Skip to main content

State Dept.’s plan to buy $400 million worth of armored Teslas hastily changed to ‘armored EVs’

Despite DOGE’s pursuit of wasteful government spending, Elon Musk said ‘No one mentioned it to me.’

Despite DOGE’s pursuit of wasteful government spending, Elon Musk said ‘No one mentioned it to me.’

STKS493_CYBERTRUCK_CVIRGINIA_D
STKS493_CYBERTRUCK_CVIRGINIA_D
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images
Emma Roth
is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

On Wednesday, reports from The New York Times and Drop Site News pointed out that the US Department of State included an order for $400 million worth of armored Teslas in its 2025 procurement forecast. But shortly after these reports emerged, the agency replaced its mention of “Armored Tesla (Production Units)” with a much vaguer line listing “Armored Electric Vehicles,” as reported earlier by Bloomberg.

Now, the State Department tells the NYT that the “solicitation is on hold, and there are no current plans to issue it.” It says it stems from a Biden administration request to explore armored electric vehicles.

The document was first published in December, just before President Donald Trump entered office but after he was elected. Since then, Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has shut down federal agencies, accessed sensitive payment systems, and offered “deferred resignation” agreements to thousands of government employees under the claim that it would cut government waste.

Related

Though the document didn’t say which Tesla model the State Department planned to purchase, the NYT and Bloomberg say it likely referred to the Cybertruck, which features a stainless steel, “bullet-proof” body and windows made of Gorilla glass.

“I’m pretty sure Tesla isn’t getting $400M,” Tesla CEO Elon Musk said in a reply on X. “No one mentioned it to me, at least.” The list also includes $40 million for armored BMW X5 and X7 vehicles, as well as unspecified mentions of “armored sedan” and “armored EV (not sedan).”

Update, February 13th: Added information from the NYT.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.