The value of the shadowy digital currency known as bitcoin has jumped
to record highs this month, sending shock waves through America’s
defense and intelligence agencies, which fear its growth signals a surge
in use by terrorists, drug kingpins, white-collar criminals and Russian
cybercriminals who don’t want to be tracked by the world’s governments.
This
summer, the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
(FinCEN), the Department of Justice and scores of European illicit
finance law enforcement officials have fought back with a wave of
operations against Russian cybercriminals. Late last month, they
shuttered AlphaBay and Hansa — two of the biggest “dark web” contraband
marketplaces rife with the illegal sale of guns, drugs and other
forbidden merchandise.
In an even more startling sign of the
battle raging around bitcoin, a FinCEN-led international illicit
financing task force arrested a Russian “mastermind of organized crime”
on a small beachside village in northern Greece less than two weeks ago.
Alexander
Vinnik, who is accused of laundering more than $4 billion worth of
illegal funds using bitcoin accounts, operated BTC-e, one of the world’s
oldest bitcoin exchanges.
U.S. authorities accuse Mr. Vinnik of
facilitating crimes including drug trafficking, public corruption,
hacking, fraud, identity theft and tax refund fraud.
“Just as new
computer technologies continue to change the way we engage each other
and experience the world, so too will criminals subvert these new
technologies to serve their own nefarious purposes,” Brian Stretch, U.S.
attorney for the Northern District of California, said about BTC-e.
Mr. Vinnik was arrested amid worldwide cyberhavoc triggered by
massive WannaCry’s Bitcoin ransomware attacks in May and June. The
attacks forced a production shutdown at Renault auto plans, crashed
computers at Britain’s National Health Service and targeted India’s ATM
network.
In Britain, screenshots on social media showed National
Health Service computer screens with messages demanding $300 worth of
Bitcoin to regain access to files.
While cyberattacks have
increasingly targeted businesses around the world, bitcoin ransom
attacks, especially in the U.S., are skyrocketing. The FBI’s Internet
Crime Complaint Center reported it received 2,673 ransomware incidents
last year — nearly double the figure from 2014.
Despite
Moscow’s denials of meddling in the U.S. presidential election, major
investigations also continue into Russian hackers suspected of using
cyberattacks to undermine or influence the vote.
A little-noticed
provision of the law passed by Congress and signed by President Trump
this month imposing new sanctions for North Korea, Iran and Russia
mandated the formulation of a national security strategy to combat “the
financing of terrorism and related forms of illicit finance.” Among
those forms, according to the text of the law, were “so-called
cryptocurrencies [and] other methods that are computer,
telecommunications, or internet-based” for cybercrime.
Bitcoin’s wild rise
A
creation of the digital age that reflects the libertarian impulses of
much of the online community, bitcoins were launched in 2009 by a
shadowy figure named Satoshi Nakamoto, who has never publicly come
forward. Many analysts have suggested that he never existed.
The
currency’s unique power comes from its independency and lack of reliance
on any single government for its legitimacy. Unlike regular money,
digital or cryptocurrencies are not connected to banks or governments
and allow anonymous purchases or money exchanges completely outside the
realm of banks, credit card firms or other third parties. Instead, the
coins exist because users “mine” them by lending their computing power
to verify other users’ transactions.
This anonymity has brought
instability to bitcoin values. Over the past month, however, prices are
up more than 30 percent. According to the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index, a
bitcoin traded for more than $3,000 — a record high — this past
weekend.
The surge follows a spinoff another cryptocurrency, Bitcoin Cash.
Anticipation
of the spinoff sent bitcoin values spiraling last month as market
analysts predicted a “civil war” with the rival. The opposite appears to
have occurred with the spinoff driving up bitcoin’s value.
Market
analysts say the value surge demonstrated bitcoin’s resiliency in
addition to a growing public appetite for cryptocurrencies.
On Thursday, bitcoins traded at $3,439.55 per coin, driving the overall market value of all existing bitcoins to $56 billion.
Adding
bitcoin’s overall value to other cryptocurrencies such as Ethereum and
Litecoin and the total market capitalization of such digital cash is
roughly $120 billion.
America’s defense and intelligence agencies,
FinCEN in particular, pride themselves on the U.S. government’s ability
to track and disrupt the illicit financial networks that work through
traditional banks and finance channels.
This summer’s crackdowns
on illicit bitcoin activity has been considerable, but the dramatic
surge in the currency’s overall value poses even more challenges.
Yaya
Fanusie, a former counterterrorism analyst for the CIA, is credited
with identifying the first verifiable instance of a terrorist
organization attempting to use bitcoin to raise funds. He now runs
analysis for the Center on Sanctions and Illicit Finance at the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies and told The Washington Times in
an interview that the increased volume of bitcoin trading in itself is
not the concern.
“The national security concern is not that
criminals will use this type of technology — they use all technologies,”
Mr. Fanusie said. “The policy question is: How do you deal with
something that governments can’t control?”
He said the U.S. needs
to engage with the cryptocurrencies as much as possible and pointed to
Defense Department procurement experiments already underway.
“Bitcoin
is like a rebellious teenager,” he said. “It wants to do its own thing.
So what do you do? Do you ban it? No, you want to have a good
relationship with it and influence how it develops.”
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