UkraineX:  How Elon Musk’s space satellites changed the war on the ground

>From artillery strikes to Zoom calls, the tech billionaire’s internet service 
>has become a lifeline in the war with Russia.

By Christopher Miller, Mark Scott and Bryan Bender  POLITICO  June 8, 2022 9:00 
am
https://www.politico.eu/article/elon-musk-ukraine-starlink/


KHARKIV REGION, Ukraine

Every time Oleksiy and his fellow artillerymen hit a Russian target, they have 
one person to thank: Elon Musk, the world’s richest man.

Embedded in a frontline hot zone just south of the strategic town of Izyum in 
Ukraine’s war-ravaged east, Oleksiy — who declined to give his last name for 
security reasons — is now a power-user of Starlink, a satellite communication 
system owned by Musk’s SpaceX.

When planning a counterattack or artillery barrage, he dials up his superiors 
for last-minute orders via a rectangular white-and-gray Starlink satellite 
receiver concealed in a shallow pit in the garden of an abandoned cottage. The 
high-tech equipment is wired to a noisy generator that runs half of the day.

It’s not just about military communications. Others in Ukraine’s 93rd 
mechanized brigade let friends and family know they are safe through daily 
encrypted satellite messages after the local cellphone network was severed 
weeks ago during heavy shelling.

In their downtime, Oleksiy and his comrades keep tabs on the latest 
developments in the war via Starlink’s internet connection and — when there’s a 
lull between artillery duels — play “Call of Duty” on their smartphones while 
sheltering in bunkers and standing by for orders.

“Thank you, Elon Musk,” said Oleksiy soon after logging on through Starlink’s 
satellites to discover the Biden administration would be sending long-range 
rockets to the Ukrainian army in its fight with the Russians.

“This is exactly what we need,” he added in reference to the rockets.

The first 100 days of Russia’s invasion of its western neighbor have left 
thousands dead and even more injured.

Ukrainian forces now find themselves in a war of attrition with the Russian 
army that, despite setbacks in and around Kyiv, continues to chip away at local 
resistance in the country’s east.

The United States, European Union and other NATO countries have donated 
billions of dollars in military equipment to Ukraine since the war began in 
late February. But Musk’s Starlink — based on a cluster of table-sized 
satellites flying as low as 130 miles above Ukraine and beaming down high-speed 
internet access — has become an unexpected lifeline to the country, both on the 
battlefield and in the war for public opinion.

Ukrainian drones have relied on Starlink to drop bombs on Russian forward 
positions. People in besieged cities near the Russian border have stayed in 
touch with loved ones via the encrypted satellites. Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the 
country’s president, has regularly updated his millions of social media 
followers on the back of Musk’s network, as well as holding Zoom calls with 
global politicians from U.S. President Joe Biden to French leader Emmanuel 
Macron.

The Ukrainian troops who held out in the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol were 
able to maintain contact with their commanders and even Zelenskyy — and conduct 
live video interviews with journalists — because they had a Starlink system in 
the besieged factory.

All told, Starlink — and Ukraine’s use of the satellite network, both for its 
military and civilians — has thwarted Russia’s efforts to cut the Eastern 
European country off from the outside world, giving Kyiv a much-needed victory 
against Moscow in a conflict that shows no sign of ending.

“The strategic impact is, it totally destroyed [Vladimir] Putin’s information 
campaign,” said Brig. Gen. Steve Butow, director of the space portfolio at the 
Defense Innovation Unit, the Pentagon’s Silicon Valley tech outpost.

“Putin has never, to this day, has been able to silence Zelenskyy.”

The conflict in Ukraine also has provided Musk and SpaceX’s fledgling satellite 
network with a trial-by-fire that has whetted the appetite of many Western 
militaries. Commanders have been impressed by the company’s ability, within 
days, to deliver thousands of backpack-sized satellite stations to the war-torn 
country and to keep them online despite increasingly sophisticated attacks from 
Russian hackers.

“We’ve got more than 11,000 Starlink stations and they help us in our everyday 
fight on all the fronts,” Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s vice prime minister, told 
POLITICO.

“We’re ready, even if there is no light, no fixed internet, through generators 
using Starlink, to renew any connection in Ukraine.”

Star Wars: Battle for the sky

Ukraine isn’t the only country to see the importance of satellite communication 
in the unfolding war in Eastern Europe.

Just an hour before Russian troops launched their full-scale assault in the 
early hours of February 24, the Kremlin successfully hacked Viasat, an American 
satellite provider whose network was used by the Ukrainian military to 
communicate with front-line troops, according to intelligence reports from the 
U.S., EU and the United Kingdom.

The cyberattack, which crippled the country’s military communications and also 
took out thousands of other internet users across Europe, fast-tracked 
negotiations, started in early 2022, between Kyiv and SpaceX to bring the 
satellite network to the country, according to four officials with knowledge of 
those discussions.

Zelenskyy’s government had realized that internet access — both for the 
military and civilians — would be critical in the likely war to come. Soldiers 
needed a sure-fire way of staying in touch during the haze of war, and raw 
footage of Russian attacks, often uploaded by Ukrainians themselves via social 
media, has brought the conflict directly to people’s smartphones worldwide.

SpaceX, whose goal is to launch more than 40,000 satellites into so-called low 
Earth orbit in the coming years, quickly positioned roughly 50 satellites ready 
to be used in the Eastern European country. But red tape, including official 
government approval needed to turn on the system, slowed down the rollout.

Then, Russia attacked. Two days after the invasion, on February 26, Fedorov — 
the Ukrainian vice prime minister who doubles as the country’s digital minister 
— tweeted directly at Musk to urgently send Starlink equipment. Two days after 
that, the first shipment showed up.

“They tweeted at Elon and so we turned it on,” Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX’s 
president, told an audience at the California Institute of Technology on March 
7 in reference to Starlink’s arrival in Ukraine. “That was our permission. That 
was the letter from the minister. It was a tweet.”

SpaceX did not respond to repeated requests for comment about its involvement 
in Ukraine.

What’s the big deal with Starlink?

Starlink isn’t the first commercial satellite provider to be used on the 
battlefield. The U.S. military piggybacked on private networks during the first 
Gulf War — a tactic that has become a mainstay of conflict zones globally.

But where the system — one of many low-orbit satellite networks, including a 
rival early-stage project from Amazon, currently under development — stands 
apart is its ability to withstand attacks from the Russians, according to three 
military officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, and two 
researchers who have studied Starlink.

Unlike traditional high-orbit satellites, which orbit thousands of miles above 
the earth, hovering over one point on the ground and beaming down radio 
signals, the new generation of low-orbit satellites relies on many more 
satellites working in a constellation. That configuration makes it more 
difficult, if not impossible, to take offline because an attacker would have to 
pinpoint all the satellites, at once, to cripple the entire system.

Starlink, too, is more adaptable than alternatives because each device’s 
computer code can be quickly altered in response to possible hacks. Last month, 
Musk said the Kremlin was “ramping up” its cyberattacks on his network, and 
SpaceX has repeatedly rewritten its code to keep one step ahead of Russia.

Todd E. Humphreys, a professor at the University of Texas who has delved into 
Starlink’s inner workings and consulted with SpaceX and the U.S. military, said 
the system’s encryption technology also had proven more resilient than many had 
expected.

Together with the network’s other incremental tech advances, including 
providing high-speed internet from space that rivals people’s home broadband 
networks, Musk’s satellite system represents a step change in how satellites 
can be rolled out, and used, in conflict zones.

“It’s a crystal clear example that secure backup communications is going to be 
the lifeline of any modern military engagement,” said Humphreys. “The 
nimbleness with which Starlink was set up in Ukraine was just astounding.”

All eyes on Musk

Like with everything to do with Musk — the enigmatic billionaire whose business 
interests include everything from Tesla, the electric car giant, to a bid for 
Twitter, the social network — just how the Starlink equipment made its way to 
Ukraine is shrouded in confusion and rumor.

Soon after the first equipment began arriving in Kyiv, the South African-born 
tech magnate, who has picked fights with others on social media and run afoul 
of financial regulators, briefly swapped texts with Fedorov, the Ukrainian 
politician. He also talked — powered by Starlink — with Zelenskyy via Zoom 
about the ongoing rollout and promised to visit Ukraine as soon as the war was 
over.

In public statements, the company said funding for the satellite communication 
system in Ukraine — estimated to be around $15 million, with each satellite 
receiver, known as Dishy McFlatface, costing $499 a piece — came almost 
exclusively from private sources. SpaceX has pledged to pay for all internet 
access that, for those outside Ukraine, costs $110 a month.

Yet USAID said in early April it had bought over 1,300 satellite dishes as part 
of the Starlink project, with SpaceX donating a further 3,600 stations. The 
U.S. federal agency subsequently scrubbed references to how much equipment 
Washington had purchased from its press release, though it confirmed to 
POLITICO that it had shipped the equipment from the U.S. to Eastern Europe.

A USAID spokesperson said the agency was grateful to SpaceX and other donors 
for contributing to the Starlink project.

Other Western allies, including the French and Polish governments, have also 
helped with logistical support, including handling the last-mile delivery of 
the equipment to Ukraine, according to two European officials with direct 
knowledge of those discussions. One of those officials added that a so-called 
ground station, or hardware that linked Starlink’s satellites with local 
internet infrastructure, was housed in neighboring Poland to avoid Russian 
attack.

Both officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not 
authorized to speak publicly.

“The invasion happened on a Thursday and by the next day, Elon had called 
together a meeting and said, ‘I want to get Starlink up over Ukraine,’” said 
Butow of the U.S. Defense Innovation Unit.

“By Sunday, the link was active. By Monday, 500 ground terminals showed up in 
Ukraine. By Wednesday of that week, all but 25 of those terminals were alive 
and providing real-time data,” he added. “That’s commercial speed. That’s 
amazing.”

Crowdsourced communications

Not all of the Starlink equipment has arrived via official channels.

For Alisa Kovalenko, who joined the Ukrainian military after Putin’s invasion 
and now fights with the 92nd Separate Mechanized Brigade near the Russian 
border in the northern Kharkiv region, her satellite dish was donated by a 
group of Ukrainian volunteers, who crowdfunded to buy the system and delivered 
it directly to the frontline.

“There’s no communication for us with the outside world without Starlink,” 
Kovalenko told POLITICO by phone over a Starlink connection. “During the last 
weeks, we had no mobile connections because we moved in our sector from a town 
to a village. It was impossible to call with any mobile network.”

Like everything on the frontline, her team’s Starlink has had its fair share of 
close calls — even as it gives both soldiers and civilians a direct connection 
with friends and family after Kovalenko’s comrades handed over Starlink’s 
password to locals so they could let relatives know they were safe.

Fuel to power the equipment is always in short supply. During a recent Russian 
artillery attack, the satellite dish was left exposed in a nearby field, and 
narrowly missed being destroyed. Whenever the soldiers move positions, they 
have to gently pull apart the high-tech equipment, putting the small components 
in a duffle bag and the dish in a waiting vehicle.

But for Kovalenko, a documentary filmmaker, the ability to keep in touch with 
almost anyone in the world via Musk’s satellite system is a godsend, even if 
it’s a tricky balance to keep the equipment safe and operational in the middle 
of the ongoing war.

“If there is bombing and you need to pack up fast and run, it still takes time 
to grab everything for the Starlink,” she said. “You have to be careful with 
it. It’s not just a pile of clothes which you can throw in the car.”

Laurens Cerulus contributed reporting from Brussels.

--
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to