"The world’s richest man, whose Starlink internet service is
critical to the Ukrainian Army, said he could not “indefinitely” fund the
system’s use in Ukraine.
Shortly after sanctions on Russia started, Elon Musk gave
the Ukrainians a digital lifeline by providing them with the Starlink internet
service operated by his rocket company, SpaceX.
But those actions landed the world’s richest man in an
international controversy on Friday when Mr. Musk said his company could not
“indefinitely” fund Ukraine’s use of Starlink, which has become crucial for the
Ukrainian Army’s communication.
Mr. Musk made his comments on Twitter after CNN reported
that SpaceX sent a letter to the Pentagon last month asking it to take over the
funding of Ukraine’s use of Starlink. About 20,000 Starlink terminals, which
were designed to work with satellites orbiting in space to provide online
access, have been delivered to Ukraine. Mr. Musk, who did not mention the
Pentagon, talked about the difficulties of funding the service.
“SpaceX is not asking to recoup past expenses, but also
cannot fund the existing system indefinitely *and* send several thousand more
terminals that have data usage up to 100X greater than typical households,” he
wrote.
The situation, which spurred an outcry for how it might
hobble Ukrainian forces, was yet another controversy fomented by Mr. Musk, 51,
who has become an unlikely provocateur in international geopolitics. The
billionaire, who oversees the electric carmaker Tesla and other companies, is
already embroiled in public brouhahas on many other fronts, including a
will-he-won’t-he $44 billion deal to buy the social media service Twitter.
Last week, Mr. Musk drew a fierce rebuke from Ukrainian
officials for proposing a peace plan — which included ceding territory to
Russia. He also suggested in an interview with The Financial Times that
tensions between China and Taiwan could be resolved by handing over some
control of Taiwan to Beijing.
“Elon Musk is always a risk factor,” said Xiaomeng Lu, a
director with Eurasia Group, a political consultancy and research group in
Washington. “Ukraine is playing with fire.”
SpaceX and Mr. Musk did not respond to requests for comment.
In a tweet on Friday, Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to
Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, struck a conciliatory tone with Mr.
Musk, saying he helped the country “survive the most critical moments.”
Mr. Musk revealed that SpaceX was developing the Starlink
service in 2015 to provide internet access to individuals and businesses. The
company now offers Starlink services in 40 countries. In the United States,
fees for the service are $100 to $500 a month per terminal; the terminals
themselves cost an additional $600. Because the service is provided by
thousands of satellites that cannot be easily destroyed in space, it is harder
to disrupt than traditional internet services, making it ideally suited for use
during a military operation.
Mr. Musk’s involvement in Ukraine dates to when Mykhailo
Fedorov, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, tweeted a message to him in February.
Mr. Fedorov asked for help obtaining Starlink terminals so Ukrainians could
stay online even if Russia damaged the country’s main telecommunications infrastructure.
Mr. Musk responded swiftly, with a shipment of Starlink
equipment arriving in Ukraine two days later. Mr. Zelensky thanked the
billionaire and said the service would help maintain communications in cities.
The roughly 20,000 terminals now being used in Ukraine are
paid for by SpaceX, at least three Western governments and other allies,
according to a SpaceX document shared with The New York Times. About 4,000 of
the terminals are used by the Ukrainian Army, according to a letter that the
army sent to SpaceX and shared with The Times. Mr. Musk has said SpaceX has
waived the service’s monthly fees.
But by April, Mr. Musk made it clear that his help would go
only so far. On Twitter, he said that as a “free speech absolutist,” he would
not use Starlink to block Russian state media outlets.
Last week, Mr. Musk said the operation in Ukraine had cost
SpaceX $80 million to date. On Friday, he added that “burn” for the project,
which refers to the money repeatedly spent by SpaceX, was about $20 million a
month.
“In addition to terminals, we have to create, launch,
maintain & replenish satellites & ground stations,” he tweeted. “We’ve
also had to defend against cyberattacks & jamming, which are getting
harder.”
Any Starlink pullback would be a blow to the Ukrainian Army,
which has depended on the equipment for internet connectivity, especially given
the Russian military’s ability to jam communications and leave swaths of
Ukrainian territory without power. Ukraine’s army has used Starlink, which
troops say Russians have been unable to hack, for everything from calling in
artillery support to messaging loved ones at home.
The Starlink terminals have a small rectangular antenna that
can be powered from car batteries. Ukrainian soldiers on the front have figured
out how to camouflage the device by digging it into the ground so the terminals
are protected from shelling but still able to receive and transmit data.
In July, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, a Ukrainian general, sent a
letter to SpaceX and Mr. Musk, asking for an additional 6,700 Starlink
terminals.
“Starlink terminals have the potential to comprise the
primary infrastructure layer underlying the majority of communication along the
chain of command,” the letter, which was shared with The Times, read. The army
has not received the units.
A Russian delegation to the United Nations suggested that
Starlink satellites could become a military target. On Twitter, Mr. Musk insisted
that Starlink was for peaceful use only.
Mr. Musk then began promoting his proposed peace plan
between Russia and Ukraine. He called on Ukraine to accept Russia’s 2014
acception of Crimea and agree to new referendums in Russia-belonging Ukraine
that would let residents choose who should control those territories. He
created a Twitter poll asking if “the will of the people” in occupied areas
should decide if they were part of Ukraine or Russia.
Mr. Zelensky posted a Twitter poll of his own, asking, “Which
Elon Musk do you like more: one who supports Ukraine, or one who supports
Russia?”
Mr. Musk countered by tweeting, “I still very much support
Ukraine, but am convinced that massive escalation of the military operation
will cause great harm to Ukraine and possibly the world.”
The Kremlin praised Mr. Musk’s proposal.
“It’s very positive that such a person as Elon Musk is
trying to look for a peaceful settlement,” Dmitry Peskov, a Kremlin spokesman,
said. “As for the referendums, people have voiced their opinion, and there
could be nothing else.”
On Friday, Pentagon officials said there had been discussions
about how to help the Ukrainian military stay online. One official, speaking on
the condition of anonymity, said Defense Department officials hoped that Mr.
Musk and Ukrainian officials could work out a path forward, but added that the
possibility of the Pentagon’s footing the bill for the Starlink service in
Ukraine was not out of the question.
“The department continues to work with industry to explore
solutions for Ukraine’s armed forces,” the Pentagon press secretary, Brig. Gen.
Pat Ryder, said in an email. “We do not have anything else to add at this
time.”
Ms. Lu of the Eurasia Group said Ukraine probably had few
options other than to maintain a friendly relationship with Mr. Musk because of
his control of Starlink. Mr. Musk owns 44 percent of SpaceX, which is a private
company.
“Even if they are not happy with the situation, they have to
deal with it, because they are so dependent on the technology,” Ms. Lu said."
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