The post Trump’s New Cyber Strategy Puts Crypto Under National Security Spotlight appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The White House has released a new cybersecurity framework titled President Trump’s Cyber Strategy for America, outlining how the U.S. plans to strengthen its response to cyber threats.
The seven-page document focuses heavily on cyber offense and deterrence, while offering relatively few details on how the policies will actually be implemented. Despite its shorter format, the strategy marks a major development for the crypto industry.
For the first time, cryptocurrency and blockchain technologies are explicitly mentioned as systems that must be “protected and secured.”
According to crypto policy analyst Alex Thorn, the new strategy is significantly shorter than previous cybersecurity frameworks.
For example, the cybersecurity strategy released in 2023 under Joe Biden was around 35 pages long, nearly five times longer than the new document.
However, Thorn noted that the latest framework focuses more on high-level strategy rather than implementation details, raising questions about how some of the policies will actually be carried out.
He also pointed out that neither Biden’s cybersecurity strategy nor the 2025 National Security Strategy mentioned crypto or blockchain at all, making their inclusion in the new document a first for U.S. cyber policy.
While the strategy recognizes blockchain infrastructure, Thorn highlighted that it also contains language that could lead to stricter regulatory enforcement.
Under Pillar 1, the policy states the government will “uproot criminal infrastructure and deny financial exit and safe haven.”
According to Thorn, when combined with a new executive order targeting transnational cybercrime, this language could be used to justify crackdowns on crypto mixers, privacy-focused cryptocurrencies, and unregulated crypto off-ramps often associated with illicit activity.
The executive order also establishes a new operational cell within the National Coordination Center to target international cybercrime groups and directs the Attorney General to prioritize related prosecutions.
The U.S. government estimates that cybercrime caused $12.5 billion in losses in 2024 alone, underscoring why enforcement has become a major focus.
Another major point of the strategy is expanded offensive cyber capabilities. The document states the U.S. “will not confine our responses to the cyber realm,” suggesting broader retaliation options against hostile networks.
It also proposes AI-powered cyber defense systems, including autonomous “agentic AI” capable of detecting and deceiving cyber attackers at scale.
However, Thorn noted that the strategy does not outline oversight frameworks or limits on data collection, raising questions about governance.
Despite the ambitious goals, Thorn highlighted challenges around implementation. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the main civilian cybersecurity body, has faced budget cuts and still lacks a Senate-confirmed director.
Having said that, this could shift more operational power toward military and intelligence agencies.
Overall, the strategy expands cyber offense, introduces AI-driven defense, and brings crypto into national cybersecurity policy for the first time, a move that could shape future regulation and adoption.
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