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Ukrainian authorities say SpaceX has effectively blocked unauthorised Starlink terminals used by Russian forces across the eastern front, in a move Kyiv and the company characterise as a ‘whitelist’ verification operation.
Ukraine’s defence minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, and advisers reported mass disconnections of Starlink terminals from the front on Feb. 5, 2026, and said the disruption has degraded Russian command-and-control and slowed attacks in multiple sectors.
Elon Musk and SpaceX said the measures to curb unauthorised use appear to have worked, while Reuters and other outlets reported they could not independently verify the full scope of outages.
Analysts and fact-checkers note technical limits: geofencing and whitelisting are complex in active, fluid battle zones and risk collateral disruption to Ukrainian users.
Kyiv says Russia had been using Starlink-equipped drones and captured or illicitly acquired terminals to extend strike ranges; the verification process aims to allow only registered terminals to operate inside Ukraine.
Ukrainian officials continue to process registrations and urge reports of remaining unauthorised devices.
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Key takeaways: DoD involvement and export/control regimes shape Starlink use in Ukraine; a rapid whitelist move forced registration, temporarily hit some Ukrainian users but largely deprived Russian forces of stolen terminals, with restoration expected as registration finishes.





















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