Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : Joint Declaration on Enhanced Defence Cooperation between Germany and the United Kingdom [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Joint Declaration on Enhanced Defence Cooperation between Germany and the United Kingdom [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 24 July 2024.

    The Ministry of Defence of Germany and the Ministry of Defence of the United Kingdom commit to improve and further enhance bilateral defence cooperation to better meet the common challenges of the 21st century and to best secure the common interests of both countries in defence-related areas.

    Recognising the imperative for closer collaboration in the face of evolving geopolitical challenges and shared security threats and building on existing lighthouses of bilateral cooperation between Germany and the UK, such as the German-British Amphibious Engineer Battalion 130 in Minden, the Defence Ministers of Germany and the United Kingdom endeavour to embark upon a new path of enhanced partnership and defence cooperation, to promote stability in NATO’s eastern flank and in Europe as a whole and beyond for the Euro-Atlantic area. We consider closer defence cooperation as an important first step in a new relationship between Germany and the United Kingdom.

    Strategic Context

    In light of the escalating security concerns, exacerbated by Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, and a deteriorating strategic environment, the preservation of European security demands a unified response. The Defence Ministers of Germany and the United Kingdom recognise the urgency of the situation and the imperative for closer collaboration to address these challenges collectively.

    As staunch NATO Allies, we reaffirm our commitment to its principles, and acknowledge its indispensable role in securing our collective deterrence and defence. We recognise the need to strengthen the European contribution to NATO, which will enhance our capacity to respond effectively to evolving security threats.

    Through strategic cooperation in defence procurement, research, and technological innovation, we aim to contribute within our responsibilities to bolstering our industrial capabilities and enhance our operational effectiveness. By leveraging our respective strengths and fostering interoperability, we will build a resilient partnership capable of addressing the complex security challenges facing our region.

    As we confront these challenges together with partners, we are guided by our shared values of democracy, freedom, and the rule of law. By working hand in hand, Germany and the United Kingdom seek to contribute to maintaining the Alliance’s effective and credible deterrence and defence tasks. At the same time, both Germany and the United Kingdom remain committed to the security of Europe.

    Priority Objectives

    Strengthening Defence Industries:

    Both Ministries of Defence will explore opportunities to contribute to nurturing and promoting the defence industrial base in Europe, foster joint procurement initiatives and interoperability, and advance research and development endeavours to enhance capability production and technological innovation.

    Reinforcing Euro-Atlantic Security:

    Affirming NATO as the cornerstone of our defence architecture, we will endeavour to do our part to strengthen NATO, bolster complementary cooperation between NATO and the EU, renew dialogue between Allies, and support collective action within international forums.

    At the Eastern Flank of NATO, we are committed to enhance the cooperation in the framework of Forward Land Forces and NATO’s Advance Plans, in order to support deterrence activities and the ability to defend Allies’ territory. This also includes close coordination and cooperation within the 3+3 Defence Minister’s format, bringing together the three Baltic host nations and the three framework nations Germany, the UK and Canada.

    Enhancing Interoperability:

    Recognising the importance of seamless coordination, we endeavour to enhance interoperability between the German Bundeswehr and United Kingdom Armed Forces across all domains and strengthen standardisation in NATO.

    Addressing Emerging Threats:

    Confronting evolving security challenges, including hybrid warfare, cyber threats, and climate change, we shall explore joint efforts aimed at enhancing our collective resilience and response capabilities within the responsibility of our Ministries.

    Supporting Ukraine:

    Both Ministers aim to coordinate long-term military support for Ukraine, fostering stability and bolstering the country’s defence capabilities in the face of external aggression.

    Deep Precision Strike:

    The Ministries of Defence of Germany and the United Kingdom will, together with partners, undertake a long-term, comprehensive cooperation in the field of long-range capabilities.

    Intergovernmental Cooperation Structures

    To facilitate strategic direction and oversight, our intended closer cooperation may include the establishment of a senior-level group tasked with steering defence cooperation and annual meetings with Defence Ministers. In addition, we propose enhanced dialogue between parliamentarians on defence matters as well as joint strategic planning fora.

    Defence Industrial Collaboration

    Drawing upon existing frameworks such as OCCAR, Eurofighter/Typhoon programme and Boxer User Group, and our bilateral Ministerial Equipment and Capability Cooperation (MECC), the Defence Ministers of Germany and the United Kingdom commit to fostering joint procurement initiatives, advancing NATO standardisation, and promoting technology sharing. The Ministries will also share views on defence exports in the framework of joint programmes, including through regular consultations, which enhance our shared security and support our respective defence industrial bases. We aspire to share our Ministries’ views regarding our defence industrial strategies, underpinned by structured dialogue and cooperative frameworks across land, air, and maritime domains.

    Military to military

    We will explore opportunities to increase our military cooperation, ensuring a coordinated and effective response to emerging security challenges. We intend to place a renewed emphasis on defence diplomacy, interoperability, military doctrine development and high-level strategic exchanges. We are committed to enhancing focused exchanges, fostering robust dialogue, and mutually supporting initiatives. Interoperability will remain a cornerstone of our partnership, strengthened by joint training programs and shared technological advancements.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New order of missiles secures future supply for UK Armed Forces [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : New order of missiles secures future supply for UK Armed Forces [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 24 July 2024.

    A significant number of Lightweight Multirole Missiles (LMM) have been ordered by the Government from Thales UK for the supply of the versatile, precision weapon to UK Armed Forces.

    The order is worth £176 million and will equip current and future short-range air defence capabilities for the British Army, such as Stormer combat vehicles, and be fired by the Royal Navy’s Martlet maritime anti-surface missile system deployed from Wildcat helicopters.

    Weighing only 13kg each, LMM provides a precision solution against threats such as drones, helicopters, other aircraft, and small, fast maritime targets.

    Supporting 135 jobs at Thales’ site in Belfast, Northern Ireland, the contract placed by Defence Equipment & Support (DE&S) – the MOD’s procurement arm – will also support economic growth through small and medium enterprises and the local supply chain.

    Hundreds of LMMs have also been gifted to Ukraine, as they have fought to repel the illegal Russian invasion which started in February 2022.

    Maria Eagle, Minister for Defence Procurement and Industry, said:

    In a more dangerous world, we must continue to provide weapons to Ukraine but also replenish our own stocks.

    Our new order of Lightweight Multirole Missiles from Thales UK will support this, providing our Armed Forces with versatile missiles that can be used against threats such as drones, helicopters and small maritime targets.

    This contract is also a great example of how defence investment can support economic growth and sustain jobs in the UK for years to come.

    LMM were first fired from a Wildcat in the Bay of Bengal during the Royal Navy’s Carrier Strike Group deployment of 2021, marking initial operating capability for the Martlet system.

    Martlet has since supported operations including Operation Prosperity Guardian, helping to protect commercial ships from attacks by Houthi rebels in the Red Sea.

    Andy Start, DE&S CEO, said:

    As we have seen during UK military operations and when used by our Ukrainian allies, LMM is a versatile and valuable missile in a variety of battlespaces.

    Now more than ever we need to ensure UK Armed Forces and our allies are fully equipped to defeat the evolving global threats we face. This order with Thales UK is a key element of that collective effort.

    The order follows a £69 million contract placed by DE&S earlier this year, also with Thales UK, to secure the supply chain for key components used in the manufacture of the missiles.

    Production at the Thales Belfast site has doubled since the conflict in Ukraine as the global demand for air defence capabilities has increased.

    Alex Cresswell, CEO of Thales UK, said:

    Today’s contract announcement reflects the enduring partnership between the UK MOD and Thales for the provision of lightweight weapons.

    I look forward to continuing to work closely together with the Ministry of Defence to deliver the capabilities our Armed Forces need, and to make industry more resilient to deal with increasing demand.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Russia claims that it wants peace – UK statement to the OSCE [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Russia claims that it wants peace – UK statement to the OSCE [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 July 2024.

    At the OSCE Forum for Security Cooperation (FSC), Ambassador Neil Holland calls on Russia to end its war, withdraw all its forces from all of Ukraine and to re-engage in dialogue and risk-reduction.

    Thank you, Mr Chair, dear Mario. I want to start by thanking you and your team for your stewardship of this Forum over the past trimester and for ensuring that this Forum has remained relevant and able to fulfil its mandate.

    We fully support your efforts to keep this Forum focused on Russia’s unprovoked, full-scale and illegal invasion of Ukraine. The invasion is in its third year and continues to violate the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final Act’s core principles, including those on sovereignty, territorial integrity and the non-use of force. Under your stewardship, we have shown that these principles and this Forum continue to matter and that we will keep on defending both.

    Mr Chair, we welcomed the focus of your Security Dialogues on different aspect of the war on Ukraine, particularly Humanitarian Mine Action and Women, Peace, and Security. It remains essential that we continue to champion women’s full, equal, meaningful, and safe participation in political and peace processes.

    Since 24 February 2022, the Ukrainian people have continued to defend their homeland. As my Prime Minister said this month, we will support Ukraine with whatever it takes, for as long as it takes to uphold our shared values and our shared security.

    Mr Chair, Russia’s invasion of another participating State has undermined the principles of this organisation and of international humanitarian law. Perhaps that is why Russia continues to do everything it can to avoid a discussion on these issues in this Forum. For a third trimester in a row, Russia blocked consensus on holding a formal FSC Security Dialogue. It has blocked standard sessions of the Forum too, while demanding exceptional treatment. Yet, it has been unable to articulate any issues with the mandated Agenda, let alone offer an alternative.

    The Rules of Procedure remain clear. Under these, the Chair is mandated to ‘ensure the good order and smooth running of meetings’. The Rules remain clear that it is the Chair’s prerogative to set the agenda. And to select and invite guest speakers.

    There remains another path. Russia claims that it wants peace. Peace is in its gift. If that wish for peace is genuine, it can end this war and withdraw all of its forces to outside of Ukraine’s internationally recognised borders. It should do this. Russia claims that it is serious about dialogue and risk reduction. If that is true, it must re-engage with an FSC that meets, as mandated, weekly.

    I wish to conclude by thanking Cyprus as it leaves the FSC Troika, and to welcome Spain. The incoming Chair, Denmark, can count on the UK’s full and continued support next trimester – including in its prerogative as FSC Chair. Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary meets Indian Prime Minister Modi and launches landmark Technology Security Initiative [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary meets Indian Prime Minister Modi and launches landmark Technology Security Initiative [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 July 2024.

    Foreign Secretary announces UK-India Technology Security Initiative in New Delhi.

    • new UK-India Technology Security Initiative agreed delivering crucial collaboration on telecoms security and unlocking investment across emerging technologies
    • the new initiative will refresh and deepen the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, focusing on boosting economic growth in both countries
    • UK and India agree to closer collaboration on tackling climate change, accelerating our green energy partnership on off-shore wind and green hydrogen, and unlocking green growth opportunities

    The Foreign Secretary has today announced the UK-India Technology Security Initiative during his first visit to India in his role where he met senior Indian Government officials including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as part of the government’s reset with the Global South.

    The Initiative has been spearheaded and agreed by the National Security Advisors (NSAs) following negotiations between both countries to expand collaboration in critical and emerging technologies across priority sectors. It will set out a bold new approach for how the UK and India work together on the defining technologies of this decade – telecoms, critical minerals, AI, quantum, health/bio tech, advanced materials and semiconductors.

    This first of its kind agreement – delivered by the Foreign Secretary on behalf of the Prime Minister – builds on a series of partnerships between the British and Indian government, industry and academia. The respective National Security Advisers will take this agreement forward to ensure the collective potential of UK-Indian critical technologies is harnessed.

    The announcement is part of a wider package of announcements the Foreign Secretary agreed following bilateral meetings in New Delhi with Indian Prime Minister Modi and Minister for External Affairs Dr Jaishankar to refresh the UK-India Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. This will drive forward a bilateral partnership that is framed on boosting economic growth, deepening co-operation across key issues including trade, technology, education, culture and climate.

    A new £7-million funding call for Future Telecoms research was also announced by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) and India’s Department of Science and Technology, under the India-UK science, technology, and innovation partnership.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:

    This government will put growth at the heart of our foreign policy. That’s why 3 weeks into the job, I am in Delhi announcing a new Technology Security Initiative to deliver on the promise of the UK-India relationship.

    This will mean real action together on the challenges of the future from AI to critical minerals. Together we can unlock mutual growth, boost innovation, jobs and investment.

    We are also accelerating our joint work on the climate crisis – ensuring brighter, safer futures for Brits and Indians. This government is reconnecting Britain for our security and prosperity at home.

    Secretary of State for Science Peter Kyle said:

    The UK and India are recognised the world over as powerhouses for science, innovation and technology – and this new agreement will deliver growth and untold benefits for citizens across both nations.

    From telecoms and semiconductors to biotechnology and AI, these generation-defining technologies will unlock countless new opportunities and innovations, so we can deliver for working people here and in India as we deepen our long-standing partnership.

    The Foreign Secretary agreed with the Minister for External Affairs to deepen partnership on climate, including to mobilise finance and unlock new clean growth opportunities.

    This includes strengthening our investment partnership, to unlock the potential of pioneering Indian enterprises working on climate and technology. These initiatives are specifically focussed on delivering green development while empowering women.

    As well as work on off-shore-wind and green hydrogen, the UK and India agreed to deepen our partnership on forests and on building resilient cities of the future.

  • PRESS RELEASE : International Development Minister begins reset of relationship with Global South on first overseas visit [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : International Development Minister begins reset of relationship with Global South on first overseas visit [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 July 2024.

    International Development Minister Anneliese Dodds is in Rio de Janeiro for the G20 Development Ministers’ Meeting.

    • minister to set out how she will modernise the UK’s approach to international development
    • the UK’s intention to join the Brazilian President’s Global Alliance against Hunger and Poverty also set to be announced

    The UK’s Minister for International Development Anneliese Dodds is in Rio de Janeiro representing the UK at the G20 Development Ministers’ Meeting – on the first visit by a member of the new government to South America.

    The government wants to modernise the UK’s approach to international development – with a focus on genuine respect and partnerships with other countries.

    In meetings with Brazil and other key Global South partners, Minister Dodds is raising shared challenges and common interests, such as tackling global poverty, instability, and the climate and nature crisis, accelerating reform of the global financial system and unlocking economic development and growth.

    Today Minister Dodds will also confirm the UK’s intention to join the Global Alliance Against Hunger and Poverty, an initiative created by Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

    Minister for International Development, Women and Equalities, Anneliese Dodds said:

    The new UK government’s mission is to create a world free from poverty on a liveable planet. To tackle global crises and deliver sustainable growth, we need to draw on the strength which comes from equal partnerships.

    We want to build relationships based on genuine respect, such as Brazil’s Global Alliance against Hunger and Poverty with its focus on action, sharing solutions, exchanging expertise and unlocking much-needed finance.

    Poverty and a lack of opportunities are drivers of vulnerability, conflicts and uncontrolled migration, a vicious cycle which breeds more poverty and hunger. We cannot change the past, but we can change the future. That change starts now.

    The Global Alliance against Hunger and Poverty builds on Brazil’s internationally renowned successes in tackling poverty and inequality through support to family farms, and through programmes like the Bolsa Família, which uses cash-based transfers to improve access to food, the health of mothers and children, and school attendance. It has benefited more than 55 million people in total so far.

    The UK has contributed its own expertise to the work of the Global Alliance Taskforce and will offer further support to add momentum – including our readiness to join the Board of Champions and bringing in the UK’s global network of development, academic and civil society organisations.

    During the 2-day visit, the minister has also visited a quilombo, a community set up by an Afro-Brazilian community which plays a key role in environmental preservation, reaffirming that gender and racial equality will be a domestic and international priority for the new UK government.

    Background

    • the Brazilian presidency of the G20 officially started on 1 December 2023, with President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as chair. The theme of the Brazilian presidency is ‘Building a Just World and a Sustainable Planet’. The presidency will culminate in the G20 Leaders’ Summit, which will take place in Rio de Janeiro later this year, on 18 to 19 November 2024
  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary travels to India to cement stronger partnership on tech, climate and growth [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary travels to India to cement stronger partnership on tech, climate and growth [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 July 2024.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy makes his first visit to New Delhi to push the UK growth agenda.

    • UK growth at the top of the agenda for the Foreign Secretary’s first visit to New Delhi
    • David Lammy will highlight the importance of new partnership with India that focuses on economic, domestic and global security
    • he will hold high level meetings with the Indian government as well as climate and business leaders

    Economic, domestic and global security will be at the heart the Foreign Secretary’s first visit to India as he travels to New Delhi today (24 July) to unlock the full potential of the UK-India partnership.

    On the visit, the Foreign Secretary will push for a reset of the UK-India partnership including through reinforcing the UK’s commitment to securing a Free Trade Agreement that will benefit both economies.

    He will tell his Indian counterpart that he wants to drive forward greater growth for both countries.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:

    India is the emerging superpower of the 21st century, the largest country in the world with 1.4 billion people and one of the fastest growing economies in the world.

    Our Free Trade Agreement negotiations is the floor not the ceiling of our ambitions to unlock our shared potential and deliver growth, from Bengaluru to Birmingham. We have shared interests on the green transition, new technologies, economic security and global security.

    I am travelling to India in my first month as Foreign Secretary because resetting our relationship with the Global South is a key part of how this government will reconnect Britain for our security and prosperity at home.

    David Lammy will galvanise support for accelerated action on the climate crisis with India as an indispensable partner – driving forward the clean energy transition and creating opportunities for British and Indian businesses. He will discuss partnering on Indian-led global initiatives to build clean power access, climate resilience in the Global South and small island states.

    The Foreign Secretary will underscore the importance of the ‘living bridge’ between the UK and India. It represents the 1.7 million people with Indian heritage that have made their home in the UK and make an exceptional contribution to British life.

    In a visit to India’s third largest technology company, the Foreign Secretary will meet business leaders to highlight how the UK and India are working together on shared ambitions such as cutting-edge science to encourage innovation, boost trade, and improve the livelihoods of working people in both countries.

    The Foreign Secretary will also hold high-level talks with members from the Indian government including Dr Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India’s External Affairs Minister. He will reiterate the extraordinary contribution of British Indians, saying that they enrich the UK’s social and economic landscape and are the epitome of modern Britain.

    He will say that we must harness this and unlock the potential of the new UK-India partnership, so we can deliver prosperity not just for the people of India and the UK but for the rest of the world.

    The Foreign Secretary will travel on from India to the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ meeting in Laos where he will advance UK economic partnerships and unveil new cooperation on climate and health.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 487 Ukrainian athletes killed following Russia’s invasion honoured in Parliament Square [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : 487 Ukrainian athletes killed following Russia’s invasion honoured in Parliament Square [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 July 2024.

    Ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, a new display has been unveiled in Parliament Square to honour the lives lost from the Ukrainian sporting community.

    • a powerful display honouring the Ukrainian athletes who have been killed since Russia’s full-scale invasion has been unveiled today in Parliament Square
    • more than 487 Ukrainian athletes have been killed, with the lives of former and aspiring Olympians, as well as the next generation of sporting talent, cut short
    • display comes ahead of the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games later this week

    Ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, a display has been unveiled in Parliament Square to honour the lives lost from within the Ukrainian sporting community and to highlight the devastating consequences of the war in Ukraine.

    Since Russia’s barbaric full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the conflict has claimed the lives of thousands of innocent Ukrainians, including 487 athletes. More than 4,000 athletes are still actively supporting the war effort.

    Unveiled today in Parliament Square, the new 3D display brings to life the harrowing ‘487’ figure – though the true number is likely to be even higher. Surrounding the display, sporting equipment representing the disciplines of some of the 487 fallen athletes offers a stark reminder of the war’s devastating toll.

    With only 140 athletes from Ukraine competing at this year’s Olympic Games in Paris, this marks the smallest representation ever in Ukraine’s summer Olympic history.

    Among the athletes killed by Russian forces are Oleksandr Pielieshenko, who competed in weightlifting at the Rio 2016 Olympics and died defending his country in May this year. Other casualties include promising young athletes like 11-year-old rhythmic gymnast Kateryna Diachenko, whose life was cut short by a Russian attack on her hometown of Mariupol at the onset of the war on 12 March 2022.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:

    As the world gathers this summer to celebrate the very best of sporting talent, we must pause to remember the hundreds of Ukrainian athletes who are no longer with us or can no longer take part due to the war.

    We are drawing attention to the harrowing real life stories behind the 487 statistic to pay tribute to the fallen athletes as a timely reminder of this government’s iron-clad support for Ukraine and its people. We must support Ukraine’s fight for freedom.

    The defence of Europe begins in Ukraine and the outcome is down to our collective will. Now is the time to double down on our support so Ukraine not only wins the war, but can forge the bright and ambitious future that Ukrainians deserve.

    Heorhii Tykhyi, Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, said:

    Every Ukrainian athlete at the Olympics represents the Ukrainian will to win, Volia. By acting swiftly and with united efforts, the prospect of a world where Ukrainian athletes and citizens are free from the threats posed by Russia will be a reality.

    The display comes just days after the Prime Minister hosted President Zelenskyy at Downing Street last week after the European Political Community summit. President Zelenskyy also met the Defence and Business Secretaries where they discussed the need for more cooperation and the need to boost industrial production for Ukraine.

    The UK’s commitment to support Ukraine to resist Russian aggression is iron-clad. The Prime Minister announced his commitment to £3 billion a year of military support for Ukraine for as long as it takes. In total, the UK has committed almost £12.7 billion in military, humanitarian, and economic support for Ukraine since February 2022.

    Current and former Olympic athletes and coaches worldwide have also united in solidarity with Ukraine in light of the 487 figure, sharing their hopes for Ukraine to receive the support it needs to win.

    This includes Sasha Cohen, former Ukrainian-American Olympic figure skater, Oksana Masters, Ukrainian-American Paralympic athlete, German Biathlete Jens Steinigen and coach Wolfgang Pichler, and former Ukrainian Olympic wrestler Oksana Rakhra.

    Sasha Cohen, former Ukrainian-American figure skater, said:

    I’ve always believed in the power of sport to unite and inspire. But today, I’m not just speaking as an athlete. I’m speaking as the daughter of a Ukrainian immigrant, my mother, Galina. I’ve grown up with stories of Ukraine, our culture, our people, and their resilience.

    Today, I stand in awe of the Ukrainian athletes participating in the Olympics and think of those who we are missing and have been lost to the war. Their courage, strength and determination embodies the spirit of my mother’s homeland and I stand with them in solidarity.

    Together, we can show the world the power of unity in sport.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Staff speech at RUSI Land Warfare Conference [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Staff speech at RUSI Land Warfare Conference [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 23 July 2024.

    The Chief of the Defence Staff, Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, gave a speech to the RUSI Land Warfare Conference 2024.

    The big reason I wanted to be here today is because I am probably more excited about the future of the Army than I am any other part of Defence.  The imperative to learn from Ukraine – combined with the march of technology – creates a range of possibilities that play to the British Army’s strengths.

    I recognise that some will be sceptical of this view. There are near term financial challenges to work through. We are addressing historic underinvestment. And beneath the headline capabilities there are deficiencies in people, equipment, stockpiles, training and technology.

    We need the humility to recognise that we are not as strong as we could be and then the determination and focus to put this right.

    But none of that changes the scale of transformation underway in the Army. Or your responsibility as the custodians of British land power to deliver maximum return from the investment you receive.

    And I want to unpack this by looking at three points:

    • First, to recognise the strategic context: a NATO that is becoming stronger, and a Russia that is weaker.
    • Second, to explore what this means for the British Army. How NATO can be your strategic anchor. How CGS has a vision that is aligned to Britain’s role and purpose within this family of 32.
    • And third, your part in this, and mine. Because the future of the Army matters to all of us. It is a priority for the whole of Defence.

    Those of you who have heard me speak about the lessons of Ukraine will know that I take a deeply boring and unfashionable view that Russia’s aggression serves to reinforce the central tenets of British Defence Policy.

    For all the necessary debates that Russia’s war in Ukraine has prompted – on defence spending, on mass, on technology and tactics – the most enduring lesson for the United Kingdom is that we are safe because we are a nuclear power and because we belong to the world’s largest and strongest defensive alliance.

    It is frustrating when I hear commentators contrasting Britain’s capabilities with those of Russia without acknowledging the context that we would only ever fight a war with Russia, or any other peer aggressor, alongside our allies and partners.

    NATO has grown from 30 to 32 nations. Twenty-three member states now spend 2% of GDP on Defence compared to just 3 members a decade ago. Our 3.2 million uniformed personnel already outmatch Russia’s 1.2 million. Sweden brings an additional 25,000 active personnel and 40,000 reserves. Finland another 23,000 regulars and 280,000 reserves.

    Take any measure of conventional strength – troops, tanks, armoured vehicles, fast jets, submarines  – and the NATO overmatch against Russia is enormous.

    As for Ukraine, this audience will recognise more than most the extent to which Putin’s forces are tied down.

    Russia is making tactical gains – towns and villages taken at huge cost. They are also targeting our friends in Ukraine where it hurts most: in their energy sector, in their cities and even their hospitals. That is concerning.  But overall, the situation remains dire for Putin.

    Russia has lost 550,000 men. And our assessments are that it would take Putin five years to reconstitute the Russian Army to where it was in February 2022; and another five years beyond that to rectify the weaknesses that the war has revealed.

    It is not complacent to point this out. It is the responsible thing to do.

    Our role as military leaders is to reassure the nation and stiffen its resolve. And our advice to ministers needs to be grounded in a thorough and honest assessment of the threats we face.

    Yes, the threats can change and evolve. Which is why we keep them under review and test them against the intelligence we receive from our allies.

    And while Putin may not directly attack a NATO member in such an overt manner as to trigger Article 5, we have seen that he is able to threaten us in other ways: in cyber and space, and underwater where our energy infrastructure and digital networks are most vulnerable.

    But the fact remains: NATO is getting stronger, and Russia is getting weaker.  And the best way to keep Britain and Europe safe is by maintaining support to Ukraine so that Russia continues to lose.

    And this brings me to my second point – if the United Kingdom’s defence and security is rooted in NATO, then NATO is the British Army’s strategic anchor.

    But that doesn’t mean our role within the Alliance should mirror that of our allies on the Eastern flank.

    Poland is doubling the size of its Army over the next decade. The Baltic and Nordic states are talking about mass, resilience, and conscription. That is understandable. They border Russia. The threat is close.

    Our geography is different. Northern. Maritime. One of just two island nations in an Alliance of 32. We don’t share a border with Russia. But we are vulnerable in our dependency on sea lines of communication.

    This shapes our role in NATO. We operate with the advantage of distance. And we have that special combination of political will and military capability that allows us to act with speed and effect and carry other allies with us.

    The Joint Expeditionary Force is a case in point. An organisation born from both the camaraderie and shared suffering of Afghanistan, which has now come of age with the accession of Sweden and Finland and the new focus on NATO’s northern flank.

    Our convening power, our position as a framework nation, represents something special and essential within the Alliance which few other allies can offer.

    It is why over the past two years I’ve been working with SACEUR to position the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps to become one of NATO’s two Strategic Reserves, with the other being led by France.

    What SACEUR wants most from the UK is an Army that is more lethal. More mobile. More available. Organised to advance, react and respond at Division, and Corps levels. And equipped to strike faster, harder and deeper.

    And if that starts to sound familiar over the course of today, then it is because it’s exactly the kind of Army CGS wants to deliver.

    Thanks to General Patrick, clarity of purpose and a sense of urgency are to the fore. Now under General Roly the task is to lead toward a future where the British Army puts NATO first and is first in NATO – by dint of its quality, deployability, sustainability and lethality.

    In the past year we’ve seen Ukraine – a country which barely has a Navy – bring the Russian Black Sea Fleet to heel through a combination of drones and long-range missiles.

    I want a British Army that can follow suit. To become an Army that can hold Russia at risk if SACEUR sees that necessity.  An Army equipped with hypersonic missiles, and battalions of one-way attack drones. An Army that serves as a disruptor in NATO. Challenging the Alliance to push the boundaries of technology and lethality.

    It’s the reason I said at the outset that the Army has the most exciting opportunity of any Service. And it reflects the British Way of Warfare.

    But it rests on demonstrating the responsibility, the ambition and the drive required to seize the moment, which is my final point.

    CGS’s focus on doubling the fighting power of land forces by 2027 and to triple it by the end is the right one.

    Politics responds to positive reasons to invest. And the more you do and the better you do it, the more you make the case for a stronger and more capable Army, and so the ambition grows.

    You are already doing amazing things.

    More productive as you were a decade ago with fewer people.  8,000 troops overseas on operations or training. 16,000 for STEADFAST DEFENDER. 37,000 held at readiness.

    A footprint in fourty countries. A Land Industrial Strategy that supports 270,000 British jobs and £6 billion of exports.

    An immense contribution to social mobility.  The strongest across all three Services. 37,000 cadets. 13,000 apprentices. The people, standards, training, and ethos which are the envy of the world.

    So my most important message to you this morning is to keep on doing the amazing things you do. Be consistent. Maintain your confidence, ambition, and tenacity to see through CGS’s vision and deliver for the nation.

    Be demanding of me and Head Office where you think you are not getting the support you deserve. And I will do all that I can to champion the Army and to ensure you get what you need.  But also look inwards and all that you control to create betterment.

    You are an outstanding Army. And you have the means to become even better in the years ahead.

    So be bold. Be ambitious. And be demanding for your Service. Because that’s how you’ll deliver a stronger Army. And that’s how we will keep our nation safe.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Contract for Bibby Stockholm not renewed past January 2025 [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Contract for Bibby Stockholm not renewed past January 2025 [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 23 July 2024.

    The Minister for Border Security and Asylum has made the decision not to renew the contract for use of the Bibby Stockholm barge.

    As part of the government’s commitment to clear the backlog and fix the asylum system, the Minister for Border Security and Asylum has made the decision not to renew the contract for use of the Bibby Stockholm barge.

    Ending the use of the Bibby Stockholm forms part of the expected £7.7 billion of savings in asylum costs over the next ten years, as the Home Secretary takes action to restart asylum caseworking, clear the backlog and remove those with no right to be here.

    Extending the use of the Bibby Stockholm would have cost over £20 million next year. The barge will continue to be used until January 2025, but there will be no continuation of the contract beyond that.

    Yesterday, the Home Secretary set out more detail on the government’s plans to save billions of pounds by clearing the asylum backlog – where thousands remained permanently in taxpayer funded accommodation.

    By doing so, the government will reduce demand for accommodation, like the Bibby Stockholm.

    The news comes mere weeks since the newly elected government began delivering on its mission to create a faster, fairer asylum system. It builds on action to fix the asylum system and protect our border. The government has already begun rapid recruitment of a new border security commander and committed a 50% uplift in UK officers at Europol – to boost intelligence sharing, disrupt criminal people smugglers and bring them to justice.

    The Minister for Border Security and Asylum, Dame Angela Eagle MP said:

    We are determined to restore order to the asylum system, so that it operates swiftly, firmly and fairly; and ensures the rules are properly enforced.

    The Home Secretary has set out plans to start clearing the asylum backlog and making savings on accommodation which is running up vast bills for the taxpayer.

    The Bibby Stockholm will continue to be in use until the contract expires in January 2025.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan [July 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 23 July 2024.

    The Prime Minister hosted King Abdullah II of Jordan at Downing Street today.

    The Prime Minister thanked His Majesty for making the time, and said the visit demonstrated the strength of the relationship between the UK and Jordan.

    The Prime Minister updated the King on his Government’s decision to lift the pause on funding to the UN Relief and Works Agency, adding that he remained deeply concerned by the trajectory of the Israel-Gaza conflict.

    Securing a ceasefire and ensuring the acceleration of aid into Gaza was the immediate priority, the leaders agreed. They also discussed the need to restore hope and the viability of peace on both sides.

    Turning to the bilateral relationship, the leaders discussed the strong and long-standing security partnership between the UK and Jordan, as well as the opportunities to further technology, energy and education ties.