The Biden era’s clampdown on digital assets gave way to a bold shift under the Trump administration, and that change is reshaping industry, markets and defense thinking. This piece argues why America should keep that momentum, how congressional clarity can lock in leadership, and how blockchain can strengthen military logistics, supply chains and secure data handling. It makes the case for targeted public and permissioned uses of the technology, and shows practical payoffs for service members and the defense industrial base. The tone is optimistic about private sector innovation and insists Washington move from obstacle to enabler.
One of the clearest moves of the last year has been a regulatory about-face that favors innovation over heavy-handed rules. The Biden years leaned into enforcement that stalled projects and pushed talent offshore, but recent policy shifts have opened doors for entrepreneurs and investors to build here. That matters because talent, capital and infrastructure follow a confident regulatory environment, and the United States should be the natural hub for digital finance.
Congress has a role to finish what’s started: pass market structure rules that give firms a dependable framework to operate under. When rules are clear, companies invest, hire and scale, and national security benefits from having that expertise onshore. A legislative push that treats stable, regulated markets as a public good will help preserve our capital markets advantage.
Crypto already moves value reliably for tens of millions of Americans, and it does so in ways that cut fees and wait times by trimming middlemen. For many users the appeal is straightforward: faster settlement, lower cost and a chance at more direct control over their assets. Skeptics focus on volatility, but the underlying ledger tech unlocks much broader utility beyond currency.
TRUMP PUSH TO MAKE US ‘CRYPTO CAPITAL OF THE WORLD’ GAINS STEAM AS CRYPTO BILL NEARS SENATE MARKUP This momentum matters for more than finance; it builds talent and standards that the Pentagon can leverage. Policy that welcomes market growth creates a pool of engineers and firm-level practices the defense world can tap into for secure, auditable systems.
At its simplest, blockchain is a tamper-evident ledger that can represent anything of value, from copyrights to professional licenses and sensitive communications. That property makes it useful for both public verification and tightly controlled, permissioned systems. New tools like zero-knowledge proofs and better key management reduce past technical roadblocks and make hybrid approaches realistic now.
REBECCA GRANT: TRUMP’S 8 BIGGEST NATIONAL SECURITY WINS OF 2025 For the Pentagon this suggests a layered strategy: keep classified flows on closed, permissioned networks the DOD controls, while using public blockchains where external verifiability and coalition interoperability are needed. Public chains can anchor hashes for document integrity and provenance, helping to fight deepfakes and build shared, neutral infrastructure with allies.
Blockchain can also tighten logistics and supply chains by tracking parts from origin to deployment, and by preserving reliable maintenance and financial records across diverse IT systems. Manufacturers “can use blockchain to improve the way they track parts, inform the analytics that anticipate when repairs will be needed and make maintenance processes far more efficient.” That kind of visibility matters when readiness and lives are at stake.
US NEEDS TO BREAK CHINA’S SUPPLY CHAIN CHOKEHOLD TO WIN THE TECH RACE China is clearly treating blockchain as strategic infrastructure, so we cannot cede this ground. The military and its vendors should adopt proven practices already in use in the private sector; firms like Walmart and major banks show the model works at scale. U.S. leadership here protects our tech edge and strengthens allied cooperation.
The department can also use blockchain to give service members better control over important records—medical, service files and documents that travel with a person throughout their career. A targeted pilot program led by a CDAO-style office, plus a cross-agency working group and clear policy guardrails, would be a practical way to start. The gains are concrete: stronger data integrity, faster processes and a defense enterprise that uses modern tools instead of resisting them.
