Is Bitcoin quietly evolving beyond finance into a tool of national defense? That question is gaining traction after comments from Samuel Paparo, the commander of the United States Indo-Pacific Command, reported that BTC may have significance beyond markets, hinting at a role in cyber defense, power projection, and strategic competition. Paparo pulled back the curtain on a quiet but potentially significant shift in how the technology is being evaluated at the highest levels of defense.
In a recent X post, an analyst known as TFTC updated that the head of the United States Indo-Pacific Command revealed that the US military is actively running a Bitcoin node and testing the protocol’s cryptographic architecture for operational security.
Furthermore, Paparo reportedly framed BTC as a tool for securing and protecting networks, and suggested its relevance to power projection in the context of strategic competition with China. Not mining, not speculating, but running infrastructure. The same network once mocked as a haven for criminals is now considered critical to national security by the Department of Defense.
Meanwhile, the US is estimated to hold roughly 328,000 BTC, while China is believed to control around 194,000 BTC. Whether BTC was intentional or incidental, the military is treating it as an asset in a geopolitical arms race.
It has been 15 years since Satoshi Nakamoto handed Bitcoin to the world. Alex Thorn, the head of firmwide research, has stated that Nakamoto sent what is widely believed to be his last confirmed communication.
On April 26, 2011, Satoshi wrote to Bitcoin developer Gavin Andresen, urging him to shift the narrative away from the shadowy figure and toward emphasizing BTC as an open-source project and community contribution.
In the days leading up to that message, Satoshi had already begun stepping back. In a message to developer Mike Hearn on April 20 and 23, Satoshi said he had moved on to other things, reassuring him that BTC was in good hands with Gavin and everyone. His last public post was earlier on December 12, 2010, in his 575th post on the Bitcointalk forum. The focus was on warning about a potential DoS attack, and signing off with the fact that there was still more work to do.
Fifteen years later, the coins remain untouchable. Satoshi holds roughly 1.097 million BTC, currently worth an estimated $85 billion, still sitting untouched. In Alex’s view, when Satoshi said BTC was in good hands, he wasn’t only speaking to early developers; he was speaking to all of us, and we must carry that legacy forward.
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