual. The price of Bitcoin experienced significant short-term fluctuations after the news spread, and fund flow monitoring showed that some safe-haven funds were quietly shifting towards crypto assets. Historical experience tells us that when geopolitical tensions rise, Bitcoin often becomes one of the global funds seeking safety's "safe haven."

How familiar is this scene? Whenever international tensions escalate, from the Russia-Ukraine conflict to Middle Eastern frictions, Bitcoin has repeatedly shown its "anti-volatility resilience" by decoupling from traditional financial markets. The core logic behind this is:

Decentralized attributes: Not directly controlled by the policies of a single country or banking system;

Global liquidity: 24/7 trading, allowing for rapid cross-border fund transfers;

Scarcity consensus: A constant total supply, viewed by some investors as "digital gold."