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Starlink: what Elon Musk's satellite soft power means for the world

Starlink: what Elon Musk's satellite soft power means for the world

Yahooa day ago

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The 7,000 or so satellites orbiting Earth as part of Elon Musk's Starlink network make up nearly two-thirds of the entire network of active satellites. And with thousands more planned for launch in the coming years, the rapid expansion of Musk's space internet service shows no sign of slowing down.
It has already spread widely across the globe, reaching remote areas that fibre broadband cannot, and has afforded Musk "unprecedented geopolitical leverage for a private citizen", said The Atlantic.
The aim of Starlink when it launched in 2019 was to "connect the globe with reliable and affordable high-speed broadband services". Its progression towards that goal has been rapid.
While other satellite internet companies exist, Musk has been able to scale Starlink at a remarkable rate, thanks to huge uptake in countries and areas where traditional internet has been patchy or non-existent. That includes non-civilian arenas: Ukrainian soldiers have been using it to communicate on the front lines in their war against Russia, while Starlink is also one of the US government's biggest contractors.
Musk was a very public backer of Donald Trump in his election campaign, and was subsequently appointed to head Trump's Department of Government Efficiency.
There have been numerous reports already of Musk using his access to the president to gain advantages for Starlink. Leading Democrat senators complained in March amid reports that Starlink was in line to take over a lucrative air traffic control contract from Verizon worth billions of dollars, said The Independent, though that has yet to come to fruition.
Trump's swingeing tariffs and foreign aid cuts have also put pressure on countries that have been hesitant in approving licences for Starlink, reportedly including India and a number of African countries. Musk spent "months trying to secure regulatory approval" in The Gambia, for example, but had "grown impatient" over delays, said ProPublica. He then looked to the US government's "foreign policy apparatus" to try to advance his interests, with an investigation by ProPublica suggesting there had been a "veiled threat" by US officials of withholding infrastructure money if licences weren't granted.
There are signs that the "global wall of resistance" to Starlink is beginning to fall apart, said Bloomberg. Many authorities are "removing those obstacles" that had previously prevented Musk from operating there, "extending" his "global influence", including over delicate geopolitical areas.
In Gaza, Starlink was last year able to provide service to a UAE-built hospital, with Israeli approval. Israel had been hesitant to restore any kind of internet connection to prevent use by Hamas, but now Musk is the only internet provider operational in the area.
Ukrainian forces have become reliant on Starlink to evade Russian hackers and launch covert attacks, but they, too, are at the "mercy of the entrepreneur", said Politico: for instance, he refused to switch the service on over Russian-occupied Crimea for a drone attack by Ukraine on Russian ships. Access to Starlink was also reportedly used as a pressure point to get the US-Ukraine minerals deal over the line.
Starlink's ability to rapidly expand its fleet of satellites gives it an advantage over every other company. It can manufacture four satellites a day and launch dozens of them at once into space via its SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
With other companies struggling to catch up, Musk "could end up with more power over the human exchange of information than any previous person has ever enjoyed", said The Atlantic. He seems to be looking to a future where "neither his network nor his will can be restrained by the people of this world".

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As Trump escalates immigration fight, Democrats face high-stakes test: ANALYSIS

time19 minutes ago

As Trump escalates immigration fight, Democrats face high-stakes test: ANALYSIS

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The leader of the opposition
The leader of the opposition

Politico

time26 minutes ago

  • Politico

The leader of the opposition

Presented by With help from Eli Okun and Bethany Irvine On this morning's Playbook Podcast, Jack and Adam Wren discuss Gavin Newsom's emergence this week at the front of the anti-Trump pack … and why Saturday's grand military parade in D.C. may not be entirely comfortable viewing for either GOP grandees or military top brass. Good Wednesday morning. This is Jack Blanchard, more bleary-eyed than usual after last night's glammed-up party at the French Ambassador's place. But fear not: I stuck to sparkling water all night long, just for you guys … Playbook is a cruel mistress indeed. Let me know how I'm doing so far. BREAKING THIS MORNING: Elon says sorry. 'I regret some of my posts about President @realDonaldTrump last week. They went too far,' Elon Musk wrote on X at, erm, 3.04 a.m. this morning. 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Stacey Plaskett (D-U.S. Virgin Islands), Joe and Gayle Manchin, Vince Haley, CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, Kiron Skinner, Justin Fanelli, Paul Dabbar, Omar Vargas, Faryar Shirzad, Teresa Carlson, Nick Carr, Dante Disparte, Riaz Valani, Joe Bartlett, Ludovic Hood, Sarah Rogers, Alex Wong, Joe Hack, Hogan Gidley, Morgan Ortagus, Sébastien Fagart, Belgian Ambassador Frédéric Bernard, Japanese Ambassador Shigeo Yamada, Roy Blunt, Dan Knight, John Hudson, Kaitlan Collins, Josh Dawsey, Tammy Haddad, Gloria Dittus, Daniel Cruise, Vincent Voci, Michael Wilner, Matthew Mazonkey, Garrett Haake, Tyler Pager, Juleanna Glover, Michael Shepard, Goli Sheikholeslami, Dafna Linzer, Michael Froman, Douglas Rediker and Heidi Crebo-Rediker, Tomicah Tillemann and Susan Blumenthal. — The Shakespeare Theatre Company's annual Will on the Hill event last night included participation by Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), Reps. 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Mike Conaway (R-Texas) … Ryan Bugas … former South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard … Wendy Teramoto … CNN's Morgan Rimmer … Will Rahn … Sofia Jones of the House Agriculture Committee … Jonathan Martinez of Haleon … Tamar Epps of the National Head Start Association … Amy Barrera of Senate Majority Leader John Thune's office Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.

Protests Over Immigration Raids Spread, and Austria Reels From Rare School Shooting
Protests Over Immigration Raids Spread, and Austria Reels From Rare School Shooting

New York Times

time26 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Protests Over Immigration Raids Spread, and Austria Reels From Rare School Shooting

Newsom Slams Trump's 'Brazen Abuse of Power' as L.A. Mayor Imposes Curfew , by Christina Morales, Jesus Jiménez, Francesca Regalado, John Yoon and Luis Ferré-Sadurní Texas Governor Will Deploy National Guard to Immigration Protests , by Yan Zhuang Norton, D.C.'s Stalwart in Congress, Clings to Seat Amid Signs of Decline , by Annie Karni Southern Baptists Endorse Effort to Overturn Same-Sex Marriage , by Ruth Graham 'We're Just Speechless': Austria Mourns After Deadly School Rampage , by Christopher F. Schuetze and Jim Tankersley K-Pop Fans' Wait Is Almost Over as BTS Members Leave the Army, by Victor Mather Image Chicago police officers faced off on Tuesday with protesters expressing anger over Trump administration immigration raids. Credit... Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times Tune in, and tell us what you think at theheadlines@ For corrections, email nytnews@ For more audio journalism and storytelling, download the New York Times Audio app — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter. Special thanks Adam Liptak and Esther Zuckerman.

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