The White House released a 7-page cybersecurity policy document, marking the first time a U.S. national cybersecurity framework explicitly names crypto and blockchain as priorities for protection.
The strategy, titled President Trump’s Cyber Strategy for America, builds on the administration’s National Security Strategy.
Crypto and Blockchain Enter the National Security Framework
The document’s fifth pillar focuses on critical and emerging technologies. The administration will support the security of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technologies alongside post-quantum cryptography, quantum computing, and artificial intelligence (AI).
It outlines six policy pillars covering adversary deterrence, federal network modernization, and leadership in emerging technologies.
This marks a significant policy shift. Prior U.S. cybersecurity frameworks addressed crypto largely through the lens of illicit finance. As it were, the latest change sees crypto as infrastructure warranting federal protection.
The strategy frames blockchain as essential to American innovation. It positions it as a counterweight to foreign digital platforms that enable censorship or state surveillance.
“President Trump’s Cyber Strategy for America makes it a national priority to secure crypto networks and protocols against cyber threats. This is critical as the CFTC modernizes its rules and regulations for on-chain markets,” wrote CFTC chair Mike Selig.
A Dual Signal: Protection and Enforcement
The strategy does not treat crypto exclusively as an asset to defend. The first pillar, focused on shaping adversary behavior, pledges to uproot criminal infrastructure.
It also looks to cut off financial exit routes, language that analysts say could target mixers and privacy coins.
The strategy’s first pillar also commits to disrupting cybercrime networks and imposing costs on threat actors, with burden-sharing among allies.
The CFTC is currently expanding oversight of spot digital asset markets, reducing the SEC’s jurisdiction over assets like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) classified as commodities.
Selig’s remarks connect the cybersecurity strategy directly to that regulatory buildout, framing secure blockchain infrastructure as a precondition for functioning on-chain markets.
Broader Policy Context
The cyber strategy fits into a wider set of digital asset policy moves by the Trump administration, including:
- Exploration of a U.S. Bitcoin reserve,
- Proposed stablecoin legislation, and
- Efforts to provide clearer tax treatment for digital assets.
Quantum computing poses a distinct threat noted in the document, one capable of undermining current blockchain cryptographic standards if federal protections are not put in place ahead of time.
The strategy’s promotion of post-quantum cryptography directly addresses this risk.
Drawing on the strategy’s language about criminal infrastructure, enforcement actions against privacy-preserving tools could be the next step.
The document sets direction without specifying timelines or agencies responsible for implementation.
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