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Is Bitcoin the New Strategic Asset for National Security? Insights from the US Defense Department

Daniel Kim Views  

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The U.S. Department of Defense has begun treating Bitcoin (BTC) not merely as an investment but as a strategic asset. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth told Congress that BTC could become a strategic lever for the United States, elevating the cryptocurrency to a national-security concern amid competition with China.

According to Cointelegraph on April 13, Hegseth made the remarks at a House hearing on April 30. During questioning, Rep. Lance Gooden asked whether BTC could serve as a tool of power projection beyond a simple monetary network, citing Iran’s toll demands, North Korean hacking groups’ use of ransomware, and the possibility that China might stockpile Bitcoin.

Gooden referenced testimony from Admiral Samuel Paparo, commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM), arguing that BTC is directly tied to power projection. He also noted that the U.S. military runs Bitcoin nodes and warned that cyber and financial infrastructure are becoming security assets.

Hegseth’s reply was brief but unambiguous. “In short, yes, and yes,” he said, adding that the Defense Department is conducting classified efforts to “use or block” BTC. That suggests the department is preparing not just to hold or regulate BTC but also to counter how adversaries might employ it.

Earlier, on April 21, Admiral Paparo told the Senate Armed Services Committee that BTC has implications for America’s power-projection capability. With senior Defense officials repeatedly raising Bitcoin, analysts say the debate is moving from financial markets into national-security planning.

The comments mark a meaningful shift: Bitcoin (BTC) is starting to be treated not only as “digital gold” but as a geopolitical variable. Still, it remains unclear whether this framing will translate into concrete policy, so markets are likely to watch the Defense Department’s follow-up actions closely.

Article summary by TokenPost.ai
🔎 Market takeaway
The U.S. Department of Defense now views Bitcoin as a strategic asset rather than merely an investment, moving the discussion from financial markets into national security.
BTC is emerging as a new lever in geopolitical competition with rivals such as China.

💡 Strategy points
The U.S. military is weighing a dual “use and defend” approach to BTC
Operational testing and security experiments are underway as the military runs nodes and analyzes network behavior
If formalized as policy, these actions could reshape markets and regulatory frameworks

📘 Glossary
Power projection: the ability to project military and economic influence globally
Bitcoin node: a computer that validates and monitors the network
Strategic asset: a resource valued for national-security use as well as economic value

💡 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q. Why is Bitcoin being seen as a national security asset?
Bitcoin operates on a decentralized, censorship-resistant network that enables cross-border transfers. That makes it useful for evading sanctions or facilitating cyber operations, so military and government officials now view it as a strategic tool rather than just an investment.
Q. Why does the U.S. military operate Bitcoin nodes?
Running nodes lets the military validate network data and monitor transaction flows. That strengthens cyber defenses and enables analysis of how adversaries use the network.
Q. What impact will these remarks have on the Bitcoin market?
In the short term, the comments are largely symbolic. Over the longer term, they could influence regulatory and policy direction. If national-level demand or control policies emerge, market volatility is likely to increase.

TP AI Notice We summarized the article using a language model based on TokenPost.ai. Important details may have been omitted or may differ from the facts.

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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