Elon Musk Admits to Withholding Starlink Service as a Precaution Against Ukrainian Attack

Elon Musk Admits to Withholding Starlink Service as a Precaution Against Ukrainian Attack


A⁤ top adviser to Ukraine’s president accused Elon Musk of⁣ enabling Russian aggression, after​ the billionaire entrepreneur acknowledged denying satellite internet service in order to prevent a Ukrainian drone attack⁣ on a Russian naval⁢ fleet ​last ⁣year.

The ‌Starlink satellite internet service, which is ‍operated by‌ Mr. Musk’s rocket‍ company SpaceX, ‍has been a​ digital lifeline in Ukraine⁢ since ​the early days ⁤of ⁣the‌ war ‍for ​both civilians and‌ soldiers⁢ in ⁣areas where digital infrastructure has been wiped out.

On ​Thursday,‌ CNN reported on an excerpt from Walter ⁢Isaacson’s upcoming biography “Elon Musk,”​ later published by The⁤ Washington Post,⁣ that said ⁣the billionaire had ordered the ⁣deactivation of Starlink satellite ‌service near the⁣ coast⁣ of ‌Crimea ⁤last ⁤September to thwart⁣ the Ukrainian attack. ⁤The excerpt said⁣ that Mr. Musk ‍had conversations with a⁣ Russian official that ‍led him⁤ to worry that an attack on Crimea could⁤ spiral into a nuclear conflict.

Later on Thursday, Mr. Musk responded on his social‍ media platform to say that he hadn’t disabled the​ service ​but had rather refused to ⁢comply with an emergency request from Ukrainian officials to enable Starlink ​connections to Sevastopol on the ⁤occupied ‌Crimean ⁤peninsula. That was‌ in effect‍ an ‍acknowledgment that he had made the decision to prevent a Ukrainian attack.

“The obvious intent being‍ to sink most of the Russian ​fleet ⁤at anchor,” he ⁣wrote on X, formerly known ‍as Twitter. “If I had agreed⁣ to their‌ request, then ‌SpaceX would be explicitly complicit in a major‌ act of ⁢war and ​conflict escalation.”

That drew ‍an⁣ angry response ⁣from Mykhailo Podolyak, a senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. Mr. Musk’s‌ “interference,” he said, had allowed Russia’s⁢ naval fleet⁣ to continue ​firing cruise missiles at Ukrainian cities.

“As a⁤ result, civilians, ⁣children are being killed.⁢ This is the‌ price of​ a cocktail ‍of ignorance ‍and big ego,” he wrote on X.

The account in the biography further confirms the ways in which⁢ Mr. Musk’s control ⁤over ⁤Starlink appears to be affecting ⁤Ukraine’s military. In July, The New York Times reported on Mr. ​Musk’s refusal ​to allow the service to work near Crimea, and the broader challenges Ukrainian officials ‌were ⁤facing ⁣because of‌ the country’s huge dependence on Starlink.

Within days of Russia’s⁢ full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February​ 2022, Mr. Musk sent Starlink terminals to‌ the country in response to public pleas from Ukrainian officials. Throughout the war, the connectivity provided by Starlink has been pivotal for ⁣Ukraine to coordinate drone ⁤strikes and gather intelligence.

The more than 42,000 Starlink terminals⁢ are also in use⁣ by hospitals, ⁤businesses ⁣and aid organizations across Ukraine.

But ⁤Mr. Musk has repeatedly stoked controversy around access to Starlink, saying last ​October that ⁢he could not “indefinitely” finance Ukraine’s ⁣use of Starlink, then abruptly reversing course. The near-total control that he wields…

2023-09-08 09:26:41
Post from www.nytimes.com
​ rnrn

Exit mobile version