Conflicts don't necessarily mean that bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies should go up. It's not as if the economy of an affected country would tank almost immediately should conflicts arise and its citizens would start buying bitcoin/cryptocurrencies frantically. The citizens would still cling into something that they fully understand rather than take risks on uncertain situations.
Though there's a high possibility that Iranians would shift towards bitcoin as the conflict ensues, I'm still believing that they have no direct correlation with what's happening in bitcoin's economy currently. I mean, look at the prices of petrol which skyrocketed after the Iranian Quds Forces general was killed? It's obvious that Iranians would stick to their currency and not shift their attention elsewhere knowing that one of their valuable assets is on the move towards good prices. Besides, we've been in a sideways movement for months now that even Trump's impeachment nor the current news in US-Iran conflict haven't made an obvious dent no the pricing.
bitcoin and gold are set to soar...
Meh. Gold has been doing well as of late November 2019, and I don't, in the slightest, believe that its good performance is caused by the airstrike.
The article compares gold, oil, and Bitcoin.
If you check gold and benchmark crude charts and zoom out, you see the trend started at the beginning of December, and it got more pronounced around Christmas time, It didn't start immediately after US airstrikes. It seems more like a continuation.
Oil prices somewhat skyrocketed after the airstrikes though, but has since normalized a day after the announcement of the general's death. (Thanks for the link on current oil pricing, LeGaulois.)
Nothing special to notice for Bitcoin, the price is even around the same as December
I don't know why up to now, geopolitical issues are always connected to bitcoin as if they are intertwined and bonded like crazy. It started from Greece's loans, EU instability, up to Brexit and now The US-Iran conflict.
Seriously, people should stop correlating geopolitics and bitcoin just for speculative growth. The next thing we know, different countries are nuking each other and people would still post "Would dropping an atomic bomb to X country be beneficial to bitcoin?"