Elon Musk 's SpaceX is reportedly the forerunner to win a $10 billion contract to build Donald Trump's Golden Dome -- inspired by Israel's Iron Dome, Reuters claimed. Elon Musk, however, refuted the claim and said SpaceX has not tried to bid for any contract in this regard. "Our strong preference would be to stay focused on taking humanity to Mars."
"If the President asks us to help in this regard, we will do so, but I hope that other companies (not SpaceX) can do this,"Musk wrote.
The Reuters report, however, did not claim that SpaceX was leading it in its name. The report said SpaceX formed a consortium with two other companies with close Trump ties -- defense startup Anduril in which billionaire Peter Thiel is a key investor and Palatir which Theil co-founded -- for the bidding.
The Reuters report said SpaceX representatives held talks at the Pentagon, outlining the consortium's proposals. The grouping, which does not have formal name, is proposing it would launch as many as 1,000 satellites to orbit the earth watching for missile threats as the first stage of the process. Design and preliminary engineering for that alone would cost up to $10 billion, Reuters reported.
"If the President asks us to help in this regard, we will do so, but I hope that other companies (not SpaceX) can do this,"Musk wrote.
SpaceX has not tried to bid for any contract in this regard.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 17, 2025
Our strong preference would be to stay focused on taking humanity to Mars.
If the President asks us to help in this regard, we will do so, but I hope that other companies (not SpaceX) can do this.
The Reuters report, however, did not claim that SpaceX was leading it in its name. The report said SpaceX formed a consortium with two other companies with close Trump ties -- defense startup Anduril in which billionaire Peter Thiel is a key investor and Palatir which Theil co-founded -- for the bidding.
The Reuters report said SpaceX representatives held talks at the Pentagon, outlining the consortium's proposals. The grouping, which does not have formal name, is proposing it would launch as many as 1,000 satellites to orbit the earth watching for missile threats as the first stage of the process. Design and preliminary engineering for that alone would cost up to $10 billion, Reuters reported.
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