Elon Musk Wants to Sell Satellite Internet to Iran If He Can Get an Exemption on Sanctions – Gizmodo Australia

Posted: September 20, 2022 at 8:13 am

Elon Musks satellite internet provider Starlink will try to offer its service to people in Iran, provided U.S. sanctions against the country can be waived, according to the billionaire. Musk declare his intentions to enter the market in response to a tweet from someone who said they were in Iran on Monday and wanted to know if Starlink would ever be available in the country.

Starlink will ask for an exemption to Iranian sanctions in this regard, Musk tweeted.

U.S. sanctions against Iran are some of the toughest in the world and often limit the ability of everyday people to receive basic medical supplies and medicines sometimes not because those medicines are specifically mentioned in American sanctions legislation but because businesses and banks are afraid to do business in Iran, a side effect known as overcompliance.

But it appears Musk isnt afraid of doing business with Iran, despite his company SpaceXs lucrative government contracts and his need to maintain a security clearance with the Pentagon. Musks illicit drug use was previously an issue for the U.S. Department of Defence.

Will Musk actually follow through and apply for an exemption? That remains to be seen, given his propensity for saying lots of things and following through on just a small percentage of those promises. But the people in Iran no doubt await with bated breath.

Some sanctions against Iran were lifted during the Obama era when the JSPOA was signed, they were strengthened again under the Trump regime when the 45th president unilaterally violated the deal. And while President Joe Biden has shown no interest in reviving the deal with Iran, its not clear what the current president would do if Musk came to him hat-in-hand for a sanctions waiver.

Then again, Musk has made fun of Biden in the past. So, who knows?

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Elon Musk Wants to Sell Satellite Internet to Iran If He Can Get an Exemption on Sanctions - Gizmodo Australia

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