When a country begins accepting cryptocurrency payments for weapons orders, digital assets are no longer just a matter of “financial innovation” or “gray tools,” but are officially incorporated into the national survival and foreign strategy systems.
In January 2026, Iran’s Ministry of Defense Export Center Mindex explicitly stated in an official document that its overseas military contracts can accept cryptocurrencies, barter trade, or Iranian rials as payment methods.
Arms trade has always been one of the most heavily sanctioned, regulated, and sensitive cross-border transaction scenarios. The fact that Iran openly includes cryptocurrencies as a payment option in this field signifies one thing: digital assets are being systematically used by Iran as an “anti-sanction financial tool.”
Driven by Practical Constraints
In recent years, Iran has been under three highly realistic constraints:
Long-term depreciation of the national currency, the rial, and a fragile foreign exchange system
The international banking system has been largely cut off
Energy exports and military-industrial trade continue to face settlement and delivery risks
Against this backdrop, in 2025, Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf publicly stated that without accepting cryptocurrencies, Iran would be unable to achieve its national goal of digital economy accounting for 10% of GDP, and called for the rapid formulation of a national roadmap for digital assets.
This is not technological idealism; it is a sober judgment formed under long-term sanctions—without integrating cryptocurrencies, many economic goals would be impossible to realize.
The Fourth Largest Mining Center Globally
In practical terms, Iran’s dependence on digital assets is far more aggressive than its public statements suggest.
On one hand, Iran has become the world’s fourth-largest cryptocurrency mining center. Thanks to substantial electricity subsidies, even rampant illegal mining has brought considerable hash power and digital assets.
On the other hand, digital assets are deeply embedded in more sensitive areas. The Israeli National Counter-Terrorism Financing Authority has disclosed that addresses related to the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have received approximately 1.5 billion USD in USDT.
Although some addresses may belong to exchanges or shared services, the scale alone is enough to demonstrate that stablecoins are becoming an important liquidity vehicle for Iran to bypass sanctions.
Flickering in the Darkness
In January 2026, due to protests and exchange rate crises, Iran implemented a nationwide internet shutdown. This should have been a “fatal blow” to crypto transactions, but the outcome was unexpected.
Under the offline or weakly connected environment, various offline or low-connectivity solutions were quickly discussed and deployed:
Starlink satellite network
Blockstream satellite network supporting global Bitcoin data broadcasting
Bluetooth mesh communication tool Bitchat
Darkwire, a Bitcoin transfer scheme without internet
Machankura, supporting telecom networks to send and receive Bitcoin
These solutions are not mature and cannot replace the internet on a large scale, but in such extreme environments, the crypto industry demonstrated its strong resilience. When traditional communication and financial systems fail simultaneously, digital assets become the “last possible channel” to attempt.
“Strategic Tool” Era
Iran’s experience is a microcosm of a country’s survival under extreme sanctions.
It demonstrates the unique value of cryptocurrencies in geopolitics: bypassing traditional financial systems to transfer value and acquire strategic materials.
Russia’s oil trade, Venezuela’s “shadow Bitcoin reserves,” and now Iran’s arms trade all point to an undeniable reality: cryptocurrencies are rising from “financial tools” to “geopolitical tools,” becoming a new medium connecting national strategies with the global economy.
*This article is for reference only and does not constitute investment advice. Markets are risky; invest cautiously.
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Iran's "De-dollarization" Path: When Weapons Start Settling with Cryptocurrency
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When a country begins accepting cryptocurrency payments for weapons orders, digital assets are no longer just a matter of “financial innovation” or “gray tools,” but are officially incorporated into the national survival and foreign strategy systems.
In January 2026, Iran’s Ministry of Defense Export Center Mindex explicitly stated in an official document that its overseas military contracts can accept cryptocurrencies, barter trade, or Iranian rials as payment methods.
Arms trade has always been one of the most heavily sanctioned, regulated, and sensitive cross-border transaction scenarios. The fact that Iran openly includes cryptocurrencies as a payment option in this field signifies one thing: digital assets are being systematically used by Iran as an “anti-sanction financial tool.”
Driven by Practical Constraints
In recent years, Iran has been under three highly realistic constraints:
Long-term depreciation of the national currency, the rial, and a fragile foreign exchange system
The international banking system has been largely cut off
Energy exports and military-industrial trade continue to face settlement and delivery risks
Against this backdrop, in 2025, Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf publicly stated that without accepting cryptocurrencies, Iran would be unable to achieve its national goal of digital economy accounting for 10% of GDP, and called for the rapid formulation of a national roadmap for digital assets.
This is not technological idealism; it is a sober judgment formed under long-term sanctions—without integrating cryptocurrencies, many economic goals would be impossible to realize.
The Fourth Largest Mining Center Globally
In practical terms, Iran’s dependence on digital assets is far more aggressive than its public statements suggest.
On one hand, Iran has become the world’s fourth-largest cryptocurrency mining center. Thanks to substantial electricity subsidies, even rampant illegal mining has brought considerable hash power and digital assets.
On the other hand, digital assets are deeply embedded in more sensitive areas. The Israeli National Counter-Terrorism Financing Authority has disclosed that addresses related to the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have received approximately 1.5 billion USD in USDT.
Although some addresses may belong to exchanges or shared services, the scale alone is enough to demonstrate that stablecoins are becoming an important liquidity vehicle for Iran to bypass sanctions.
Flickering in the Darkness
In January 2026, due to protests and exchange rate crises, Iran implemented a nationwide internet shutdown. This should have been a “fatal blow” to crypto transactions, but the outcome was unexpected.
Under the offline or weakly connected environment, various offline or low-connectivity solutions were quickly discussed and deployed:
Starlink satellite network
Blockstream satellite network supporting global Bitcoin data broadcasting
Bluetooth mesh communication tool Bitchat
Darkwire, a Bitcoin transfer scheme without internet
Machankura, supporting telecom networks to send and receive Bitcoin
These solutions are not mature and cannot replace the internet on a large scale, but in such extreme environments, the crypto industry demonstrated its strong resilience. When traditional communication and financial systems fail simultaneously, digital assets become the “last possible channel” to attempt.
“Strategic Tool” Era
Iran’s experience is a microcosm of a country’s survival under extreme sanctions.
It demonstrates the unique value of cryptocurrencies in geopolitics: bypassing traditional financial systems to transfer value and acquire strategic materials.
Russia’s oil trade, Venezuela’s “shadow Bitcoin reserves,” and now Iran’s arms trade all point to an undeniable reality: cryptocurrencies are rising from “financial tools” to “geopolitical tools,” becoming a new medium connecting national strategies with the global economy.
*This article is for reference only and does not constitute investment advice. Markets are risky; invest cautiously.