Just came across something interesting that got me thinking about how traditional institutions view crypto. Apparently the Pentagon ran a war game back in 2018 that's pretty revealing about their actual concerns with Bitcoin and digital assets.



The scenario they created involved a fictional group called Zbellion - basically Gen Z activists operating from the dark web, using cyberattacks to steal from institutions they see as part of "the establishment," then converting those stolen funds into Bitcoin. The whole thing was set in 2025 and designed to prepare military personnel for future cyber conflicts. The Intercept got their hands on the 200-page document through a FOIA request.

What's fascinating isn't really the Zbellion premise itself - it's what it reveals about how the Pentagon thinks about cryptocurrency. They're clearly viewing Bitcoin as a tool for funding and coordinating attacks, which tells you something about their threat model.

But here's the thing that makes this almost comical: if you actually understand how blockchain works, Zbellion would be one of the worst choices for moving illicit funds. Bitcoin transactions are permanent, transparent, and traceable. Every movement sits on a public ledger that anyone - including law enforcement - can analyze. Companies like Chainalysis have already built sophisticated surveillance tools specifically for this, and agencies like the FBI and DEA use them regularly. The DEA even prosecuted crypto dealers who thought they were anonymous, proving the point pretty clearly.

So either the Pentagon war game designers didn't fully grasp blockchain's public nature, or they were using "Bitcoin" as a catch-all term for cryptocurrencies in general. Either way, it's revealing. Real criminal operations would never pick a public blockchain for money laundering - the immutability and transparency make it essentially the worst option available.

What this document actually shows is interesting from a market perspective though. Back in 2018 when they designed this, the military was already thinking about crypto as strategically important enough to war-game around. Fast forward to now and you've got central banks researching digital currencies, governments building blockchain infrastructure, and the entire conversation around crypto has shifted from "is this even real?" to "how do we integrate this?"

The Pentagon's concerns about Zbellion might have missed the mark on technical reality, but they weren't wrong about one thing: cryptocurrency's role in how power and resources move around is becoming increasingly central to security thinking. Whether that's a feature or a bug probably depends on your perspective.
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