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When U.S. General Samuel Paparo appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee, he brought an unusual topic to the table. Paparo, who serves as commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM), made the case that Bitcoin deserves serious attention from a national security standpoint, and specifically from a technical one rather than a financial one.
Paparo described Bitcoin as a computer science system with real military and cybersecurity relevance. His argument centered on the architecture itself: the combination of cryptography, blockchain technology, and Proof of Work consensus creates a cost-based security model that goes beyond what conventional algorithmic defenses can offer. That structure, in his view, produces stronger and more reliable network integrity.
US Admiral Backs Bitcoin: A Matter of National Interest
In April 2026, Admiral Samuel Paparo, Commander of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, stated during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the fiscal year 2027 defense budget request that Bitcoin can be regarded as a… pic.twitter.com/hMbsDOYmqy
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 25, 2026
He also pointed to Bitcoin’s peer-to-peer, zero-trust design as something worth paying attention to. Cutting out centralized intermediaries reduces system vulnerabilities, a principle that aligns with military needs. More decentralization, in this context, means greater resilience.
This is a different conversation from the one most U.S. officials have been having about Bitcoin. The Trump administration and others have largely framed it as a potential reserve asset, a financial holding with strategic economic value. Paparo is not dismissing that framing, but he is clearly focused elsewhere.
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His position is that Bitcoin functions as a tool for power projection and that its defense applications exist independently of its role as a digital currency. Any technology that strengthens national power is worth incorporating into defense thinking. Bitcoin, by his assessment, qualifies on those grounds.
What makes Paparo’s testimony particularly notable is that it was not purely theoretical. He confirmed that INDOPACOM is already running a dedicated Bitcoin node, which places the U.S. military as an active participant in the network rather than an outside observer. The node is testing how Bitcoin’s protocol can help secure critical systems.
That operational detail changes the nature of the discussion. The U.S. military isn’t just considering Bitcoin’s future role. They are already testing its practical uses, marking a shift in how defense institutions engage with the technology.
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