Washington may have just found its next crypto controversy.
Two U.S. senators are urging Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to launch an urgent national security review into a $500 million foreign investment in World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a DeFi venture linked to the Trump family.
At the center of the concern is the source of the money. The investment reportedly comes from a UAE-backed vehicle and would give foreign investors a 49% stake in the company. That is not a passive position — it’s nearly half the firm.
What makes the situation more sensitive is the timing. The details surfaced just days after the inauguration, immediately raising questions about foreign influence and access to potentially sensitive financial data.
Key Points
Senators Elizabeth Warren and Andy Kim have formally requested a CFIUS review of the deal.
The $500 million transaction would reportedly grant a UAE-backed entity a 49% stake in WLFI.
Around $187 million from the deal is said to flow to entities linked to the Trump family.
Lawmakers argue the structure could give foreign actors leverage over a firm handling U.S. user financial data.
The Deal Under Scrutiny
In a letter sent Friday, Senators Warren and Kim asked Treasury to confirm whether the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has been notified about the transaction.
According to reports, the funding is linked to Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the UAE’s national security adviser. If completed, the foreign-backed vehicle would instantly become the largest shareholder in WLFI.
That alone would likely draw attention. But the political context adds another layer. WLFI has been widely promoted by Trump-family affiliates, and Trump-linked ventures have been expanding deeper into crypto in recent months.
Lawmakers say the issue isn’t just about the size of the investment — it’s about influence. A $500 million stake could potentially provide access to internal operations, strategic decision-making, or sensitive company data. For a project tied to a sitting president’s family, that raises difficult questions.
Why National Security Concerns Are Surfacing
Beyond the ownership structure, senators are focused on the type of information WLFI may collect.
According to its privacy disclosures, the platform gathers wallet addresses, device identifiers, and approximate location data. If a foreign-backed entity were to gain meaningful influence over a company handling that kind of financial information, lawmakers argue it could create national security vulnerabilities.
The letter also references reported ties between executives connected to the deal and G42, a technology firm that has previously faced U.S. scrutiny over alleged links to China.
Warren and Kim have asked Treasury to confirm by March 5 whether a formal review is underway.
What Happens If CFIUS Steps In?
If CFIUS opens a formal investigation, the situation could escalate quickly. The committee has broad authority to review — and even unwind — foreign investments if it determines they pose national security risks.
High-profile cross-border deals tied to politically sensitive figures rarely avoid scrutiny. And with crypto increasingly intersecting with federal oversight, developments like this can ripple into markets fast.



