Did Iran disable Starlink internet?
In numerous reports, I wrote and stated that Iran has acquired the technology to disrupt the Starlink satellite internet network. No one believed this news, but—as I emphasized in many reports—Iran succeeded in disrupting 85 percent of the Starlink receivers that had entered the country, which were being directed and managed by Elon Musk as a “super virtual terrorist.”
For the enemy, it was completely unacceptable to comprehend how Iranians managed to achieve this major success and deprive the West of one of its most important tools for exerting influence and creating disruption in other countries. Nevertheless, Iranians registered this great achievement in their own name, astonishing and surprising all Western media outlets and major technology companies.
Westerners and Zionists Astonished by Iran’s Cyber Power
In this regard, Zionist media outlets acknowledged that during the unrest, Iran’s security apparatuses turned Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite network into a “state identification and monitoring system”—a system specifically used to identify and track rioters and saboteurs.
According to these reports, the Starlink network—which some had regarded as a “lifeline” for communicating with the outside world and bypassing restrictions—effectively turned into a tool against its own users. Based on this account, Iranian authorities did not fail to completely block the network at the outset; rather, they deliberately left it open and used it as a “trap.”
Reports cited by Zionist media add that users, after using Starlink to send images and information abroad, became targets of precise geolocation operations. Following these actions, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), by identifying the locations from which signals were transmitted, proceeded to arrest the users, after which access to the network was completely cut off.
The report further states that through this approach, Iran succeeded in undermining the image of “invincible Western technology” and delivered a deterrent message to saboteurs—a message conveying that “there is nowhere to hide,” and that even American satellites can be turned against their own users.
According to Hebrew-language media, this process demonstrates Iran’s possession of advanced capabilities in the fields of cyber operations and electronic warfare—capabilities which, in the view of these outlets, were likely strengthened with technical support from Russia or China, particularly in the area of identifying uplink signals sent to satellites.
In numerous reports published over recent days—and even prior to the operation carried out by hired terrorists on the Syrian news channel—I addressed a strategic and important meeting of Iranian, Chinese, and Russian experts, held with the participation of specialists from other friendly countries, in which experts from these nations shared their perspectives and technologies to counter the terrorist tool known as Starlink…



