By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Game-Changer For Current And Future
Conflicts
Ukraine
has 20,000 Starlink terminals provided evenly by
USAID, Poland, the European Union, and private companies. Musk, the world's richest person and chief executive
of Tesla Inc, said SpaceX spends nearly $20 million a month for maintaining
satellite services in Ukraine and that the company has spent about $80 million
to enable and support and support Starlink there. The
Pentagon is considering paying for the service to Ukraine, Politico reported on
Monday, citing
two U.S. officials involved in the discussions.
Even before he bid to
buy Twitter, Elon Musk was an avid user of the site. It is why Ukraine’s
Minister of Digital Transformation Mykhailo Fedorov
took to the social media platform to prod the SpaceX CEO to activate Starlink. This SpaceX division provides satellite Internet
to help his country in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion. “While you
try to colonize Mars—Russia try [sic] to occupy Ukraine!” Fedorov wrote
on February 26. “We ask you to provide Ukraine with Starlink
stations.”
“Starlink
service is now active in Ukraine,” Musk tweeted that day. This was a coup for Ukraine:
it facilitated Ukrainian communications in the conflict. Starlink
later helped fend off Russian jamming attacks against its service to
Ukraine with a quick and relatively simple code update. Musk has gone
back and forth on whether the company will continue funding the Starlink satellite service that kept Ukraine and its military online during
the war.
The tensions and
uncertainty Musk injects into the war effort demonstrate the challenges that
can emerge when companies play a crucial role in military conflict. Technology
companies ranging from Microsoft to Silicon Valley startups have provided cyber
defense, surveillance, and reconnaissance services—not by the direction of a
government contract or even as a part of a government plan but through individual
companies' independent decision-making. These companies’ efforts have
rightly garnered respect and recognition; their involvement, after
all, was often pro bono and could have provoked Russian attacks
on their networks, or even their people, in retaliation.
But this is new
territory for U.S. companies and the U.S. government. The Biden
administration could now figure out
how to harness the power and willingness of these companies
in ways that will help, and not harm, strategic interests going forward.
To do that, policymakers should carefully consider why companies are
getting involved and what the government can do to more meaningfully partner
with them to serve U.S. foreign policy interests.
Corporate Responsibility
U.S. businesses have a
long history of working with the U.S. government amid war. During World
War II, Ford Motor Company repurposed
its assembly lines to build the equipment needed by the military, such as
vehicles, aircraft engines, and even the B-24 bomber. More
recently, service contractors such as Kellogg, Brown, and Root built
and provided logistical support in Iraq and Afghanistan. But
these companies were contracted by the U.S. government for
those services. That is not the case for many tech companies
operating in Ukraine.
Small and large private
and public companies have supported Ukraine’s military operations. Planet,
Capella Space, and Maxar technologies—all satellite
companies—have supplied imagery helpful to the Ukrainian
government and its cause. The imagery has done everything from
inform ground operations to mobilize global opinion, thanks to
the publicity on Twitter and prominent news outlets. Primer.AI, a Silicon
Valley startup, quickly modified its suite of tools to analyze news and
social media and capture, translate, and analyze unencrypted Russian military
leaders’ voice communications. Even Clearview AI, a New York-based startup
focused chiefly on law enforcement in the United States, volunteered its facial
recognition services to aid Ukrainian officials in
countering disinformation and to help identify victims and war criminals.
Microsoft has played a
particularly active role, announcing the launch of new teams to work “around
the clock” to defend Ukrainian organizations and
government agencies from “an onslaught of cyberwarfare.” It has protected
against attacks on critical infrastructure, which run on Microsoft
products. Microsoft even went so far as to take legal and technical
measures to remove Internet launching points Russians were using for their
attacks. In April, Microsoft published its intelligence report,
attributing specific attacks to Russian units and constructing a detailed
timeline of events ahead of U.S. Cyber Command’s announcement in
July.
Market considerations
were one reason these companies got involved. All had some past or future
business plans with the U.S. government. A desire to remain on good terms could
have influenced their decisions to engage in a conflict where the Biden
administration has a stated national security interest. A company such as
Microsoft also has an economic incentive to defend the integrity of its
products. By identifying and eliminating vulnerabilities exploited by the
Russians, Microsoft improved the security of its systems writ large.
Corporate branding
played a role too. Companies made online posts about their
involvement, reported Russian cyber-activities, and posted social media
messages and press releases. Quarterly investor reports also
referenced support for Ukraine as part of environmental, social, and
governance (ESG) programs. Maxar’s
satellite imagery of Ukraine was accessible to news agencies as part of its
“Data Philanthropy” effort.
Some company leaders
appear to have been key to spearheading support to Ukraine. Microsoft President
Brad Smith has long affirmed his conviction in protecting the “subtle and
sensitive” barrier “between freedom and its opposite,
totalitarianism.” Sean Gourley, the founder of Primer.AI, has a history of
working with the U.S. government on national security issues and has former
government executives on his board. And, of course, Musk’s rapid responses on
Twitter give reason to believe that he drives his company’s decision to engage.
Underneath a SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket carrying 54 of the company's Starlink
internet satellites lifts off from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
on Sept. 18, 2022.
Left Hand Talk To Right Hand
These technology
companies’ efforts have been laudable and, in most cases, are
aligned with the U.S. government’s work on Ukraine. But the U.S.
government now needs to build relationships and a plan for
coordination amid the crisis in Ukraine and before another
problem emerges elsewhere. Initially, these engagements could be at
senior levels because decisions are being made and driven by the top.
Frequent informal exchanges would help national security leaders
appreciate the impact and potential responses to corporate-specific challenges,
such as threats to overseas infrastructure or employees. Ideally,
government and industry partners could form close working relationships at
senior and middle levels that government leaders could more readily use to
anticipate corporate actions and coordinate amid a crisis.
These
relationships could also help government officials understand and
anticipate the capabilities that an adversary’s corporations could bring to a
conflict since tech companies are often more aware of the threat posed by
competitors. And continuous interaction will help to establish communication
pipelines for the unanticipated challenges inevitable in future conflicts.
Such public-private
communication and collaboration on national security issues are not
unprecedented. For example, since 2015, U.S. Space Command has established four commercial
integration cells. It has been open about the relevance of the retail
space industry to military space domain awareness and intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance operations. Currently, nine U.S. space
companies are members, including Maxar Technologies. Similarly, commercial
cyberspace companies have engaged with each other and the government since
establishing Information Sharing and Analysis Centers in 2003. Although
these centers were set up to share information about threats to U.S. critical
infrastructure, they provide an excellent model for exchanging sensitive or
national security information amid crisis and combat operations.
A key objective of these
partnerships should be the ability to anticipate and coordinate
when a tech company will engage in a conflict and when it will not. Government
and industry leaders must discuss what happens when market forces and
international relationships could lead to very different corporate decisions.
Take, for example, a potential conflict with China. American companies are
unlikely to abandon the democratic principles that enabled their rise, but
their decisions to act may be more constrained by significant infrastructure,
financial, or personnel investments in China. If the government began
to depend on tech companies for specific capabilities and found them
unreliable, the United States could be caught short during a crisis.
Understanding the needs and constraints of both sides well in advance could
help avoid misunderstandings and missteps.
This issue, of course, is
now playing out with Starlink. The Ukrainian military
has become dependent on technology and, therefore, on Musk’s decisions. Musk
has decided not to support Ukraine’s request to activate Starlink
in Crimea, and Starlink services have been recently
unreliable in Ukraine, especially in areas controlled by Russia. It also
appears as though Musk has asked the Pentagon to pick up funding for Starlink in Ukraine, although he currently says he will
continue funding Starlink. His funding request could
be a business decision. His decision on where and where not to activate Starlink is reportedly based on his assessment of the risk
of Russian escalation. A private company decides all this, independent of
government policies or objectives.
These events in
Ukraine should serve as a call to action for government leaders.
Tech companies have demonstrated how businesses can support
military and security operations and their independent power and willingness to
act. Now is the time to reach out to tech company leaders and initiate
substantive and continuing conversations about these companies’ abilities and
plans. The relationships built may be a game-changer for current and future
conflicts.
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