The UK is bringing nuclear bombs back to its air force, a Cold War-era practice that it shut down in the 1990s
The UK said on Tuesday that it's buying 12 F-35As to carry nuclear weapons.
It would be the first time in nearly three decades that the Royal Air Force could conduct nuclear strikes.
The push comes after the F-35A was certified in March 2024 to carry the American B61-12 nuclear bomb.
The UK is buying 12 F-35As that can carry nuclear weapons, and it's making it clear that it's buying the American aircraft for that capability.
"The purchase represents the biggest strengthening of the UK's nuclear posture in a generation," UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office wrote in a statement on Tuesday evening.
The move will bring back the Royal Air Force's ability to conduct nuclear strikes, a capability that the UK decommissioned in 1998 when it withdrew its own air-dropped nuclear bomb from service.
Since then, the UK's only official method of launching a nuclear attack has been from its Vanguard-class submarines. Every other nuclear-armed nation has at least two of the three typical methods of launching an attack: by air, land, or sea.
The US, Russia, and China are known to possess all three, what's known as the nuclear triad.
In his office's statement, Starmer said his government was re-establishing the air-based leg of its nuclear forces amid an "era of radical uncertainty."
"The UK's commitment to NATO is unquestionable, as is the Alliance's contribution to keeping the UK safe and secure, but we must all step up to protect the Euro-Atlantic area for generations to come," he said.
Starmer's office said the new fighters will be stationed at RAF Marham in eastern England.
The UK is already on schedule to receive 138 Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters, and the F-35As announced on Tuesday are coming from the next batch of this order.
British forces already have roughly three dozen of the fighter jets, though these are the F-35B, a variant that can land vertically and take off with an extremely short runway.
The F-35A, the baseline version of the aircraft, was the only variant to be certified to carry nuclear weapons.
In March 2024, the stealth fighter was certified to carry the B61-12, an American 800-pound nuclear bomb. The B61-12 is a gravity weapon, meaning it's dropped from above and has no propulsion system.
Starmer's office said it made its decision to purchase the F-35As after a review of UK defenses urged it to boost its deterrence posture.
"The Strategic Defence Review recognised that the UK is confronting a new era of threat, including rising nuclear risk," the statement reads.
While the UK and France have their own nuclear programs, Western European nuclear deterrence relies heavily on the US through American missiles stationed on the continent.
NATO, which is gathering its leaders at a summit in the Hague on Tuesday and Wednesday, has also been pushing member states to build up the alliance's fleet of dual-capable aircraft, or warplanes that can drop both conventional and nuclear bombs.
The UK's decision comes amid fears of a full-blown nuclear arms race between the three largest nuclear powers, and as tensions among them continue to worsen.
The US and Russia, which own close to an estimated 83% of the world's nuclear warheads, are both undertaking wide-scale modernizations of their nuclear weapons and launch systems.
China has not publicly admitted to an expansion, but international observers say that it's rapidly building up its arsenal by at least 100 warheads a year from 2023 to 2025. By that rate, it could reach 1,550 warheads — the deployment limit kept by the US and Russia — by 2035.
The UK has an estimated 225 nuclear warheads, but has said it intends to increase its stockpile to 260. It's also developing a new submarine, the Dreadnought, to replace its four Vanguard-class nuclear submarines.
Read the original article on Business Insider
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
38 minutes ago
- Forbes
NATO Allies Agree To Raise Defence Spending To 5% Of GDP
NATO member nations voted to increase defense spending to 5% of their annual GDP by 2035, following long-term pressure from President Donald Trump, as the alliance reaffirmed its defensive agreement. NATO members agreed to boost their defense spending to 5% of their annual GDP. Getty Images Naming Russia a''long-term threat' to Europe, NATO made the commitment to boost defense spending during a summit in The Netherlands Wednesday. The wording of Wednesday's declaration implies not all NATO members agreed to the 5% spending increase, with Spain immediately putting out a statement indicating that 'not all allies' were bound to the target, the New York Times reported. 'We're with them all the way,' U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters at the summit, shortly before a scheduled press conference. 'I've been asking them to go up to 5% for a number of years, and they're going up to 5%,' Trump told reporters. 'From 2%, and a lot of people didn't even pay the 2%. So I think that's going to be very big news.' This is a developing story and will be updated.


Chicago Tribune
43 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
President Donald Trump faces an alliance shaped to his liking as he attends the NATO summit
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — U.S. President Donald Trump huddled on Wednesday with members of a NATO alliance that he has worked to bend to his will over the years and whose members are rattled by his latest comments casting doubt on the U.S. commitment to its mutual defense guarantees. Trump's comments en route to the Netherlands that his fidelity to Article 5 'depends on your definition' drew attention at the NATO summit, as will the new and fragile Iran-Israel ceasefire that the Republican president helped broker after the U.S. unloaded airstrikes on Iran's nuclear facilities. At the same time, the alliance is poised to enact one of Trump's chief priorities: a pledge by NATO member countries to increase, sometimes significantly, how much they spend on their defense. 'I've been asking them to go up to 5% for a number of years,' Trump said Wednesday as he met with Mark Rutte, the alliance's secretary-general. 'I think that's going to be very big news.' The boost in spending follows years of Trump's complaints that other countries weren't paying their fair share for membership in an alliance created as a bulwark against threats from the former Soviet Union. Most NATO countries, with the key exception of Spain, are preparing to endorse the 5% pledge, motivated to bolster their own defenses not just by Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine but also, perhaps, to placate Trump. As a candidate in 2016, Trump suggested that as president he would not necessarily heed the alliance's mutual defense guarantees outlined in Article 5 of the NATO treaty. In March of this year, he expressed uncertainty that NATO would come to the United States' defense if needed, though the alliance did just that after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. On Tuesday, he told reporters aboard Air Force One on his way to The Hague for the summit that whether he is committed to Article 5 'depends on your definition.' 'There's numerous definitions of Article 5. You know that, right?' Trump said. 'But I'm committed to being their friends.' He signaled that he would give a more precise definition of what Article 5 means to him once he was at the summit. New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, who traveled to The Hague and met with several foreign leaders at the summit, said other countries raised 'understandable questions' about the U.S. commitment to the alliance, 'certainly given President Trump's past statements.' 'We were very strong and reassuring everyone that we are committed to NATO, we are committed to Article 5, we are committed to maintaining troops on the Eastern flank,' said Shaheen, who represented the U.S. Senate with Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware. Trump also vented to reporters before leaving Washington about the actions by Israel and Iran after his announced ceasefire — although on Monday, he said the ceasefire was 'very good.' After Trump arrived in the Netherlands, news outlets, including The Associated Press, reported that a U.S. intelligence report suggested in an early assessment that Iran's nuclear program had been set back only a few months by weekend strikes and was not 'completely and fully obliterated,' as Trump had said. But on Wednesday morning, Trump and other senior Cabinet officials vigorously pushed back on the assessment, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the administration was launching an investigation into who disclosed those findings to reporters. 'That hit ended the war,' Trump said. Drawing comparisons to the atomic bombings from the U.S. during World War II, he added: 'I don't want to use an example of Hiroshima. I don't want to use an example of Nagasaki. But that was essentially the same thing. That ended that war.' The White House has not said which other world leaders Trump would meet with one on one while in The Hague, but Trump said during his meeting with Rutte that he will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskyy later Wednesday.


Bloomberg
43 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Rutte: NATO Allies Agreed to Spend 5% GDP in Defense
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte says members of the alliance have agreed to invest 5% of gross domestic product in defense. "It includes at least 3.5% of GDP invested in core defense requirements," Rutte told reporters. "In addition to the 3.5% for core defense, the plan includes 1.5% of GDP that will go towards investments that support our defense and security," he added. (Source: Bloomberg)