Information Warfare: China Penalizes Offshore Starlink Use

Archives

February 6, 2026: China is forcing merchant ships to turn off their Starlink equipment when they enter Chinese territorial waters and ports. The current reason is that Starlink has not registered to operate in China. That would mean allowing China to license Starlink to work in China. All foreign telecommunications services must accept rigorous Chinese controls. That means all network traffic within Chinese coastal waters or ports must operate via Chinese managed gateways. Starlink transmits data directly to foreign, as in SpaceX, satellites, bypassing Chinese security and monitoring systems.

Most non-Chinese shipping have adopted Starlink for its superior speeds compared to traditional maritime satellite systems. Starlink provides better navigation, communications, and logistics capabilities as well as improved crew welfare because of superior communications with their families as well as video entertainment.

Then there is the competition angle. Chinese firms are developing their own satellite networks to compete with Starlink. These include China SatNet which has launched 60 satellites for its planned 13,000-satellite Guowang constellation, Another Chinese firm, Qianfan, has deployed the first 90 satellites of a 15,000-satellite system.

Three years ago, China announced plans to build a competitor for the American Starlink network that provides fast Internet service to ground users. Starlink was turned on in Ukraine after the Russians invaded in 2022 and gave Ukrainian forces a communications advantage they still enjoy. The Chinese satellite network is called for the moment GW and is being developed and deployed by the Chinese military. The Chinese government encourages private enterprise and competition but considers Starlink a threat to Chinese military power. Russia and China were very public about their envy, anger and hostility towards the new American Starlink space-based communication system. Russia was the first to feel the pain caused by Starlink and declared Starlink founder Elon Musk an enemy who should be executed.

China was less emotional and more practical by making public a government study of the Starlink problem and asking for comments and new solutions. This is a common practice in China and used to be in Russia, especially when the Soviet Union existed. The Soviets used this publicity technique primarily to let all officers in the military know of new tactics, concepts or problems the state was having with something. Public discussion was allowed to help eliminate the less useful suggestions and solutions. Starlink, a subsidiary of SpaceX, is not the only multiple small satellite ISP Internet Service Provider system. There are similar efforts underway in several countries, including Russia and China. Starlink is unique in that it was the first to enter service and quickly proved it could do what it was designed to do. That included quickly adapting to the needs of military users. China sees Starlink as a serious threat to the current government and its control over the population as well as the effectiveness of their military. That’s no speculation because it’s already happening to Russian forces, often live on TV, in Ukraine.

Russia has some experience with this sort of thing. Back in 2018 Roscosmos the state-owned corporation running commercial space operations was offered a lucrative contract by a British firm, OneWeb, to use 21 Soyuz SLVs satellite launchers vehicles to put hundreds of small Internet communications satellites into orbit. This was to establish a worldwide satellite network providing Internet access to anywhere on the planet. This alarmed the Russian government because they would not be able to monitor and censor or block any Internet traffic coming into or out of Russia. The OneWeb system was to use a few ground stations connecting its satellites to the rest of the Internet. Russia was willing to compromise if one of those ground stations was in Russia and the Russians had access to all the Internet traffic passing through it. OneWeb saw that Russia intended to outlaw the use of OneWeb by Russians. The ban could not have been completely effective because some Russians would find a way to pay for their access. OneWeb makes money by acting as an ISP internet service provider and for hundreds of millions of people in areas with poor, or no, Internet access, the satellite service is all they would have access to. That includes millions of Russians in remote areas. The fact that the FSB would not have access to that Internet traffic would be a bonus for Russian users. OneWeb was forced to cancel the Roscosmos SLV deal. The Russians were the most affordable SLV service available and without it OneWeb did not get into orbit until SpaceX offered affordable SLV service and began putting the OneWeb satellites into orbit.

The irony of this was that one of the potential replacements for the billion dollar Roscosmos contract was the American SpaceX, which has perfected the reusable boosters which can land intact and be reused that lowers the cost of using SpaceX launchers. Roscosmos has been having a hard time remaining competitive, and the OneWeb contract was seen as something of a lifeline. China may offer a way out as they are proposing a Russian Chinese partnership to establish a competitor for OneWeb that would, of course, be accessible to Russian and Chinese Internet censorship efforts. Russia cannot afford to create its own satellite Internet system and Roscosmos is sliding towards bankruptcy.

X

ad

Help Keep StrategyPage Open

First came Facebook, then came Twitter, and finally, AI has arrived. They have all caused a decline in our business, but AI may be the deadliest innovation. We are currently in survival mode. Our writers and staff receive no payment in some months, and even when they do, it is below the minimum wage for their efforts. You can support us with your donations or subscriptions. Please help us keep our doors open.

Make sure you spread the word about us. Two ways to do that are to like us on Facebook and follow us on X.

Subscribe   Donate   Close