"The tech billionaire has become the
dominant power in satellite internet technology. The ways he is wielding that
influence are raising global alarms.
On March 17, Gen. Mark A. Milley,
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, the
leader of Ukraine’s Armed Forces, dialed into a call to discuss events in Ukraine. Over the secure line, the two military leaders conferred
on air defense systems, real-time battlefield assessments and shared
intelligence on Russia’s military losses.
They also talked about Elon Musk.
General Zaluzhnyi raised the topic
of Starlink, the satellite internet technology made by Mr. Musk’s rocket
company, SpaceX, three people with knowledge of the
conversation said. Ukraine’s battlefield decisions depended on the continued
use of Starlink for communications, General Zaluzhnyi said, and his country
wanted to ensure access and discuss how to cover the cost of the service.
General Zaluzhnyi also asked if the
United States had an assessment of Mr. Musk, who has sprawling business
interests and murky politics — to which American officials gave no answer.
Mr. Musk, who leads SpaceX, Tesla
and Twitter, has become the most dominant player in space as he has steadily
amassed power over the strategically significant field of satellite internet.
Yet faced with little regulation and oversight, his erratic and personality-driven
style has increasingly worried militaries and political leaders around the
world, with the tech billionaire sometimes wielding his authority in
unpredictable ways.
Since 2019, Mr. Musk has sent SpaceX
rockets into space nearly every week that deliver dozens of sofa-size
satellites into orbit. The satellites communicate with terminals on Earth, so
they can beam high-speed internet to nearly every corner of the planet. Today,
more than 4,500 Starlink satellites are in the skies, accounting for more than
50 percent of all active satellites. They have already started changing the
complexion of the night sky, even before accounting for Mr. Musk’s plans to
have as many as 42,000 satellites in orbit in the coming years.
A
global satellite network
There are over 4,500 Starlink
satellites orbiting Earth. What appear to be long lines here are recently
launched satellites approaching their place in orbit.
Most of the satellites are spaced
out and move in a gridlike formation between Earth’s poles, while a few are
closely clustered and move together in lines.
The power of the technology, which
has helped push the value of closely held SpaceX to nearly $140 billion, is just beginning to be
felt.
Starlink is often the only way to
get internet access in conflict zones, remote areas and places hit by natural disasters.
It is used in Ukraine for coordinating drone strikes and intelligence
gathering. Activists in Iran and Turkey have sought to use the service as a
hedge against government controls. The U.S. Defense Department is a big
Starlink customer, while other militaries, such as in Japan, are testing the
technology.
But Mr. Musk’s near total control of
satellite internet has raised alarms.
A combustible personality, the
52-year-old’s allegiances are fuzzy. While Mr. Musk is hailed as a genius
innovator, he alone can decide to shut down Starlink internet access for a
customer or country, and he has the ability to leverage sensitive information
that the service gathers. Such concerns have been heightened because no
companies or governments have come close to matching what he has built.
In Ukraine, some fears have been
realized. Mr. Musk has restricted Starlink access multiple times during the conflict,
people familiar with the situation said. At one point, he denied the Ukrainian
military’s request to turn on Starlink near Crimea, the Russian-controlled
territory, affecting battlefield strategy. Last year, he publicly floated a
“peace plan” for the conflict that seemed aligned with Russian interests.
At times, Mr. Musk has openly
flaunted Starlink’s capabilities. “Between, Tesla, Starlink & Twitter, I
may have more real-time global economic data in one head than anyone ever,” he tweeted in April.
Starlinks
are a majority of active satellites orbiting Earth
Starlink satellites operate
approximately 300 miles above Earth in what is known as “low-Earth orbit.”
That's more than 60 times closer than traditional satellite internet services
that operate at higher altitudes in “geosynchronous orbit.”
Some are near Earth in low-Earth
orbit, and others are farther away in geosynchronous orbit, forming a wide ring.
“There are over 10,300 satellites
orbiting the Earth. Over 80% of those satellites are currently active. 53% of
active satellites are Starlink
Mr. Musk did not respond to requests
for comment. SpaceX declined to comment.
Worried about over-dependence on Mr.
Musk’s technology, Ukrainian officials have talked with other satellite
internet providers, though they acknowledged none rival Starlink’s reach.
“Starlink is indeed the blood of our entire communication
infrastructure now,” Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s digital minister, said in an
interview.
At least nine countries — including
in Europe and the Middle East — have also brought up Starlink with American
officials over the past 18 months, with some questioning Mr. Musk’s power over
the technology, two U.S. intelligence officials briefed on the discussions
said. Few nations will speak publicly about their concerns, for fear of alienating
Mr. Musk, said intelligence and cybersecurity officials briefed on the
conversations.
U.S. officials have said little
publicly about Starlink as they balance domestic and geopolitical priorities
related to Mr. Musk, who has criticized President Biden but whose technology is
unavoidable.
The federal government is one of
SpaceX’s biggest customers, using its rockets for NASA missions and launching
military surveillance satellites. Senior Pentagon officials have tried
mediating issues involving Starlink, particularly Ukraine, a person familiar
with the discussions said.
The Defense Department confirmed it
contracts with Starlink, but it declined to elaborate, citing “the critical
nature of these systems.”
Other governments are wary. Taiwan,
which has an internet infrastructure that could be vulnerable in the event of a
Chinese invasion, is reluctant to use the service partly because of Mr. Musk’s
business links to China, Taiwanese and American officials said.
China has its own concerns. Mr. Musk said last year that Beijing sought assurances
that he would not turn Starlink on inside the country, where the internet is
controlled and censored by the state. In 2020, China registered with an
international body to launch 13,000 internet satellites of its own.
The European Union, partly driven by misgivings about
Starlink and Mr. Musk, also earmarked 2.4 billion euros, or $2.6 billion, last
year to build a satellite constellation for civilian and military use.
“This is not just one company, but
one person,” said Dmitri Alperovitch, a cybersecurity expert who co-founded the
Silverado Policy Accelerator think tank and has advised governments on
satellite internet. “You are completely beholden to his whims and desires.”
Reaching
for the skies
Sir Martin Sweeting, a British
engineer who founded the satellite design and manufacturing company Surrey
Satellite Technology, was encouraged by a business associate in 2001 to meet
with a “chap who wants to put a greenhouse on Mars.” It turned out to be Mr.
Musk.
Mr. Sweeting and Mr. Musk met soon
after for breakfast at a space conference in Colorado, where the tech
entrepreneur criticized NASA and talked about building a private space fleet.
“He was very focused,” said Mr. Sweeting,
whose company later received an investment from Mr. Musk and had him on its
board of directors before it sold to Airbus in 2009.
Mr. Musk was also interested in an
emerging field of research where small satellites are placed in the sky several
hundred miles above sea level, an area known as “low-Earth orbit,” Mr. Sweeting
said.
Their work together was one of the
earliest examples of Mr. Musk’s focus on a technology that would help underpin
Starlink. Satellites dating to the 1960s are typically bigger — often the size
of school buses — and located higher in space, in what is known as
“geosynchronous orbit,” limiting their communication capabilities.
Smaller satellites can orbit at a lower altitude, allowing
them to link up with terminals on Earth to beam high-speed internet service to
far-flung locations.
Many small satellites are necessary for this to work. That’s
because as one satellite moves above a Starlink terminal on land, it hands the
internet signal to another satellite behind it to keep up a single,
uninterrupted flow to users below.
How
Starlink customers connect to the internet
Starlink satellites orbit at much
lower altitudes than traditional satellite internet services. As a result, the
area that each Starlink satellite covers is smaller, requiring terminals on the
ground to continually connect with the nearest passing satellite.
“A constellation of small satellites blankets
the globe, providing sweeping coverage in countries Starlink is permitted to
operate.” Satellites link to one another using lasers, and connect to a
Starlink terminal, known as a dishy, which constantly scans the sky to connect
with the nearest satellite above. Using the dishy, customers can connect to the
internet with their devices.
Mr. Musk launched his first Starlink satellites into orbit in 2019.
At the time, satellite internet was viewed as a fool’s errand. In the 1990s and
2000s, other companies had pursued low-orbit communication satellites with
little success because of the expense and technical difficulties of getting
them into space.
But Mr. Musk had an advantage. SpaceX’s rockets return to Earth after a trip to space and are
partially reusable. This effectively gave him control of an express train to
constantly deliver satellites to space, sometimes dozens at a time.
Satellite
launches per year
A bar chart of all satellite
launches per year, from 1960 through 2023, showing a spike in the number of
launches in recent years. Over half the launches in each of the past three
years are highlighted as Starlink launches.
Now nearly every week, a SpaceX rocket loaded with Starlink
satellites takes off from a site in California or Florida.
Each
satellite is designed to work for about three and half years.
There are so many in orbit that they
are often mistaken for shooting stars. Astronomers have documented how the
devices have interfered with research telescopes and warned about the risk of
collisions.
The
Starlink network grows
Launches happen nearly every week,
and about 60 satellites are released into orbit each time.
“The night sky is one of the most glorious
shows that nature puts on and humans are changing it forever,” said Patrick
Seitzer, an astronomer at the University of Michigan who studies orbital
debris.
Starlink provides internet download speeds typically around
100 megabits per second, comparable to many landline services.
SpaceX generally charges individual customers about $600 for
each terminal that receives a connection from space, plus a monthly service fee
of about $75, with costs higher for businesses and governments. The company
knows the location, movement and altitude of each Starlink terminal, experts
said.
The service, which officially debuted in 2021 in a handful
of countries, is now available in more than 50 countries and territories,
including the United States, Japan, much of Europe and parts of Latin America.
In Africa, where internet access lags the rest of the world, Starlink is
available in Nigeria, Mozambique and Rwanda, with more than a dozen other
countries following by the end of 2024, according to Starlink’s website.
“Everywhere on earth will have high
bandwidth, low latency internet,” Mr. Musk predicted on the Joe Rogan podcast
in 2020.
Militaries, telecom companies, airlines, cruise lines and
maritime shippers have flocked to Starlink, which has said it has more than 1.5
million subscribers.
Rivals have struggled, though
competition is growing. OneWeb, a British company, was so plagued by financial
difficulties that it had to be bailed out by the British government and sold to
a group of investors. Amazon, founded by Jeff Bezos, who owns the rocket
company Blue Origin, plans a Starlink competitor, Project
Kuiper, but it has yet to get a satellite into space.
Lifeline
on the battlefield
No event has demonstrated Starlink’s
power — and Mr. Musk’s influence — more than the events in Ukraine.
More than 42,000 Starlink terminals
are now used in Ukraine by the military, hospitals, businesses and aid
organizations.
Simulated
Starlink speeds since the start of conflict
Simulations of internet speeds
suggest improved service in Ukraine, based on changes in satellite parameters,
the number of satellites and ground station locations.
“Without Starlink, we cannot fly, we
cannot communicate,” said one Ukrainian deputy commander who goes by the nickname
Zub, or Tooth, and who spoke on the condition of anonymity for security
reasons.
Starlink entered Ukraine in February
2022, when events started and a cyberattack — later
attributed to Russia — took down a satellite system run by the high-speed
communications company Viasat that was being used by the Ukrainian military.
With troops and commanders knocked offline, Mr. Fedorov, the digital minister,
posted a plea to Mr. Musk for help.
Within hours, Mr. Musk contacted Mr.
Fedorov to say that Starlink had been activated in Ukraine. Days later, Starlink terminals arrived.
The technology — found in forests, fields, villages and
mounted on the roofs of military vehicles — has given Ukraine’s army a major
advantage over Russian forces. It has enabled artillery teams, commanders and
pilots to watch drone footage simultaneously while chatting online. The
response times from finding a target to hitting it have been cut to about a
minute from nearly 20 minutes, soldiers said.
“The huge number of lives that
Starlink has helped save can be measured in the thousands,” Mr. Fedorov said.
“This is one of the fundamental components of our success.”
But concerns among Ukrainian and
Western officials about Mr. Musk’s hold over the technology have grown, coming
to a head last fall when he repeatedly made comments about the conflict that
raised questions about his commitment to Starlink’s service in Ukraine.
In September, at a private event on
world and business affairs in Aspen, Colo., which was attended by then-House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and others, Mr. Musk proposed a peace plan for Ukraine that included
Russia keeping Ukrainian land. The proposal outraged many attendees.
Around this time, questions arose
about who would pay for Starlink’s service in Ukraine. SpaceX had initially
covered some of the costs, with the United States and other allies also
providing funding.
That same month, SpaceX told the
U.S. Defense Department that it could not continue the arrangement and asked
the Pentagon to take over funding. The company estimated the cost at nearly
$400 million over 12 months, according to a SpaceX letter reported by CNN, which was verified by The New York Times.
The Biden administration directed a
top Pentagon official, Colin H. Kahl, to mediate. On Oct. 7, Mr. Kahl called
Mr. Musk, who expressed fears that Ukraine would use Starlink to not just
defend itself, but also conduct offensive operations to regain territory controlled
by Russia, which could cause significant Russian military casualties, a former
administration official said. Mr. Kahl told Mr. Musk more people in Ukraine
would suffer if Starlink was shut down.
Mr. Musk nonetheless turned off
access for some Starlink terminals in Ukraine. Late last year, about 1,300
Starlink terminals purchased through a British supplier stopped working in the
country after the Ukrainian government could not pay the $2,500 monthly fee for
each, two people with knowledge of the matter said.
Starlink access also fluctuated
depending on the movements of the war as Russia won territory and Ukraine
fought to take it back. As the battle lines shifted, Mr. Musk used a process
called geofencing to restrict where Starlink was available on the front lines.
SpaceX uses location data gathered by its service to enforce geofencing limits.
This caused problems. When Ukrainian
troops tried retaking cities like Kherson in Russian-controlled areas in the
fall, they needed internet access to communicate. Mr. Fedorov and members of
the armed forces messaged Mr. Musk and SpaceX employees requests to restore
service in areas where the army was advancing.
Mr. Fedorov said SpaceX responded
“very promptly.”
Starlink
controls which areas receive service
Starlink does not operate in
Russia-controlled areas of Ukraine. The Ukrainian military was at times without
service in the fall as troops recaptured Russia-held territory.
A map of Ukraine including the
Dnipro River shows that the area where Starlink worked was limited to territory
held by Ukraine, while in territories that the Ukrainian military was
recapturing from Russia, Starlink was deactivated.
Mr. Musk had other red lines that he would not cross. He
refused Ukraine’s request last year to provide Starlink access near Crimea, the
Russian-controlled peninsula, so it could send an explosive-filled maritime
drone into Russian ships docked in the Black Sea, two people familiar with the
discussions said. Mr. Musk later said that Starlink could not be used for
long-range drone strikes.
Other U.S. officials have weighed
in. In June, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin approved a Pentagon deal to buy 400
to 500 new Starlink terminals and services. The deal gives the Pentagon control
of setting where Starlink’s internet signal works inside Ukraine for those new
devices to carry out “key capabilities and certain missions,” two people
familiar with the deal said. This appeared intended to provide Ukraine with
dedicated terminals and services to conduct sensitive functions without fear of
interruption.
Unlike traditional defense
contractors, whose weapon sales to foreign countries are typically done through
the federal government, Starlink is a commercial product. That allows Mr. Musk
to act in ways that sometimes do not align with U.S. interests, such as when
SpaceX said it could not continue funding Starlink in Ukraine, said Gregory C.
Allen, a former Defense Department official who worked at Blue Origin.
“It has certainly been a long time
since we’ve seen a company and an individual like this go pretty openly against
U.S. foreign policy in the middle of a conflict,” said Mr. Allen, who is now at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Mr. Musk’s behavior has divided
Ukrainian officials. Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to President Volodymyr
Zelensky, said on Twitter in February that SpaceX needed to pick a side.
But Mr. Fedorov said questions about
Mr. Musk’s commitment were unfair. When Ukraine was under heavy bombardment and
facing major power outages in November, Mr. Musk helped expedite the delivery
of about 10,000 Starlink terminals, he said.
“SpaceX and Elon Musk have shown
through their deeds whose side they are actually on,” Mr. Fedorov said.
From
Taiwan to Europe
In February, two undersea internet
cables running between Taiwan’s main island and the outlying islands of Matsu
were severed by Chinese shipping vessels. The incident
interrupted online access across Matsu, intensifying concerns that Taiwan’s
communications infrastructure was vulnerable.
Taiwan, which China has claimed as
its own territory, would seem to be an ideal place to bring in Starlink. But
Taiwan was reluctant — a concern increasingly echoed elsewhere as governments
weigh the power of satellite internet against the risks of working with Mr.
Musk.
Taiwanese officials had spoken with
SpaceX about Starlink, said Jason Hsu, a former Taiwan legislator who advises
the government on digital infrastructure. But talks slowed partly because of
“tremendous concerns” about Mr. Musk, whose financial interests are tied to China, he said. With roughly 50 percent
of new Tesla cars estimated to be manufactured in Shanghai, Taiwan did not
trust Mr. Musk to provide Starlink access if Beijing applied pressure to turn
off the service, he added.
“We worry that if we order devices
from Starlink, we’ll fall into some sort of trap,” said Mr. Hsu, now a senior
research fellow at Harvard Kennedy School in Taipei. “Elon has huge commercial
interests in China.”
When a U.S. congressional delegation
visited Taiwan in April, Representative Michael McCaul of Texas, a Republican
and chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, asked the Taiwanese
president, Tsai Ing-wen, during a lunch about potentially using Starlink,
according to committee staff on the trip. Ms. Tsai was noncommittal.
Congressional aides concluded soon after that the service was not a viable option
for Taiwan because of Mr. Musk’s links to China, the committee staff said.
Audrey Tang, Taiwan’s digital
minister, said the country struck a deal with OneWeb in June and had not ruled
out working with any satellite provider. “We want to test as many constellations
as possible,” she said.
Mr. Musk’s influence has been debated elsewhere. In the
European Union, concerns about Starlink’s dominance influenced the 27-nation
bloc to set aside 2.4 billion euros last year for a “sovereign” satellite
constellation, to launch as soon as 2027.
“Space has become a highly contested
domain where the European Union must safeguard its vital interests,” said
Thierry Breton, the European commissioner overseeing the project. “The E.U.
cannot afford to be reliant on others.”
To address government needs, SpaceX last year introduced a
Starlink-related service, Starshield, that offered stronger security for
handling classified material and processing sensitive data.
Starlink also faces criticism from
more authoritarian governments.
When anti-government protests broke
out in Iran last year, Mr. Musk made Starlink available there to help activists
stay online. The Iranian government accused SpaceX of violating its
sovereignty.
China complained this year to a
United Nations panel that SpaceX was putting so many satellites into orbit that
it would prevent others from accessing space. In February, Turkey refused Mr.
Musk’s offer to provide Starlink access after a major earthquake, which civil
society groups viewed as an effort to prevent unfavorable news from spreading
online.
“The government was afraid that
Starlink is not under its control, and could represent a threat,” said Chérif
El Kadhi, a policy analyst tracking Turkey for Access Now, a digital rights
organization.
Mr. Musk’s dominance in space is
unlikely to be equaled any time soon. In May, Amazon prepared to put its first
two satellites into orbit, but the launch was put on hold after a problem was
discovered in rocket testing.
Since then, Mr. Musk has sent at
least 595 more Starlink satellites into space.
A
potential future of low-Earth orbit satellites
Starlink is not the only company
working in low-Earth orbit. This simulation shows the combined plans of seven
companies that filed with the International Telecommunication Union to launch
close to 71,000 satellites in coming years, nearly 42,000 of which are from
Starlink.”
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