logo
UK's arsenal of nuclear bombers will be protected by garden fence just 5 FEET tall – amid fury over Brize Norton breach

UK's arsenal of nuclear bombers will be protected by garden fence just 5 FEET tall – amid fury over Brize Norton breach

Scottish Sun07-07-2025
THE UK's deadly arsenal of nuclear bomber jets will only be protected by a 5ft garden fence amid fury over the Brize Norton breach.
Britain's state-of-the-art warplanes across the country are being 'guarded' by flimsy wooden fences and even hedgerows in a huge security risk, according to a new investigation by the Telegraph.
8
New F-35 bombers are nuclear-capable
8
The jets will reportedly be protected by a 5ft-high fence that could be scaled by saboteurs
Credit: The Telegraph
8
Other bases were also at risk with flimsy defences
Credit: The Telegraph
The outlet found that some of the RAF's most critical airbases could be waltzed into by determined activists or enemy agents with barely a barbed wire in sight.
In one shocking case, a 5ft chain-link fence was all that stood between infiltrators and a base tipped to host Britain's new nuclear-ready F-35 fighter jets.
At other bases, entire sections of the perimeter are protected by garden-style wooden fences, patchy CCTV, or even nothing at all – making them sitting ducks for intruders, according to findings.
It comes after huge security concerns were raised in recent weeks following a break in at RAF Brize Norton.
An estimated £7million of damage was inflicted at the Oxfordshire air base including military aircraft sprayed with paint during the raid.
The group Palestine Action have claimed the damage on two Voyager aircraft was carried out by them.
The group has since vowed to strike again, naming two more RAF bases as future targets, including one that trains the UK's top military officers.
The Telegraph, which accessed a secret meeting of the group, reports that one of the bases has a four-mile stretch of perimeter made up of broken fences, drystone walls, or open access points.
Shocking findings also revealed that there were also two gates that are simply left open.
Another site had three unmanned gate barriers with gaping holes in between, giving infiltrators a straight run onto the grounds.
UK military ready for war Greg Bagwell former Air Marshal RAF says
One of the bases targeted is reportedly linked to Elbit Systems UK, a weapons firm repeatedly targeted by activists.
And while some 10ft black metal fences have recently gone up on site, huge gaps remain.
Even the RAF's main intelligence hub isn't safe, with 700 metres of its perimeter protected by a mix of hedges and low metal fencing.
There is no barbed wire in sight and a handy escape route leads straight onto the A15.
Nearby, another base is protected only by a 6ft-high, garden-style wooden fence for almost 1.5 miles along its north and eastern perimeter.
The major base is home to RAF Typhoon fighter squadrons.
Insiders admitted to the Telegraph that the defences were 'not perfect'.
Security experts have already warned the sites' weaknesses are clearly visible on Google Street View and is highly likely to have already been assessed by activists and foreign agents.
8
The 5ft high chain link fence
Credit: The Telegraph
8
It comes after RAF Brize Norton was broken into and vandalised
Credit: Alamy
8
Security experts have already warned against the fence
Credit: The Telegraph
The Telegraph claims to have handed over its dossier to the Ministry of Defence.
However, it is refusing to name the bases or pinpointing the weak spots, for national security reasons.
Video posted online last month showed yobs from Palestine Action vandalising Voyager aircraft at Brize Norton.
Four people have since appeared in court since the attack and have been remanded into custody to next appear at the Old Bailey on July 18.
It is understood that enhanced measures are in place following the infiltration at Brize Norton and that security at all bases is under review.
Further 'layered' security measures are also in place inside the bases and other non-visible security measures being used include electronic motion sensors.
Sources also said there were air safety limits on the height of fences that can be erected immediately next to runways.
The majority of the five bases' perimeters consist of barbed wire-topped metal fencing and main gates are guarded by uniformed personnel.
Frequent patrols are conducted by the RAF, police and dog units, and signs warn people to keep out.
A MoD spokesperson told the Telegraph: 'We take security extremely seriously and operate a multi-layered approach to protect our sites, including fencing, patrols and CCTV monitoring.
'Following the security incident at RAF Brize Norton, we are urgently reviewing security procedures across the Defence estate and have immediately implemented a series of enhanced security measures at all sites.
'After years of hollowing out and underfunding of the Armed Forces, the Strategic Defence Review concluded that we need to invest more in this area, backed by the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War.'
8
Military aircraft were sprayed with paint during a break-in at RAF Brize Norton
Credit: Unpixs
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Palestine Action protests reveal Britain's spiritual sickness
The Palestine Action protests reveal Britain's spiritual sickness

Telegraph

time5 hours ago

  • Telegraph

The Palestine Action protests reveal Britain's spiritual sickness

Palestine Action's campaign against Israel recalls the famed elevator scene from Mad Men. Sore at being sidelined in a pitch meeting, ambitious and impatient advertising executive Michael Ginsberg confronts his boss, Don Draper, and pouts: 'I feel bad for you.' Draper, icier than the rocks in his Old Fashioned, replies: 'I don't think about you at all.' It's doubtful if Israel will think at all about crowds taking to Britain's streets to demand the unbanning of proscribed terror organisation Palestine Action. Reports of some protesters chanting 'f*** your Jewish state' are unlikely to give anyone in Jerusalem much pause. Such scenes will be regarded as a matter of private grief not to be intruded on. For all that Palestine Action's criminal campaign of thuggery and intimidation is directed at the state of Israel, and specifically its ability to defend itself, it's not Israel that needs to worry about Saturday's events. Israel can take care of itself, but can the UK? Because these protests portend nothing good for Britain. Recall that Palestine Action is not merely anti-Israel. This is an organisation that openly, proudly targets British companies for vandalism and destruction. That uses criminal conduct to terrorise British business owners into changing their commercial relationships. An organisation whose activists have breached a British military base and damaged RAF planes. And not insignificant numbers of Britons have assembled in UK cities in solidarity with that organisation. This is not a well country. The last time we found ourselves in this level of economic decline and political dysfunction, in the 1970s, we were called the Sick Man of Europe. But this is a different kind of sickness. It's a spiritual sickness, a new British disease. Chants of 'f*** your Jewish state' will have been alarming for British Jews, who have been forced to watch in horror as their country, including and perhaps especially its educated middle classes, have been radicalised by events in the Middle East since October 7, 2023. From Parliament to the press, churches to the universities, the BBC to the NGOs, Britain has become fixated on the war in Gaza, to the exclusion of other, deadlier conflicts. And in a way that is detached from all reason, so that even the sketchiest Hamas propaganda is accepted at face value. It is not simply that Britons are troubled by the human suffering in Gaza – a very real and very grave situation – but that the public square has become thoroughly Palestinianised in a short space of time. All other foreign conflicts, and even some domestic matters, have been pushed aside. Gaza is the new unifying issue of British politics. That reflects trends that have been in train for some time now. The UK political class is so thoroughly in sway to the political culture of American progressivism that, after Black Lives Matter and 'trans women are women', it was inevitable that they would embrace the historically illiterate Civil Rights frame for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The mass immigration of foreign-born Muslims is also making obsessive hatred of Jews and Israel a fact of mainstream political discourse in Britain. Given the decline of the UK and the modish self-loathing promoted in classrooms, lecture halls, on television and in museums, it should not surprise us that there is some level of sympathy out there for an organisation that vandalises RAF planes, those symbols and guarantors of British self-determination and sovereignty. It's not just Israel's defensive capability that is under attack. Nothing Palestine Action or its acolytes do will change reality on the ground in Gaza or alter the strategic aims of the Israeli government. Israel draws strength not only from its military but from the national self-confidence of its people. In Britain, they take to the streets in the name of foreign nations and imported hatreds.

Thousands march through Edinburgh for pro-Palestinian campaign
Thousands march through Edinburgh for pro-Palestinian campaign

STV News

time7 hours ago

  • STV News

Thousands march through Edinburgh for pro-Palestinian campaign

Thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators braved rain to march through Edinburgh on Saturday, as part of a national campaign. One veteran activist said the recent move to proscribe Palestine Action under anti-terror laws had not deterred people from showing their support to the wider movement. A large group gathered outside St Giles' Cathedral in the early afternoon before marching down the Royal Mile, chanting while waving flags and banners. The march stopped in front of the UK Government headquarters at Queen Elizabeth House, where speeches were given outside the building, before heading on to Bute House – the First Minister's official residence. Other demonstrations took place in Manchester, Bristol, Truro and London – calling for the ban on Palestine Action to be reversed. While there were dozens of arrests at the other events, Police Scotland said no arrests had been made in relation to the march in Edinburgh. Mick Napier, founding member of the Scottish Palestinian Solidarity Campaign, said there was a large turnout in the Scottish capital because of outrage over Israel's plan for a 'humanitarian city' in Rafah. PA Media Speaking as the march set off down the Royal Mile, he told the PA news agency: 'It's large, it's bigger than we've had for a very long time and it's entirely due to the building of the Israeli concentration camp in Rafah. 'They've called it a humanitarian city but people are utterly horrified, cumulatively, by what's happened during 22 months of genocide.' He said the ban on Palestine Action was 'absurd' and police had been on a hair trigger, arresting people for placards and banners which contain the words Palestine and action. Mr Napier said the ban had not deterred people from supporting the wider pro-Palestinian movement, saying: 'I think people are enraged. 'I look back to previous campaigns against the war in Vietnam, when that issue became fused with the issue of free speech it rose to a higher level.' Earlier this week, three women were arrested under the Terrorism Act after a van was driven into the external fence of the Leonardo UK factory in Edinburgh. The group Shut Down Leonardo claimed it was making components for F-35 fighter jets but the defence company says it does not directly supply equipment to Israel. Asked if such actions worked against the pro-Palestinian movement, Mr Napier said: 'I think in the past it may have put some people off, not any more.' Other activists at the march condemned the move to ban Palestine Action. Jane Ferrell, who travelled from Fife, said: 'It's Palestine Action one day, what's it going to be in the end? 'Trade unionism, the Labour Party activists, who knows?' Former MP Tommy Sheppard spoke to the crowd outside Queen Elizabeth house, saying: 'Today in the Middle East a genocide is being prosecuted in real time and we are watching it on television play by play.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Thousands march through Edinburgh as part of pro-Palestine protests
Thousands march through Edinburgh as part of pro-Palestine protests

The Herald Scotland

time7 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Thousands march through Edinburgh as part of pro-Palestine protests

One veteran activist said the recent move to proscribe Palestine Action under anti-terror laws had not deterred people from showing their support to the wider movement. Thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators braved rain to march through Edinburgh on Saturday, as part of a national campaign. A large group gathered outside St Giles' Cathedral in the early afternoon before marching down the Royal Mile, chanting while waving flags and banners. The march stopped in front of the UK Government headquarters at Queen Elizabeth House, where speeches were given outside the building, before heading on to Bute House – the First Minister's official residence. Other demonstrations took place in Manchester, Bristol, Truro and London – calling for the ban on Palestine Action to be reversed. While there were dozens of arrests at the other events, Police Scotland said no arrests had been made in relation to the march in Edinburgh. Read More Mick Napier, founding member of the Scottish Palestinian Solidarity Campaign, said there was a large turnout in the Scottish capital because of outrage over Israel's plan for a 'humanitarian city' in Rafah. Speaking as the march set off down the Royal Mile, he told the PA news agency: 'It's large, it's bigger than we've had for a very long time and it's entirely due to the building of the Israeli concentration camp in Rafah. 'They've called it a humanitarian city but people are utterly horrified, cumulatively, by what's happened during 22 months of genocide.' He said the ban on Palestine Action was 'absurd' and police had been on a hair trigger, arresting people for placards and banners which contain the words Palestine and action. Mr Napier said the ban had not deterred people from supporting the wider pro-Palestinian movement, saying: 'I think people are enraged. 'I look back to previous campaigns against the war in Vietnam, when that issue became fused with the issue of free speech it rose to a higher level.' Earlier this week, three women were arrested under the Terrorism Act after a van was driven into the external fence of the Leonardo UK factory in Edinburgh. The group Shut Down Leonardo claimed it was making components for F-35 fighter jets but the defence company says it does not directly supply equipment to Israel. Asked if such actions worked against the pro-Palestinian movement, Mr Napier said: 'I think in the past it may have put some people off, not any more.' Other activists at the march condemned the move to ban Palestine Action. Jane Ferrell, who travelled from Fife, said: 'It's Palestine Action one day, what's it going to be in the end? 'Trade unionism, the Labour Party activists, who knows?' Former MP Tommy Sheppard spoke to the crowd outside Queen Elizabeth house, saying: 'Today in the Middle East a genocide is being prosecuted in real time and we are watching it on television play by play.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store