Key Highlights
- The market prices an 84% chance of a U.S.-Iran diplomatic meeting by February 28 (surging +31% in the last 24 hours) and 91% by March 31, making it one of the platform’s trending markets despite the military buildup.
- The deployment includes two carrier strike groups (USS Gerald R. Ford and USS Abraham Lincoln), over 60 fighter jets, THAAD defenses, and additional naval assets across the region.
- While diplomacy leads the prediction markets, there’s still a 57% chance of U.S. strikes by the end of March and 67% by June 30; Trump’s 10-15 day ultimatum (roughly one week left as of February 23) keeps the situation volatile.
The massive U.S. military surge in the Middle East has led to traders on the prediction platform Polymarket betting heavily on a diplomatic breakthrough with Iran. This is even as the U.S. President Donald Trump keeps the pressure dialed up with a ticking 10-15 day ultimatum.
Since late January, American forces have poured into the region, with the USS Gerald R. Ford and USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike groups, more than 60 fighter jets at bases like Jordan’s Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, THAAD missile defenses, and additional destroyers and cruisers positioned across the Arabian Sea and Gulf.
On Polymarket, the crowd is pricing in optimism, the market for a U.S.-Iran diplomatic meeting by February 28 sits around 84% “Yes,” while the odds climb to 91% by March 31. For the February date, it surged 31% in the past 24 hours, while the March data saw a 22% spike to the odds. This market is currently one of the most trending among all on Polymarket.

The shift reflects bettors interpreting Trump’s hardline stance as classic deal-making leverage, maximum pressure to force concessions rather than inevitable war. Military markets, on the flip side, see 57% chances of U.S. strikes by the end of March, and by June 30 at 67%, indicating the diplomatic path isn’t a sure thing.
President Trump’s warnings
Trump delivered the stark warning earlier this week, calling Iran leaders to reach a “meaningful” nuclear deal or face “really bad things.” However, not following through on the proposal, Tehran fired back with threats to hit U.S. bases and staged joint live-fire drills with Russia, but behind the rhetoric, back-channel signals suggest movement.
Tehran insists any deal must lift sanctions and respect its enrichment rights, while Washington demands verifiable curbs on nuclear activity and ballistic missiles. With the deadline closing fast, roughly a week left as of February 23, markets suggest the next few days could tip the balance toward talks or escalation.
Amid this escalating tension, crypto traders have poured hundreds of thousands into these contracts, turning Polymarket into a real-time barometer of whether bluster turns to handshakes or worse.
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