03.06.26
The Iran question…
Last Sunday afternoon (4.11pm Pacific time), March 1, Elon Musk posted a curious tweet:
This came in response to another tweet about use of Starlink on US attack drones, but that’s not the important issue (and in fact, as it applies to US-approved uses, the statement is somewhat misleading: Starlink satellites are widely used in Ukraine for military purposes, with funding from the US Department of War, it’s just that SpaceX uses the Starshield brand for these sales, not the “commercial Starlink” service).
Musk’s tweet states that “weapon systems” using Starlink are “shut down when discovered”. So what did Starlink shut down right after this tweet? That became clear on Monday morning, when general aviation users started complaining that their Starlink service had been affected because “effective immediately, the maximum supported in-motion speed for Roam and Priority plans is 100 mph”. Instead Starlink has introduced Aviation 300 and Aviation 450 plans (with much higher pricing) that allow for usage at up to 300mph and 450mph respectively.
But what is even more notable is that the rules for these new plans require you to submit a scan of your passport, as well as details of the aircraft that the Starlink service will be used on. In contrast, all you need to sign up for the Roam plan is a credit card.
So what “weapon system” flies at not much more than 100mph and shouldn’t be provided to certain passport holders? We all know that Russian attack drones have been an issue in Ukraine and Starlink introduced a whitelisting process last month to address this. But it seems no one thought about Iran at that point in time.
And the remaining question is how did Musk “discover” this on Sunday? God forbid that the Iranian drone which killed six US servicemembers earlier in the day in Kuwait (and was described as “flying slow and low to the ground”) was using Starlink…
