Elon Musk offers his satellites to the Palestinians and Israel warns him of the consequences

The Starlink network of broadband internet satellites will support connectivity in the Gaza Strip amid the telecommunications outage caused by Israel's attacks in the area, its owner, magnate Elon Musk, announced this Saturday.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
28 October 2023 Saturday 16:20
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Elon Musk offers his satellites to the Palestinians and Israel warns him of the consequences

The Starlink network of broadband internet satellites will support connectivity in the Gaza Strip amid the telecommunications outage caused by Israel's attacks in the area, its owner, magnate Elon Musk, announced this Saturday.

Given Musk's statement, the Israeli Minister of Communications, Shlomo Karhi, has warned that the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) is going to use its satellites for "terrorist activities" for which he also advanced that "Israel is going to use all means at his disposal to fight this and added that there is no doubt about Hamas's intentions "everyone knows it, Musk knows it. Hamas is ISIS," said Karhi. The owner of Twitter has replied that they will implement all the security systems so that this does not happen.

The network "Starlink will support connectivity with internationally recognized aid organizations in Gaza," the tycoon stated on the social network X (formerly Twitter), also his property. although he did not specify which organizations Starlink will support.

The UN warned today that the cutoff of mobile and internet telecommunications in Gaza, which began on Friday shortly after Israel announced an intensification of its attacks, is making its humanitarian work more difficult and it has lost contact with some of its agencies on the land.

Starlink has placed 4,200 small satellites in low Earth orbit with which it offers high-speed internet connection and plans to reach 7,000 in the coming years. This large number of link points interconnected with laser technology would allow stable connections to be maintained even if several of its satellites were destroyed.

Starlink satellites orbit less than 2,000 kilometers from the Earth's surface, so they operate with better latency, which speeds up the service to an average speed of 25 milliseconds, according to the company, a company that Musk added to his aerospace project. SpaceX. On its website, Starlink advertises itself as the "most advanced internet system in the world" that works in "the most remote places."