The White House has explicitly framed Bitcoin accumulation as a geopolitical imperative, likening it to a 21st-century “space race.” In an exclusive interview recorded inside the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Bo Hines, Executive Director of the President’s Council on Digital Assets, spoke with Bitcoin Magazine political correspondent Frank Corva and Riot Platforms head of policy (and former White House deputy communications director) Brian Morgenstern.
Hines framed the administration’s first 100 days as a deliberate reversal of the “lawfare” that had hounded the crypto sector. “The President made promises on the campaign trail,” Hines said at the outset, “and he’s delivered on many of those promises thus far, but we still have quite a bit of work to do.”
Central to that is the launch of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) and a broader Digital Assets National Stockpile. The goal, Hines explained, is to secure as much of the digital gold as fiscal prudence permits. “We recognize bitcoin as being unique and we’ve said repeatedly that we view Bitcoin as digital gold,” he said.
When asked how much bitcoin the United States hopes to amass, Hines dismissed the premise: “That’s a silly question. That’s like asking any country how much you want of any asset with intrinsic stored value. You want as much as you can possibly accumulate.” Statutory language requires all accumulation to be budget-neutral, but Hines voiced confidence that “high-IQ people in this administration, specifically over at Treasury and Commerce,” will “come up with extremely creative ways for us to accumulate.”
That intent is animated by an explicitly geopolitical lens. “There is definitely a sort of space race as it pertains to accumulation of this asset,” Hines said. “We’ve positioned ourselves to be the bitcoin superpower of the world.” The analogy to the twentieth-century contest for extraterrestrial dominance recurred throughout the conversation; in the administration’s view, hash rate, custody competence and sovereign reserves may soon count as strongly as launch pads once did.
Hines credited much of the early velocity to what he called a deliberate infusion of private-sector talent into government. David Sacks, named both AI and “crypto czar,” was singled out for lending the expertise of Silicon Valley venture capital to federal decision-making. “We’re finally testing the hypothesis… what happens when you take a bunch of private-sector actors who have been successful and inject them into government?” Hines said, arguing that three months of regulatory reversals and policy construction already vindicate the experiment.
The White House’s demolition-construction-implementation roadmap is aggressive. Stage one—removing “burdensome regulations that really stifled innovation”—is already under way with lawsuits dropped by the Securities and Exchange Commission and new banking guidance designed to make the United States, in Hines’s words, “the most pro-crypto-friendly environment that possibly exists in the world.”
Stage two entails shepherding both stablecoin and market-structure bills through Congress. “We want to make sure we deliver on the President’s wishes to get both pieces of legislation on his desk before August recess,” Hines declared, predicting bipartisan passage. Stage three, scheduled to begin once a statutory framework exists, will integrate blockchain rails into conventional payments—an overhaul Hines said could become the signature achievement of the President’s second term.
That timetable is undergirded by a 180-day inter-agency report mandated by the executive order, meant to articulate how federal departments will operate under the forthcoming legal architecture. Treasury has already audited existing government-held Bitcoin (deadline was April 5); Hines said every relevant agency “has been extremely cooperative in producing what they have,” with consolidation now in progress.
One open question is how the government will acquire new coins. Policymakers have floated ideas ranging from revaluing gold certificates to leveraging federal energy assets for on-site mining. Hines declined to privilege any single path. “We can do this in numerous different ways,” he said, emphasizing speed and practicality. “What can we move on in the quickest fashion, and how can we start this accumulation process in the most expeditious manner possible?”
The administration is also trying to strike a balance between blockchain transparency and individual privacy. Hines rejected the notion that crypto rails are uniquely hospitable to illicit finance—“You’re a pretty dumb criminal if you want to use digital assets to do something nefarious, because that can be traced publicly”—while acknowledging the importance of self-custody and anonymity for lawful users. “It is a delicate balance, but it’s one that we can strike very effectively,” he said, adding that the world will “look to the US” for precedent.
As the interview concluded, Hines framed the initiative as both domestic necessity and international contest. If legislation passes and the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve begins accumulating before year’s end, he argued, “we will be the crypto capital of the world at that point.” Whether other nations accept that outcome—or accelerate their own sovereign accumulation—now depends on how seriously they take the United States’ declaration that Bitcoin is the new battlefield where economic superpowers measure their reach.
At press time, BTC traded at $95,068.