00:26Iran just put
00:27Elon Musk on a target list, not metaphorically. State media in Tehran has officially declared
00:34that SpaceX and Starlink facilities across the Middle East, including in Arab countries
00:40and Israel, are now quote, military targets. And the reason why tells you everything about
00:46the war being fought right now, not just with missiles, but with satellites.
00:51Here's the backstory you need. Starlink, Musk's satellite internet service, became a lifeline
00:57for anti-regime activists inside Iran. When the government cut off the internet during
01:02protests, Iranians were using Starlink terminals smuggled across the border to stay connected
01:08with the outside world, thousands of them. The US State Department reportedly purchased
01:14nearly 6,000 terminals to help dissidents get around the blackout. To Tehran, that's not
01:20a tech company, that's infrastructure being used against them. And now they're treating
01:25it like one. Iran's state-owned Fars news agency made it explicit. All economic interests
01:32managed by Elon Musk in what they call West Asia are now on their initial targeting list.
01:38Their exact words? Iran reserves the right to attack all facilities related to holdings managed
01:45by Musk in the region. That's a sitting government through official state media naming a private
01:52American citizen's company as a legitimate military strike target. And this isn't happening in a
01:57vacuum. This is dropping in the middle of an active military confrontation. The US launched
02:03strikes on Iranian military sites, radar, communications, air defenses. Iran fired back at US bases in
02:11Jordan, Kuwait, and Bahrain. An 11-year-old girl was injured in Bahrain from falling shrapnel.
02:17Iran claims to shut the Strait of Hormuz, one of the most critical shipping lanes on the planet.
02:23And President Trump threatened to seize Karg Island, Iran's main oil export hub. The situation
02:30is escalating fast. But zoom out for a second, because the Iran-Musk angle is genuinely significant
02:37beyond just the headline. It's one of the first times we've seen a nation-state formally extend military
02:43targeting doctrine to a private tech company's infrastructure, based on its connectivity tools,
02:49not weapons, not drones, internet terminals. It signals that in modern conflict, whoever controls
02:56communication, whoever controls the signal, is a combatant. Starlink has already been used in Ukraine,
03:03it's being used by dissidents in Iran. And now Iran is essentially saying, if you provide the signal,
03:10you're part of the fight. Using a Starlink device inside Iran already carries up to two years in
03:16prison. This is the next level. Whether Iran actually acts on this threat is a separate question,
03:22but the declaration itself is a moment worth paying attention to. Elon Musk built a satellite network,
03:29Iran just called it a weapon. And in the middle of a shooting war between Iran and the United States,
03:35that line between tech mogul and military asset is getting very, very blurry.
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