
UK to build attack subs as part of major defence review
Prime Minister Keir Starmer told BBC radio that "there is greater instability on defence and security than there has been for many, many years, and greater threats."
His Labour government will later publish its Strategic Defence Review, a document that will assess threats facing the UK and make recommendations.
The review warns that Britain is entering "a new era of threat" as drones and artificial intelligence transform modern warfare, The Guardian newspaper reported over the weekend.
"I wanted a review that told me the challenges we're actually facing and likely to face for the foreseeable future," Starmer told the BBC Monday.
"And the principles are clear: war-fighting readiness, integrating our forces... and a NATO first approach," he added.
The UK has been racing to rearm in the face of the threat from Russia and fears that US President Donald Trump will no longer help protect Europe.
Starmer said it would serve as "a blueprint for strength and security for decades to come".
'Daily attacks'
His government pledged in February to lift defence spending to 2.5 percent of GDP by 2027 in the "largest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War".
And despite budget constraints, it aims for spending to rise to three percent in the next parliamentary term, due in 2029.
The Labour government has said it will cut UK overseas aid to help fund the spending.
Based on the recommendations of the review, which is led by former NATO secretary general George Robertson, the government said Sunday that it would boost stockpiles and weapons production capacity, which could be scaled up if needed.
This includes £1.5 billion ($2 billion) for building "at least six munitions and energetics factories", procuring 7,000 domestically built long-range weapons, and spending £6 billion on munitions over the current parliamentary term.
The government also said late Sunday that it would build up to 12 new attack submarines as part of its AUKUS military alliance with Australia and the United States, and invest £15 billion in its nuclear warhead programme.
The defence ministry last week pledged £1 billion for the creation of a "cyber command" to help on the battlefield.
"We're in a world that is changing now... and it is a world of growing threats," Defence Secretary John Healey told the BBC in an interview Sunday.
"It's growing Russian aggression. It's those daily cyberattacks, it's new nuclear risks, and it's increasing tension in other parts of the world as well," he said.
'Sophisticated challenge'
The last such defence review was commissioned in 2021 by the previous Conservative government, and was revised in 2023 after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
While launching the new review, Robertson said it would tackle threats from Russia, China, Iran and North Korea, calling them a "deadly quartet".
But in an op-ed in The Sun newspaper, Starmer did not mention China, while warning that "The Kremlin is working hand in hand with its cronies in Iran and North Korea."
The softer rhetoric on China is in line with the Labour government's efforts to thaw relations with Beijing, which reached new lows under former prime minister Rishi Sunak's Conservative government.
The review describes Russia as an "immediate and pressing" threat, but calls China a "sophisticated and persistent challenge", according to The Guardian.
At a time when Washington is demanding that its NATO allies bolster their own defences, Britain is considering strengthening its deterrent by buying nuclear-missile capable aircrafts from the United States, The Sunday Times reported.
Without confirming or denying, Healey said Sunday that "strong deterrence is absolutely essential in order to keep Britain and the British people safe".
Hashtags

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


France 24
36 minutes ago
- France 24
'Artificial diplomacy': Zelensky, Putin trade accusations of bringing false pretexts to peace talks
On Monday, delegations from Ukraine and Russia met for a second round of talks in Istanbul aimed at breaking the deadlock on ending the war. Both sides exchanged memorandums setting out their conditions for a ceasefire. The meeting lasted just over an hour and no progress was made toward ending hostilities. Instead, the two sides agreed only to swap thousands of their dead and seriously wounded troops, and a new prisoner exchange. 14:50 Speaking at a media briefing in Kyiv, Zelensky said the talks in Istanbul had differed little from the first meeting on May 16, and accused Russia of staging 'a political performance' and deploying 'artificial diplomacy' in a bid to stall for time, delay sanctions and convince the United States that Russia is engaged in dialogue. 'The same ultimatums they voiced back then – now they just put them on paper ... Honestly, this document looks like spam. It's spam meant to flood us and create the impression that they're doing something,' Zelensky said in his first reaction to the Russian document. The Ukrainian leader said that he sees little value in continuing talks at the current level of delegations and instead called for direct talks with Putin, possibly also including US President Donald Trump. The US has led a recent diplomatic push to stop the full-scale invasion, which began on February 24, 2022. 'We are proposing … a ceasefire before a leaders' summit,' with the US acting as a mediator, Zelensky said. He said Ukraine is ready to meet at any time from next Monday at a venue such as Istanbul, the Vatican or Switzerland. Ceasefire would 'reward' Ukraine Putin, meanwhile, on Wednesday told a government meeting that Kyiv was behind the 'terrorist' attacks on bridges in Russia's border regions over the weekend, including one that caused a train to derail, killing seven people. That attack – which Ukraine has not claimed responsibility for – was 'directed at thwarting the negotiation process', he said. Instead of agreeing to the 30-day truce Ukraine has been pushing for, he said Russia had proposed a short two-three day ceasefire to allow both sides to collect bodies of dead soldiers from the battlefield, but that Ukraine had rejected that idea. A longer ceasefire, he said, would only be used by Ukraine to rearm. 'Why reward them by giving them a break from the combat, which will be used to pump the regime with Western arms to continue their forced mobilisation and to prepare different terrorist acts?,' Putin said.


Euronews
an hour ago
- Euronews
Saudi Arabia tackles sweltering heat as Hajj pilgrimage starts
Over a million Muslims have begun the once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage, Hajj, on Wednesday in Saudi Arabia's Mecca, as additional measures are taken to contend with this year's sweltering heat, expected to exceed 40 degrees Celsius. Over the span of five days, Muslim pilgrims - who can afford it and are physically fit - will immerse themselves in religious rituals that originated more than 1,400 years ago. After entering Mecca, pilgrims will start their journey by circling the Kaaba, a black cube-shaped structure in the centre of the Great Mosque and Islam's holiest site, seven times in a anti-clockwise direction to express a unified devotion to one God. Pilgrims will then travel to other sacred sites in Mecca, where they will perform additional rituals and acts of worship. Before leaving the holy city, Muslims will circle the Kaaba another seven times, signifying a spiritual farewell to the sacred sanctuary. A successful completion of the Hajj, a spiritual experience of a lifetime, is a chance to seek God's forgiveness and can wipe the slate clean of past sins. While it's only required to do the pilgrimage once in a lifetime, some Muslims perform the Hajj multiple times. The Hajj occurs once a year during the 12th and last month of the Islamic calendar, called the lunar month of Dhul-Hijja. This year, the annual pilgrimage falls at the start of summer, making the heat an additional challenge to pilgrims completing the journey. After last year's suffocating temperatures, reaching up to 47 degrees Celsius, resulted in more than 1,300 deaths, Saudi authorities are taking additional measures to ensure the safety of visitors. This year, Riyadh has spent billions of dollars on crowd control and cooling systems. The world's largest and a one-of-a-kind cooling system installed in the Grand Mosque will keep pilgrims comfortable at temperatures ranging from 22-24 degrees Celsius, local media reported. Pilgrims are also being told to avoid going out during the day and uncovering their heads, unless necessary such as during rituals and are given an official safety kit offering advice on what to wear and bring and explaining how to recognise and treat heat exhaustion and dehydration symptoms. Representing one of the biggest policy changes in years, Riyadh has also introduced a ban on the participation of children younger than 12 years old in this year's Hajj. Children are exempt from doing the Hajj and are not required to fulfil other religious obligations, such as praying and fasting, until they reach puberty. Hajj is one of the Five Pillars of Islam, in addition to faith, prayer, almsgiving and fasting. Ukraine's security service (SBU) released new drone footage of Operation "Spiderweb", showing how exactly Kyiv struck 41 Russian heavy military bombers last Sunday. The footage released on Wednesday shows Ukraine's first-person-view drones striking four Russian airfields: Dyagilevo in the Riazan region, Ivanovo in the Ivanovo region, Belaya air base in the Irkutsk region, located in south-eastern Siberia over 4,000km east of the frontline, and Olenya air base in Russia's Murmansk region, some 2,000km away from Ukraine's border. Kyiv said these were the airfields where Russian strategic aviation "had been based". The damaged aircraft include A-50, Tu-95, Tu-22, Tu-160, as well as An-12 and Il-78. Moscow uses these heavy bombers for daily attacks on Ukrainian cities. The SBU also revealed that it used a modern UAV control technology during this operation. It combined autonomous artificial intelligence algorithms and manual operator interventions. Ukraine's security service says some of the UAVs lost signal and would switch to an artificial intelligence-assisted mission following a pre-planned route. The warhead then automatically detonated as it approached and made contact with a specific target. Earlier, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that 117 drones had been used in Operation Spiderweb, each with its own pilot. The General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces confirmed on Tuesday that Russia lost 41 military aircraft. Zelenskyy said it took Kyiv "one year, six months, and nine days from the start of planning to effective execution." Kyiv managed to smuggle FPV drones deep inside Russia and hide them inside trucks in mobile log cabins. The cabins' roofs were then opened remotely, and the drones proceeded to launch their attack on Russian military bombers. Social media footage widely shared by Russian media appears to show the drones rising from inside containers, while the panels lie discarded on the road. On Wednesday, Ukraine's president said Kyiv would not have launched its drone strike on Russian strategic bombers if Moscow had accepted Kyiv's calls for a ceasefire. Zelenskyy said Ukraine has repeatedly urged Russia to accept the US-backed 30-day ceasefire proposal, which could be the first step to putting an end to Russia's all-out war against Ukraine. However during the second round of talks on Monday, Moscow rejected the proposal once again. "If there had been a ceasefire, would the operation have taken place? No," Zelenskyy explained, adding that roughly half of the planes will be impossible to repair, while others will require significant time to be put back into service.


Euronews
an hour ago
- Euronews
Kyiv releases new drone footage and details of Operation ‘Spiderweb'
Ukraine's security service (SBU) released new drone footage of Operation "Spiderweb", showing how exactly Kyiv struck 41 Russian heavy military bombers last Sunday. The footage released on Wednesday shows Ukraine's first-person-view drones striking four Russian airfields: Dyagilevo in the Riazan region, Ivanovo in the Ivanovo region, Belaya air base in the Irkutsk region, located in south-eastern Siberia over 4,000km east of the frontline, and Olenya air base in Russia's Murmansk region, some 2,000km away from Ukraine's border. Kyiv said these were the airfields where Russian strategic aviation "had been based". The damaged aircraft include A-50, Tu-95, Tu-22, Tu-160, as well as An-12 and Il-78. Moscow uses these heavy bombers for daily attacks on Ukrainian cities. The SBU also revealed that it used a modern UAV control technology during this operation. It combined autonomous artificial intelligence algorithms and manual operator interventions. Ukraine's security service says some of the UAVs lost signal and would switch to an artificial intelligence-assisted mission following a pre-planned route. The warhead then automatically detonated as it approached and made contact with a specific target. Earlier, Ukraine's president said that 117 drones had been used in Operation Spiderweb, each with its own pilot. The General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces confirmed on Tuesday that Russia lost 41 military aircraft. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said it took Kyiv "one year, six months, and nine days from the start of planning to effective execution." Kyiv managed to smuggle FPV drones deep inside Russia and hide them inside trucks in mobile log cabins. The cabins' roofs were then opened remotely, and the drones proceeded to launch their attack on Russian military bombers. Social media footage widely shared by Russian media appears to show the drones rising from inside containers, while the panels lie discarded on the road. On Wednesday, Ukraine's president said Kyiv would not have launched its drone strike on Russian strategic bombers if Moscow had accepted Kyiv's calls for a ceasefire. Zelenskyy said Ukraine has repeatedly urged Russia to accept the US-backed 30-day ceasefire proposal, which could be the first step to putting an end to Russia's all-out war against Ukraine. However during the second round of talks on Monday, Moscow rejected the proposal once again. "If there had been a ceasefire, would the operation have taken place? No," Zelenskyy said, adding that roughly half of the planes will be impossible to repair, while others will require significant time to be put back into service. Shock over the murder of a Tunisian hairdresser in a village near the French Riviera last weekend continues to reverberate throughout the Western European country, as authorities condemn the crime as fuelled by hatred. After the 46-year-old Hichem Miraoui was shot dead near his home in Puget-sur-Argens in southern France on Saturday, one of his neighbours has claimed responsibility for the attack, in which a man of Turkish background was also injured. In videos posted on Facebook shortly before his arrest, the suspect, identified as Christophe B, 53, used racist language and appeared to incite French citizens to conduct further acts of violence against Muslims. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on Tuesday that the murder was 'clearly a racist crime', 'probably also anti-Muslim' and 'perhaps also a terrorist crime'. The national anti-terrorism prosecutor's office (PNAT), which opened in 2019, launched a probe into the killing this week, the first time it has done so for a murder that is thought to have been inspired by far-right ideology. Since Miraoui's murder, Muslim communities across France have spoken of their sadness and fear. In a statement released on Tuesday, the Rhône Council of Mosques said the crime was indicative of the 'troubling and increasingly hostile climate toward citizens of Muslim faith in France'. Meanwhile, Hafiz Chems-Eddine, Rector of the Grand Mosque of Paris, called for 'urgent, national awareness of the dangers of xenophobic, racist, and Islamphobic rhetoric'. 'It is time to question the promoters of this hatred, who, in the political and media spheres, operate with impunity and lead to extremely serious incidents,' he said. Islamic leaders also made a connection between Miraoui's murder and the fatal stabbing of the 22-year-old Malian Aboubakar Cissé in a mosque in southern France on 25 April. In a video filmed while Cissé was dying, his French attacker criticised Islam.