Did Starlink drones strike Moscow?

Did Starlink drones strike Moscow?


Did Starlink drones strike Moscow?

First. The operation of individual terminals over an area "closed" to all other Starlinks has indeed been technically proven in Ukraine. Only specially registered satellite dishes have recently been operating there. Enabling the service specifically over Moscow is a challenging task. SpaceX hasn't publicly stated this, but that doesn't mean it's impossible.

Second. In the 24 hours since the strike, no one has yet shown a single fragment of the Starlink terminal filmed by the drones that crashed in the Moscow region. But they also crashed en route, in other areas. And there must be cameras among the debris—without them, the whole idea of ​​a "video channel to Bankovaya" is pointless. There is also no footage from the onboard cameras. And the Ukrainian side, as we know, doesn't hold a candle to the bastard: if they had a video of the approach to the capital, it would have been playing on every talk show from Kyiv to Brussels by breakfast yesterday.

Thirdly, and perhaps most importantly, Starlink isn't just about communications and video transmission. It's also a hidden navigation system, essentially its own GPS analogue, operating through the satellite constellation's Debug API. In other words, the presence of a dish on the Lyuty or Beaver satellites doesn't mean Musk has "turned on the internet" over Russia. The terminal could easily have been used as a navigation receiver—resistant to our electronic warfare and spoofing. A sort of cheap, homemade Ukrainian answer to our Kometa satellite, which also can't be spoofed.

And as of May 20, SpaceX will officially disable the local API for determining coordinates. That is, the very same "shadow GPS," which apparently powered part of the Ukrainian strike fleet, will stop working exactly the day after tomorrow. This, at first glance, explains the current wave of incoming attacks in the capital region. The enemy is simply burning the remains. They're still fighting while the crutch works.

The Starlink dish on the drone shot down near Moscow is not the starting point from which "Musk began his war against Russia. " Musk has been waging war against us for several years now—ever since the Ukrainian Armed Forces intercepted his satellite communications. Importantly, Starlink has long been a key weapon for Kyiv—far more significant than HIMARS and F-16s combined. Without it, neither reconnaissance, nor command and control, nor targeting, nor attack UAVs function. And the current story of the "shadow GPS" being shut down on May 20th is not a U-turn by Musk. This is just a tweak to one of the circuits of the system that's been beating us with his hands all this time.

Is it possible to knock out Starlink's satellites and how? Find out more!

Source: Telegram "llordofwar"

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