众议院共和党人正式确认“切断行动2.0”以比特币和加密货币公司为目标。
House Republicans Officially Confirm "Operation Choke Point 2.0" Targeted Bitcoin And Crypto Firms

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/crypto/house-republicans-officially-confirm-operation-choke-point-20-targeted-bitcoin-and-crypto

## “切断行动2.0”报告摘要 一份由众议院金融服务委员会共和党人撰写的50页报告指控,拜登政府下进行了一场针对加密公司的协同“断绝银行业务”,被称为“切断行动2.0”。该报告详细说明了美联储、联邦存款保险公司(FDIC)和货币监理署(OCC)如何利用非正式指导和压力——包括“暂停”和“无异议”信函——来阻止银行服务加密行业。 美国证券交易委员会(SEC)被指责采取“先执法,后制定规则”的方法,以SAB 121等指导为例,阻碍了银行提供加密托管服务。据报道,至少有30家实体因感知到的监管风险而难以维持银行关系,尽管它们符合法律规定。 委员会认为,这些策略与2010年代初备受争议的“切断行动”如出一辙,扼杀了创新,并将合法企业推向海外。尽管监管机构公开否认存在偏见,但该报告提供了私下压力和胁迫的证据。共和党人呼吁制定明确的监管指导,并为加密公司提供银行服务,以扭转这一趋势。

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原文

Authored by Micah Zimmerman via BitcoinMagazine.com,

Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee have released a 50-page report detailing what they describe as a systematic debanking effort by Biden-era regulators, dubbed “Operation Chokepoint 2.0.” 

While many of the findings — such as the Fed, FDIC, and OCC pressuring banks away from crypto through informal guidance, and the SEC’s “enforce first, make rules never” approach — were previously known, the report now places them squarely in the Congressional record.

The report identifies at least 30 entities that were effectively “debanked” through informal regulatory guidance and supervisory pressure. These businesses, the Committee claims, were forced out of the U.S. banking system without formal enforcement actions.

Government coercion, biased enforcement, and private pressure — all while denying

According to the document, the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) employed a range of tactics to influence bank behavior. 

These included “non-objection” letters, “pause” letters, and other forms of informal guidance designed to make banks hesitant to engage with crypto companies.

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) allegedly adopted a policy of “enforce first, make rules never,” using selective enforcement rather than clear regulatory frameworks to restrict digital-asset activity. 

The report highlights SAB 121, an SEC guidance that effectively blocked banks from offering custody services for crypto assets.

The report paints a picture of regulators publicly denying any bias against digital assets, while privately pressuring banks to sever ties with crypto firms. The report reads that while regulators consistently denied discouraging digital-asset activity, the evidence collected by the Committee shows a pattern of private pressure and informal coercion. 

Committee Republicans argue these actions represent a revival of Operation Choke Point, a controversial program from the early 2010s that used regulatory and reputational pressure to discourage banks from serving certain high-risk industries. 

The report asserts that the tactics used against crypto firms echo the same methods: informal guidance, opaque supervisory expectations, and reputational risk warnings.

“The lack of clear rules combined with aggressive enforcement has created a chilling effect on the digital-asset sector,” said a Committee spokesperson. “Legitimate American businesses were forced to move abroad or shut down, not because of wrongdoing, but because of regulatory overreach.”

Crypto firms struggled to keep bank accounts

The report includes anecdotal accounts of firms that struggled to maintain bank accounts despite following all applicable laws.

One executive described repeated requests for documentation, sudden account closures, and vague warnings from compliance officers citing regulatory “uncertainty.” 

Another recounted being effectively cut off from the U.S. banking system after submitting a routine regulatory filing.

Republicans on the Committee argue that this environment has stifled innovation and driven financial activity offshore.

They call on Congress and the Biden administration to reverse these policies, provide explicit guidance, and ensure that legitimate crypto firms can access banking services without fear of arbitrary pressure.

The Committee’s full report is available in full on the House Financial Services Committee website.

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