First, there’s no widely verified or credible reporting (as of now) that Donald Trump has issued a direct quote like “lots of bombs start going off” tied to a specific April 22, 2026 deadline. That kind of language would be headline-level across major outlets, and it would be very easy to confirm. So you should treat this as unverified or possibly exaggerated unless you have a solid source.
Second, the broader context you’re اشاره (U.S.–Iran tensions, ceasefire/truce dynamics, and risk around the Strait of Hormuz) is real and market-relevant—but the framing here is more dramatic than typical diplomatic signaling. Real negotiations, even tense ones, are usually communicated in more controlled language.
What is realistic in your analysis:
Any escalation involving Iran or U.S. forces → bullish for oil
Risk around Hormuz → global supply shock narrative
Markets (especially crypto + commodities) reacting to geopolitical uncertainty → valid
What needs caution:
Exact quotes without verified sources
Specific deadlines framed as “bombs start immediately”
Overstating certainty (markets price probability, not absolutes)
Cleaner, more credible version (if you want to post it):
You’d be better off saying something like:
Tensions are rising again between the U.S. and Iran
A temporary truce/negotiation window is nearing expiry
If no agreement is reached, risk of military escalation increases
Markets (especially oil) are sensitive to any developments around the Strait of Hormuz
That keeps the edge and urgency, but avoids sounding like misinformation.
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