United Arab Emirates conducted secret military strikes on Iran, Wall Street Journal reports
The UAE allegedly struck an Iranian oil refinery on Lavan Island, making it one of the few nations to engage in direct hostilities against Tehran and raising fresh risks for Gulf energy infrastructure and crypto markets.
The United Arab Emirates quietly entered the shooting war against Iran, conducting covert military strikes that included hitting a major oil refinery on Iran’s Lavan Island in early April, according to The Wall Street Journal.
What happened
The Wall Street Journal, citing sources familiar with the matter, reported that the UAE carried out the strikes without publicly acknowledging them. The attacks coincided with a US-announced ceasefire, which makes the timing politically loaded.
Iran’s response was anything but subtle. Tehran launched more than 2,200 drones and 550 missiles targeting the UAE, making it the most attacked country in the region during the conflict.
Lavan Island, the site of the refinery strike, sits in the Persian Gulf and plays a role in Iran’s oil export infrastructure. Hitting it was not a symbolic gesture. It was a strike aimed at economic capacity.
Why this matters beyond the battlefield
The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes, sits right between the UAE and Iran. Any escalation that threatens shipping through that chokepoint does not just move oil prices. It moves everything. Energy costs feed into data center operating expenses, mining profitability, and the broader macro environment that drives risk asset pricing, including crypto.
The crypto connection
The UAE has spent the last several years building what may be the most crypto-friendly regulatory framework in the Middle East. Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) has issued licenses to major exchanges. Abu Dhabi Global Market has its own framework for digital asset oversight.
That strategy depends on one foundational assumption: stability. The UAE’s value proposition to crypto firms, and to global capital more broadly, is that it offers a safe, predictable operating environment in a region known for neither. Secret wars with Iran complicate that narrative considerably.
If Iran decides to target UAE infrastructure more aggressively, crypto exchanges and custodians with servers in the region could face disruptions. Firms that assumed the UAE was a geopolitically safe jurisdiction may need to revisit their disaster recovery strategies.
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