SpaceX Wants Pentagon to Pay Five Times More for Starlink in the Iran War
May 26, 2026 – 11:21 am
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With US strike drones over Iran relying on Starlink for guidance, SpaceX has told the Defense Department the current $5,000-per-terminal rate undervalues what the network is actually doing.
According to a Reuters exclusive on Tuesday, SpaceX officials concluded this as US kamikaze drones using the network began to log visible operational gains against Iranian targets.
The dispute centers on Starlink’s role in guiding LUCAS suicide drones, a cheaper US alternative to Iran’s Shahed-136 family of loitering munitions. These drones depend on Starlink’s satellite Wi-Fi for guidance updates and post-strike confirmation.
SpaceX argues that the Pentagon is effectively consuming a service tier closer to $25,000 per terminal than $5,000 because of the network latency, redundancy, and bandwidth headroom required for this workload. The Defense Department has, however, pushed back, as reported by Reuters.
In addition to the pricing argument, SpaceX has requested up to $500 million upfront and $100 million per month thereafter to operate a direct-to-cell capability over Iran, enabling Iranian citizens to bypass government-imposed internet blackouts using regular mobile phones.
Defense officials expressed alarm at the cost of this program, which is still under negotiation.
These two disputes share a common theme. The Pentagon’s growing operational dependence on SpaceX—for satellite launches, Starlink connectivity, Starshield military variants, and the experimental direct-to-cell layer—gives the company significant commercial leverage at a time when it is aiming for an IPO with a target market capitalization of roughly $1.75 trillion.
The political implications are complex due to Elon Musk’s public stance on Starlink. Over the past two years, he has insisted that Starlink should not be used as a weapon, including in Ukraine; the same network now supports US strike-drone kill chains over Iran. Whether SpaceX’s request is perceived as pricing discipline or opportunism depends on individual perspectives.
Looking ahead, the question of alternative suppliers arises. The Pentagon has been secretly funding substitutes for Starlink for the past 18 months. Sweden’s TERASi unveiled the RU1, a compact military communications terminal designed to resist billionaire-CEO interference, earlier this month. Amazon’s competing Project Kuiper has also stepped up commercial deployments. While neither matches Starlink’s installed base, the Defense Department now argues that single-vendor dependency itself is the strategic issue; the pricing dispute is merely a symptom.