Khaleej Times

No one can hide: Spacex is building spy satellite network for US agency

If successful, it would advance US ability to spot potential targets almost anywhere on the globe: Sources

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Spacex is building a network of hundreds of spy satellites under a classified contract with a US intelligen­ce agency, five sources familiar with the programme said, demonstrat­ing deepening ties between billionair­e entreprene­ur Elon Musk's space company and national security agencies.

The network is being built by Spacex's Starshield business unit under a $1.8 billion contract signed in 2021 with the National Reconnaiss­ance Office (NRO), an intelligen­ce agency that manages spy satellites, the sources said.

The plans show the extent of Spacex's involvemen­t in US intelligen­ce and military projects and illustrate a deeper Pentagon investment into vast, low-earth orbiting satellite systems aimed at supporting ground forces.

If successful, the sources said the programme would significan­tly advance the ability of the U.S. government and military to quickly spot potential targets almost anywhere on the globe.

The contract signals growing trust by the intelligen­ce establishm­ent of a company whose owner has clashed with the Biden administra­tion and sparked controvers­y over the use of Starlink satellite connectivi­ty in the Ukraine war, the sources said.

The Wall Street Journal reported in February the existence of a $1.8 billion classified Starshield contract with an unknown intelligen­ce agency without detailing the purposes of the program.

Reuters reporting discloses for the first time that the Spacex contract is for a powerful new spy system with hundreds of satellites bearing Earth-imaging capabiliti­es that can operate as a swarm in low orbits, and that the spy agency that Musk's company is working with is the NRO. Reuters was unable to determine when the new network of satellites would come online and could not establish what other companies are part of the program with their own contracts.

Spacex, the world's largest satellite operator, did not respond to several requests for comment about the contract, its role in it and details on satellite launches. The Pentagon referred a request for comment to the NRO and Spacex.

In a statement the NRO acknowledg­ed its mission to develop a sophistica­ted satellite system and its partnershi­ps with other government agencies, companies, research institutio­ns and nations, but declined to comment on Reuters' findings about the extent of Spacex's involvemen­t in the effort.

"The National Reconnaiss­ance Office is developing the most capable, diverse, and resilient spacebased intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce, and reconnaiss­ance system the world has ever seen," a spokespers­on said. The satellites can track targets on the ground and share that data with US intelligen­ce and military officials, the sources said. In principle, that would enable the US government to quickly capture continuous imagery of activities on the ground nearly anywhere on the globe, aiding intelligen­ce and military operations, they added.

Roughly a dozen prototypes have been launched since 2020, among other satellites on Spacex's Falcon 9 rockets, three of the sources said.

A US government database of objects in orbit shows several Spacex missions having deployed satellites that neither the company nor the government have ever acknowledg­ed. Two sources confirmed those to be prototypes for the Starshield network.

All the sources asked to remain anonymous because they were not authorized to discuss the US government program.

The Pentagon is already a big Spacex customer, using its Falcon 9 rockets to launch military payloads into space. Starshield's first prototype satellite, launched in 2020, was part of a separate, roughly $200 million contract that helped position Spacex for the subsequent $1.8 billion award, one of the sources said.

The planned Starshield network is separate from Starlink, Spacex's growing commercial broadband constellat­ion that has about 5,500 satellites in space to provide nearglobal internet to consumers, companies and government agencies.

The classified constellat­ion of spy satellites represents one of the U.S. government's most soughtafte­r capabiliti­es in space because it is designed to offer the most persistent, pervasive and rapid coverage of activities on Earth. "No one can hide," one of the sources said of the system's potential capability, when describing the network's reach.

Musk, also the founder and CEO of Tesla and owner of social media company X, has driven innovation in space but has caused frustratio­n among some officials in the Biden administra­tion because of his past control of Starlink in Ukraine, where Kyiv's military uses it for secure communicat­ions in the conflict with Russia. That authority over Starlink in a war zone by Musk, and not the U.S. military, created tension between him and the US government. A series of Reuters' stories has detailed how Musk's manufactur­ing operations, including at Spacex, have harmed consumers and workers.

The Starshield network is part of intensifyi­ng competitio­n between the U.S. and its rivals to become the dominant military power in space, in part by expanding spy satellite systems away from bulky, expensive spacecraft at higher orbits. Instead a vast, low-orbiting network can provide quicker and near-constant imaging of the Earth.

The National Reconnaiss­ance Office is developing the most capable, diverse, and resilient space-based intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce, and reconnaiss­ance system the world has ever seen,” National Reconnaiss­ance Office

 ?? — REUTERS FILE ?? A Spacex Falcon 9 rocket lifts off on the USSF-124 mission for the US Space Force and Missile Defence Agency in Florida.
— REUTERS FILE A Spacex Falcon 9 rocket lifts off on the USSF-124 mission for the US Space Force and Missile Defence Agency in Florida.
 ?? — REUTERS ?? Elon Musk, CEO of Spacex and Tesla and owner of X.
— REUTERS Elon Musk, CEO of Spacex and Tesla and owner of X.

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