The post Exclusive: RAKIA CEO Omri Raiter Reveals How a $3B Crypto Network Is Powering State-Level Operations appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
In an exclusive interview, Omri Raiter, CEO of RAKIA, has shed light on a massive cryptocurrency laundering ecosystem tied to state-backed actors — one that may be far larger than publicly reported.
Raiter challenges the widely cited figures, stating that “the real state-linked volume is materially higher,” suggesting the scale of activity extends well beyond the $3 billion benchmark often cited.
At the core of the discovery is RAKIA’s advanced intelligence platform, which uses AI-driven multisensory data fusion to analyze vast streams of information simultaneously.
This approach allows investigators to move beyond transactions and uncover the actual actors behind them — a critical breakthrough in identifying state-linked operations.
The interview also reveals a key operational trend: USDT’s dominance on Tron (TRC20) in these flows.
While Bitcoin remains part of the ecosystem, particularly in mining and specific use cases, it is not the primary vehicle for day-to-day transactions.
Despite increasing scrutiny, Raiter points to structural weaknesses in global crypto regulation that continue to enable illicit activity.
Unregulated exchanges and gaps in cross-chain monitoring further complicate enforcement, creating blind spots across the ecosystem.
One of the most striking revelations involves activity during Iran’s prolonged internet blackout. Despite near-total civilian disconnection, RAKIA identified more than 1,100 active crypto nodes operating within the country.
The concentration of nodes in key strategic regions further reinforces the conclusion.
The interview also highlights a major shift in how cryptocurrency is being used at the national level. RAKIA confirms that crypto-based toll systems are now operational in critical trade routes.
From laundering networks to sovereign revenue systems, Raiter’s insights suggest that cryptocurrency is rapidly becoming embedded in state-level strategy.
The implications are significant: as enforcement struggles to keep up, the role of digital assets in geopolitical and financial systems is entering a new, more complex phase.


