Elon Musk has expressed concern about a potential escalation of the Ukraine conflict.
The US entrepreneur responded to President Vladimir Putin’s warning to NATO about the consequences of potential long-range strikes against Russia with weapons provided by the US-led military bloc.
Putin stated on Thursday that Ukraine would depend on satellite intelligence and programming by NATO specialists to enable long-range strikes deep into Russia. He warned that any such attacks “will mean that NATO nations, the US and European countries, are at war with Russia.”
Musk shared a video of Putin’s remarks posted by the popular X account Wall Street Silver, which warned that the US is “expected to launch WW3 this weekend and authorize attacks deep in Russian territory.”
“I have a bad feeling about this,” the billionaire commented, echoing a catchphrase made popular by the Star Wars character Han Solo upon seeing the Death Star space station.
Ukraine has been requesting the capability to strike targets deep inside Russia with Western weapons for months, arguing that the lack of permission to do so has weakened its positions on the front line.
UK Prime Minister Kier Starmer is meeting with US President Joe Biden in Washington on Friday, where they will discuss easing restrictions on Ukraine’s use of long-range Western weapons.
The meeting follows US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Kiev with his British counterpart, David Lammy. Both NATO members have supplied long-range weapons to Ukraine, which have been used against targets inside territories that Kiev claims, but not inside internationally-recognized Russian territory.
The original post with Putin’s remarks attributes personal responsibility for a possible outbreak of a world war to Biden and US Vice President Kamala Harris, who is also the Democratic Party’s nominee in the upcoming presidential election.
Musk is a supporter of Republican candidate Donald Trump. The former president has accused his opponents of putting the world at risk of a nuclear war during his campaign.