By Manuel Dueñas, Senior Fraud Lawyer at Crypto Legal
The relationship between geopolitics and digital assets has entered a more complex and consequential phase in 2026. Ongoing armed conflicts, expanding sanctions regimes, and the fragmentation of global financial infrastructure are no longer peripheral considerations for the crypto sector. They are now central to how digital assets are transacted, monitored, and regulated. For investors, institutions and service providers, the legal and compliance implications are both immediate and structural.
Sanctions have become a primary mechanism through which states exert economic pressure, and their interaction with cryptocurrency markets has intensified. Historically, crypto was perceived,…






