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Borderless Threat: How Crypto Networks Secretly Finance Cross-Border Terrorism
September 02, 2025
|The Business Guardian
In the digital age where innovation often outpaces regulation, cryptocurrencies have emerged as a financial force: decentralized, borderless, and anonymous.

But beneath this glittering promise of economic liberation lies a darker, graver danger, one that directly threatens India's national security. This is the story the world isn't talking about enough: how crypto networks are quietly becoming the financial lifelines of cross-border terrorism against India.
This is not a hypothetical threat—it's real, expanding, and dangerously under-addressed.
Traditionally, terror funding relied on hawala channels, counterfeit currency, illegal smuggling, or misuse of charitable fronts. These mechanisms, though insidious, were traceable to an extent through intelligence coordination, surveillance, and inter-governmental financial frameworks. But cryptocurrencies changed the game.
Bitcoin, Monero, Tether, and privacy coins like Zcash or Dash have opened a backdoor into India's security architecture, allowing terror operatives, many based across the LoC or sitting comfortably in digital havens like Turkey, Syria, Qatar, and even parts of Europe, to raise, transfer, and obscure funds without leaving a trace in conventional banking systems. Encrypted wallets, decentralized exchanges (DEXs), tumblers, and mixers are now the new smugglers of terror finance, operating silently through the shadow internet.
In 2023, Indian intelligence flagged at least eight cases of crypto-funded terrorism linked to Kashmir insurgent groups and sleeper cells in Bengaluru and Hyderabad. The money didn't come from banks or NGOs; it came through blockchain wallets created via stolen IDs, routed through servers in Belize, anonymized via Monero, and finally cashed through unregistered P2P platforms.
The answer lies in five powerful attributes of crypto:
Anonymity: Unlike SWIFT or UPI transactions, most crypto wallets require no KYC if created on DEXs. A terrorist in Rawalpindi can receive funding from a sympathizer in Istanbul in under 30 seconds—no names, no flags, no bank flags.
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