Musk Says Starlink Now Blocking Russian Drone Use
Elon Musk told the Wall Street Journal that SpaceX has stopped what he called the “unauthorized use” of Starlink satellite internet terminals by Russian drones in Ukraine, after Kyiv publicly appealed for help disabling the communications links that were guiding Russian attacks. The brief report says the change came in response to Ukraine’s warning that Starlink connectivity was becoming a dangerous battlefield tool in enemy hands, even as the same network remains the backbone of Ukraine’s own military communications. Musk did not detail how SpaceX is detecting and blocking Russian use or what technical or geographic restrictions are being applied. The move underscores how a U.S. billionaire‑controlled commercial system now sits at the center of a major war, and how decisions made in California can directly shape the capabilities of both Russian and Ukrainian forces. It also feeds an ongoing U.S. debate about whether critical wartime infrastructure like Starlink should be more tightly governed by formal defense contracts and laws rather than ad‑hoc executive decisions by a single CEO.
📌 Key Facts
- Elon Musk says Starlink has stopped “unauthorized use” of its terminals by Russian drones.
- Ukraine had appealed to Musk and SpaceX to help disable Starlink connectivity that was aiding Russian drone attacks.
- Starlink remains described as the backbone of Ukraine’s military communications, putting Musk and SpaceX in an uneasy central role in the war.
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