A four-star US Navy admiral has told Congress that the military is running a live node on the Bitcoin network and testing it for national security purposes.
Admiral Samuel Paparo, head of the US-Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM), revealed this at a House Armed Services Committee hearing on Wednesday, a day after telling the Senate Armed Services Committee that Bitcoin has “incredible potential” as a tool for US “power projection”. He also said it has great potential as a tool for national security.
The House comments were the first public confirmation by a sitting US combatant commander that the military is participating directly in the Bitcoin peer-to-peer network.
“We have a node on the Bitcoin network right now,” Paparo said, responding to questions from Rep. Lance Gooden. “We don’t mine Bitcoin. We use it to monitor and we do a series of operational tests to secure and protect networks using the Bitcoin protocol.”
A Bitcoin node is a computer that stores the full history of the blockchain and enforces the network’s rules, relaying validated transactions across the peer-to-peer network. Unlike mining, it does not earn rewards and does not require specialized hardware.
Running a node is how participants in Bitcoin independently verify the state of the network instead of relying on third parties. There are an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 publicly available full nodes on the network by early 2026, with the real number likely higher because many operate behind firewalls.
One node out of tens of thousands poses no threat to Bitcoin’s independence or its resistance to any single party controlling it.
But a US military combatant command running that node is notable because Bitcoin’s design has long been framed as a defense against takeover attempts by powerful governments, and INDOPACOM is the command responsible for US military operations across the Indo-Pacific, including the theater of strategic competition with China.



