Elon Musk to yank funding for Starlink in Ukraine after official told him to ‘F–k off’

Elon Musk said he can no longer pay for his Starlink satellite internet service to operate in Ukraine — less than two weeks after a Ukrainian official told Musk to “F–k off” over his controversial proposal for peace with Russia.

Musk had offered the SpaceX-owned service to Ukraine in February after the Russian invasion disrupted the country’s local internet services. SpaceX has since installed thousands of terminals to keep the Ukrainian military online.

On Oct. 3, however, Musk drew heavy criticism from Ukrainians for suggesting Oct. 3 they should end the war by conceding Crimea to Russia, as well as doing a UN-supervised “redo” of elections Russia staged to annex several regions of the country last month.

In response to the proposal, Ukraine’s ambassador to Germany wrote on Twitter: “Fuck off is my very diplomatic reply to you @elonmusk.”

Early Friday, Musk replied that he is now “just following his recommendation” in a Twitter thread about the Starlink shutdown.

“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,” Musk said on Twitter. “This is unreasonable.”

CNN reported on Thursday that SpaceX sent a letter to the Pentagon last month saying the agency would have to step in with funding to the tune of tens of millions of dollars a month in order to save the program.

The letter suggested that Ukraine’s use of the Starlink network could cost up to $400 million a year.

SpaceX’s Starlink satellite
Nasa
The SpaceX chief executive said that his company is spending almost $20 million a month to maintain the service.
Getty Images

The SpaceX chief executive said the company is spending almost $20 million a month to maintain the service, and has already spent over $80 million to set it up in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s vice prime minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, said this week that Starlink services have been vital to the country’s war effort, helping restore energy and communications infrastructure in critical areas after more than 100 Russian cruise missile attacks.

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