The Technopolar Paradox
The Frightening Fusion of Tech Power and State Power
Ian Bremmer
May 13, 2025
In February 2022, as Russian forces advanced on Kyiv, Ukraine’s
government faced a critical vulnerability: with its Internet and
communication networks under attack, its troops and leaders would
soon be in the dark. Elon Musk—the de facto head of Tesla, SpaceX, X
(formerly Twitter), xAI, the Boring Company, and Neuralink—stepped
in. Within days, SpaceX had deployed thousands of Starlink terminals
to Ukraine and activated satellite Internet service at no cost.
Having kept the country online, Musk was hailed as a hero.
But the centibillionaire’s personal intervention—and Kyiv’s reliance
on it—came with risks. Months later, Ukraine asked SpaceX to extend
Starlink’s coverage to Russian-occupied Crimea, to enable a
submarine drone strike that Kyiv wanted to carry out against Russian
naval assets. Musk refused—worried, he said, that this would cause a
major escalation in the war. Even the Pentagon’s entreaties on
behalf of Ukraine failed to convince him. An unelected,
unaccountable private citizen had unilaterally thwarted a military
operation in an active war zone while exposing the fact that
governments had remarkably little control over crucial decisions
affecting their citizens and national security.
continua qui:
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/technopolar-paradox-ian-bremmer-fusion-tech-state-power