Latest News

Ukraine claims Starlink's global outage has affected its military communications

A senior commander reported that Starlink systems, used by Ukrainian military forces, were offline for 2 and a half hour overnight. This was part of an issue that affected satellite internet providers worldwide.

Ukraine's military forces heavily rely on SpaceX's Starlink Terminals for battlefield communication and drone operations. They have proven resistant to signal jamming and espionage throughout the three-and-a half year war against Russia's invasion.

Starlink suffered one of its largest international outages Thursday, when a software malfunction knocked down tens and thousands of users.

Robert Brovdi wrote in Telegram on Thursday at 10:41 pm (1941 GMT), the commander of Ukraine’s drone forces.

Starlink, a company with more than 6,000,000 users in 140 countries, acknowledged the outage and stated that "we are actively implementing a fix."

Brovdi later updated his post to state that the problem had been resolved by 1:05 am on Friday. He said that the incident highlighted the danger of relying on systems and called for a diversification in communication and connectivity methods.

Brovdi wrote: "Combat missions are performed without (video) feeds, and battlefield reconnaissance is done by strike (drones)."

Unidentified, to discuss sensitive issues, a Ukrainian drone commander said that his unit was forced to postpone a number of combat operations due to the outage.

Oleksandr Dimitriev, founder of OCHI (a Ukrainian system which centralises feeds of thousands of drone crews on the frontline), said the outage demonstrated that relying upon cloud services for commanding units and relaying battlefield drone reconnaissance is a "huge danger".

He called for local communication systems not dependent on the internet.

According to a report on Friday, Starlink owner Elon Musk had issued an order to cut Starlink service in certain areas in Ukraine in 2022 as Ukrainian forces waged a counteroffensive against Russia to reclaim occupied territory.

According to posts on social media by the Ukrainian government, Kyiv will have received more than 50 000 Starlink terminals as of April 2025.

Starlink is not available in Russia but Ukrainian officials claim that Moscow's troops use the system extensively on the frontlines of Ukraine.

Starlink Vice President Michael Nicolls said on X that the outage was caused by a failure of internal software services which operate the core network. He apologized for the disruption and promised to investigate its cause. (Reporting and editing by Frances Kerry, Philippa Fletcher, and Max Hunder)

(source: Reuters)