惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
D
DataBreaches.Net
博客园_首页
罗磊的独立博客
B
Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
C
Cisco Blogs
GbyAI
GbyAI
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
H
Help Net Security
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
爱范儿
爱范儿
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
T
Threatpost
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
T
Tor Project blog
小众软件
小众软件
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Y
Y Combinator Blog
H
Hacker News: Front Page
V
V2EX
Security Latest
Security Latest
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
P
Proofpoint News Feed
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
S
Secure Thoughts
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
博客园 - 司徒正美
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
Vercel News
Vercel News
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
IT之家
IT之家
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
D
Docker
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog

Forbes - Aerospace & Defense

American Airlines Pilots Seem To Waver On Desire To Join ALPA How Ukraine Turned Its Defense Into A System Of Battlefield Control Frontier Merger Could Have Saved Spirit Airlines, Says Ex-Exec Of Both USS Gerald R. Ford Entered The Atlantic Ocean And Is Coming Home How The U.S. Coast Guard Can Make DHS Secretary Mullin A Success USS Nimitz Continues To Host Foreign Officials On Final Goodwill Tour How Drones Are Changing The Drug Wars American Airlines Pilots Would Welcome Activist Investors Drone Hide And Seek: FPVs Are Changing The Rules Of Urban Warfare The U.S. Navy’s Largest Supercarrier Has Departed The Middle East Ukraine’s Drone Strikes Reach Moscow, Threaten Putin’s Victory Day Parade Donated Qatari 747 Completed Flight Testing For Air Force One Service How Ukraine’s Innovation Enabled It To Exploit the US War With Iran Iran’s Outdated Air Force Went On The Offensive During U.S.-Israel War Japan’s Terra Drone Bets On Ukraine’s Cheap Way To Stop Shaheds Iran War Sparks Surge In Demand For Cost-Effective Anti-Drone Rockets The Battle For Chasiv Yar: How Drones Reshaped Urban Combat This U.S Navy ‘Flattop’ Was Given A Five-Year Service Life Extension It’s 10PM. Do You Know Where Your AI Agents Are? The U.S. Navy Has A Carrier Problem, It Doesn’t Have Enough In Service American Airlines Customers Now Test Happy. This Rising Exec Helped. Will New Stalker Drones Make Reaper Obsolete? Democrats And Republicans Near Discharge Petition For Ukraine Aid Planet Labs Satellites Upend Wars While Beaming Their Images Worldwide U.S. Navy Warship Back In Port After Completing Lengthy Deployment New Report Emphasizes Downsides of a Militarized Economy As Russian Threats Explode, U.S. And Allies Race To Defend Spacecraft U.S. Paratroopers Start Training With Bumblebee Drone Interceptors How U.S. Special Operations Forces Are Adapting To Fight With New Tech USS Gerald R. Ford’s Record-Long Deployment Could Be Coming To An End The Strait Of Hormuz Is Exposing The Future Of Space Warfare How Ukraine Could Launch Drones From Libya To Strike Russia’s Tanker Spirit Airlines Unions Want What Trump Wants: ‘Lend Us Some Money Now’ US Navy Supercarrier Transiting The Strait Of Magellan To The Atlantic Elon Musk’s Jilting Mars To Build Moon City Could Spark His Downfall U.S. Air Force To Fly B-1B Lancer And B-2 Spirit Well Into Late 2030s Asymmetric Warfare Becoming Decisive In The Iran And Ukraine Conflicts Russian Molniya-2 Drone Able To Evade Ukrainian Counter-Drone Defenses UAE’s Sophisticated Air Defense More Diverse Than Ever After Iran War Drones Are The Biggest Military Revolution In A Century US Blockade On Iran May Bring Back Prize And Booty Russia Faces Economic, Civil & Political Challenges During Ukraine War Another U.S. Navy Supercarrier Is Preparing For Its Next Deployment U.S. Army Pairs Drone With Bunker Buster Bomb In First Use Ambush Drones 101: Learning A New Type Of Warfare Russia Adapting New Fires Tactics To Overcome Artillery Challenges Three US Navy Supercarriers Are In The Middle East, CENTCOM Confirmed The War In Iran Is Saving The A-10 Thunderbolt II, At Least For Now Why Israel’s Economy Is Thriving Now SpaceX’s IPO Could Leave Tesla Eating Rocket Dust China’s Growing Interest In Opening The Strait Of Hormuz Pentagon’s New Drone Defense Marketplace Sees $13 Million In Purchases American Airlines Makes Surprise Gains With Customers, Survey Says Watch DAWG: Where Pentagon’s $55 Billion Drone Gamble Could Go Wrong United Airlines CEO Stirred Up A Hornet’s Nest With Merger Hint “Defeat” By Drones Teaches U.S. Army Hard FPV Lessons The Easy Way American Airlines CEO, As He Plays A Bad Hand, Tells Rival To Butt Out Three U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers Will Soon Be In The Middle East Ukrainian Drones Are Cutting Off Ammo Resupply To Russian Artillery The Best Ways To Sleep On Planes: Seats To Suites And ‘Nests’ New Book Offers New Insights Into Growth of the Military Tech Sector Our Nation’s Space Nuclear Policy Needs All Three Of Its Legs A Fire Broke Out On Another US Navy Supercarrier, Three Sailors Injured The Doolittle Raid Legacy: Buy The Air Force We Need To Fight And Win FPVs Get Medieval With “Flying Sword” Bladed Drone Zelenskyy Expands Defense Deals With Europe After Middle East Visit Trump’s Hormuz Blockade Has Been Planned For Years 5 Things To Know About The Blockade On Iran A US Navy Aircraft Carrier Is Circling Africa To Reach The Middle East Drones And EW Are Not Enough To Get Russia Across The Oskil River The Administration’s New Budget Slashes Domestic Public Investment by Hundreds of Billions of Dollars US Navy Supercarrier Set To Break Record For Longest Modern Deployment Will Iran War Result In Nuclear Weapon Transfers To The Middle East? China Seizes An Island While The World Is Watching Iran What’s At Stake In Hungary’s Election For Ukraine And Russia 5 Under-The-Radar Winners And Losers In The Iran War So Far Oldest US Navy Supercarrier Sailing In ‘Southern Seas 2026’ Exercises A Crazy Expensive U.S. Drone Disappeared Over Strait Of Hormuz Ukraine’s Heavy Lift Drones For Casualty Evacuation (VIDEO) Ukraine Turns To Middle East As U.S. And EU Aid Slows Amid Iran War The Air Defense Array That Shielded Iraqi Kurdistan During Iran War Drone Swarms Could Be Russia’s Answer To Ukrainian Kill Zones Hungary Prepares For Elections As EU, Ukraine, And U.S. Await Results Instead Of An Aircraft Carrier, This Ship Will Recover The Orion Spacecraft Daring, Costly Rescue Mission Highlights The Case For Drones Game Of Drones And Fighter Jets In Eastern Libya The Age Of Space Maneuver Warfare Is Imminent Pentagon Request Of $1.5 Trillion Does Not Do Enough To Address Iran’s Drones Russia Planning Long-Range Drone Control Stations In Belarus, Ukraine Warns US Navy Supercarrier USS Gerald R. Ford Isn’t Coming Home Yet New Ukrainian Jammer Makes Russia’s Latest Glide Bombs Useless (Again) Artemis II, Hollywood And Moon Landing Conspiracy Theories As The War In Iran Continues, Trump Threatens To Withdraw From NATO Fourth US Navy Supercarrier Has Headed To Sea, Conducting ‘Routine Operations’ NASA Artemis II astronaut health risks explained 5 Facts About Artemis II Now That It Has Launched NASA Artemis II timeline 8 key moments to watch live Why U.S. Gatling Guns Are Not Stopping Iran’s Shahed Drones Artemis II launch photos Orion begins historic moon mission The US Navy Needs More Aircraft Carriers – It’s All About The Base
Elon Musk Can Join Up With Ukraine Forces To Shoot Down Iran’s Drones
Kevin Holden Platt · 2026-06-17 · via Forbes - Aerospace & Defense
Raytheon Patriot Missiles In 3-D

By joining forces with Ukrainian designers to craft next-generation drones and interceptors, SpaceX could take the worldwide lead in this sphere of defense technology. Shown here is the leading-edge but expensive $4 million American Patriot missile. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Boston Globe via Getty Images

While Iran’s radical regime is threatening to strike the operations of trillionaire Elon Musk across the Mideast, SpaceX’s founder could swiftly turn the tables by teaming up with Ukraine’s defense-tech inventors to begin shooting down the Islamic Republic’s drones, says a world-leading space defense scholar.

On the eve of the SpaceX IPO that transformed Musk into the globe’s first trillion-dollar tycoon, an Iranian news organ aligned with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps issued a warning that his entire business empire has been placed on the military’s hit list.

That means not just the thousands of Starlink internet satellite terminals scattered across the region, but also SpaceX’s ground stations, and any outfit controlled by Musk’s AI start-up xAI or messaging platform X, could all hypothetically come under attack, says Brian Hurley, founder of the influential New Space Economy think tank and digital magazine.

SpaceX's world-leading expertise in aeronautical engineering and AI-enhanced autonomous flight "are exactly the kinds of capabilities that matter in counter-drone defense.” (Photo by Loren Elliott/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Iran’s state news agency Fars claimed the American and Israeli militaries had been using SpaceX Starlink technology and even “Twitter software” in attacks on Iran, and vowed armed revenge.

“The Starlink ground station located in the occupied territories of Qatar, Jordan, the UAE, and Oman, along with the partners of SpaceX … are Iran’s new targets,” Fars said in a provocative threat.

Space scholar Hurley told me in an interview there has been no “clear public evidence that SpaceX or Starlink directly supported U.S. military communications, battlefield coordination, or targeting in specific operations against Iran.”

“Iran may be assuming or alleging this based on Starlink’s role in Ukraine,” adds Hurley, who chronicles the rising new space powers worldwide, and their strategic and diplomatic moves across the global geopolitical chessboard.

Just months after American intelligence agencies revealed that Moscow was secretly providing its defense partners in Tehran with pinpoint satellite-derived coordinates on the location of U.S. radars, space gear, jet fighters, troops and warships across the Middle East, Hurley says, “Russia could extend intelligence support to include SpaceX or Starlink-related infrastructure in the region.”

“Russia and Iran,” he adds, “are clearly deepening their military and strategic partnership against Western interests.”

The Russian army stages joint military exercises with Iran. (Photo by Dimitar DILKOFF / AFP) (Photo by DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a series of posts on the messaging platform X that the Kremlin’s joint development, with Iran, of bomb-tipped drones to hit Israeli, American and Arab outposts, along with providing real-time targeting intel, shows that Moscow aims “to effectively turn the Iranian regime’s strikes against its neighbors and American bases into a second front of Russia’s war against Ukraine and, more broadly, against the entire West.”

President Zelensky, a lodestar leader hailed across the European democracies, also wondered, on X, whether Vladimir V. Putin might send Kremlin combatants to aid in Iran’s defense.

Victoria Samson, chief director of space security at the globally influential defense think tank Secure World Foundation, in Washington, D.C., says while she agrees the Iran conflict could be morphing into a new front in the wider Russian-Iranian war with the West, dispatching Russian soldiers to face off against American forces might be too dangerously escalatory for Putin to risk.

One of the foremost experts in the U.S. on space defense and the predicted space wars of the future, Samson told me in an interview that Iran, while mirroring Russia’s battle tactics, is threatening to escalate the scale of assaults on SpaceX gear.

While Moscow has sought to obliterate Starlink terminals across Ukraine, she says, Iran appears to be preparing to target SpaceX stations throughout the entire Middle East.

During Zelensky’s epic leadership of Ukraine’s remarkable resistance to the invasion by gigantic Russia, it has emerged, almost miraculously, as a world power in drone warfare.

Across the country, tech wunderkinds directing aerial defense skunkworks have been inventing a fusillade of leading-edge drones, along with hit-to-kill interceptors to destroy the swarms of automated Russian-Iranian bombers that crash into Ukraine’s ancient cities nightly.

Ukraine has become a global power in crafting leading-edge low-cost aerial weaponry like these "Peklo" drone missiles, and could team up with SpaceX to lead the world in this ever-expanding market. (Photo by Genya SAVILOV / AFP) (Photo by GENYA SAVILOV/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

Zelensky has dispatched leading Ukrainian aces of drone battles, along with their anti-drone defenders, to help protect Mideast outposts targeted by Iran, even as their counterparts back in Europe begin training NATO forces in Denmark, Germany and Poland.

The commander of Ukraine’s fight to preserve its democracy and independence has opened the way to joint production, with liberal Allies, of remotely piloted compact aircraft for deployment across Europe and the Middle East.

“If Iran starts targeting SpaceX, Starlink terminals, or related infrastructure in the Middle East,” Hurley told me, “that would give both regional governments and SpaceX a stronger reason to consider Ukraine-style counter-drone defenses."

“Ukraine has developed practical experience using lower-cost interceptors, electronic warfare, sensors, and rapid adaptation against Shahed-type drone attacks.”

While American forces in the Mideast have been firing off high-tech but high-priced missile interceptors to destroy dirt-cheap Iranian drones bombarding Israel and the Arab allies of the U.S., along with U.S. radar installations and aircraft, there is a growing apprehension that these defenses could quickly be depleted.

Ukraine’s moderately priced interceptors and drones could provide a perfect solution, Hurley says.

“It makes little sense to rely mainly on $4 million [American] PATRIOT missiles or $12 million THAAD interceptors against much cheaper Iranian-Russian drones."

SpaceX and Elon Musk could initially press for the massive deployment of Ukrainian drones and interceptors to protect their outposts across the Gulf, Hurley says.

Yet the spacecraft superpower, with its world-leading expertise in aeronautical engineering, high-resolution sensors, constantly updated onboard imagery and map archives, and AI-enhanced automated flight and navigation, could join forces with Ukrainian designers to co-craft a torrent of increasingly sophisticated drones and interceptors.

While the Israeli and American armed forces have been experimenting with pilotless fighter aircraft, SpaceX could swiftly take the worldwide lead in crafting cutting-edge interceptors and drones. (Photo by IDF/Newsmakers)

Getty Images

The crystal-gazing Hurley predicts SpaceX could "enter into the business of building lethal autonomous drones and autonomous defense systems and also military robots.”

While Iran might be ahead, for the moment, with its stockpiles of explosive Shahed drones, SpaceX, with its just-realized $85 billion in IPO share proceeds, has a fantastical potential war chest to enter and win a drone arms race.

And even as Iran’s war-hit economy spirals downward, with just $375 billion in GDP last year, Elon Musk’s post-IPO fortune has skyrocketed to $1. 4 trillion, higher than the entire American Department of Defense budget for 2025.

Now, as Russia deploys jet fighters, missile brigades and bomber drones to destroy Starlink terminals across Ukraine, Iran aims to conduct similar blitzes on SpaceX stations all around its periphery.

“Iran’s threat does appear to follow the pattern Russia has used in Ukraine: treating commercial space infrastructure as part of the battle space.”

With the strengthening defense entente between Moscow and Tehran, space scholar Hurley says, “the space-enabled conflict model seen in Ukraine may now be spreading.”

“Commercial satellite networks are increasingly being treated as strategic infrastructure, not neutral background services.”

“That creates new risks for companies such as SpaceX,” he says, and “reflects a wider Iran-Russia convergence.”

Even as Russia deploys jet fighters, missile brigades and bomber drones to destroy SpaceX Starlink terminals across Ukraine, Iran aims to conduct similar blitzes on SpaceX stations all around its periphery. (Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

With their parallel attacks on SpaceX, “both countries share an interest in reducing the military and political advantages the West gains from commercial space systems.”

Tehran’s revolutionary rulers are also sending out Russian-designed drones to locate Starlink stations that have been smuggled into Iran, and camouflaged while positioned on rooftops across the Islamic Republic. Possession of Starlink terminals is punishable by death, and Iran’s state media have already begun blasting out bombshell stories on Starlink owners being arrested in raids nationwide.

Iran is preparing to mirror Russia's attacks on SpaceX Starlink terminals. Possession of a smuggled Starlink station inside Iran is punishable by death (Photo illustration by Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

NurPhoto via Getty Images

Meanwhile, although the United States and Iran have signaled they could sign a 60-day ceasefire pact in Switzerland this week, that should not lull the world’s wealthiest techno-aristocrat or his spaceflight outfit into a false sense of security.

“Even if a 60-day truce is signed, SpaceX and [Mideast] regional governments should still treat the Iranian threat seriously,” Hurley warns.

“A truce reduces immediate risk, but it does not remove the need for contingency planning.”

If SpaceX races forward at its usual rocket-speed tempo in co-designing, with its Ukrainian allies, next-generation armadas of interceptors and drones, “SpaceX could become a very significant player in autonomous drone defense,” Hurley predicts.

“SpaceX already has deep experience in autonomous [flight] operations, real-time control systems, rapid software iteration, AI-enabled engineering, resilient communications, and large-scale manufacturing.”

“Those are exactly the kinds of capabilities that matter in counter-drone defense, where the challenge is not simply intercepting one drone, but detecting, tracking, prioritizing, and defeating large numbers of low-cost autonomous threats at scale.”

“SpaceX also has existing relationships with governments, militaries, and strategic customers through Starlink, Starshield, launch services, and national-security space work.”

“That gives it a potential path into the market that many defense startups do not have.”

“Ukraine’s battlefield experience would be very important,” he says.

“If SpaceX combined Ukrainian operational lessons with its own strengths in autonomy, AI, communications, and scalable engineering, I think it could potentially dominate the autonomous drone defense market.”