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BRITAIN would get blitzed with long-range drones, ballistic and cruise missiles if it had to fight a war this year.

A landmark Strategic Defence Review set out five “methods of attack” the UK should expect if it was forced into state-on-state conflict.

Illustration of the HMS Dreadnaught ballistic missile submarine at sea.
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An illustration of the submarine HMS DreadnoughtCredit: BAe Systems
Aerial view of Portsmouth harbor, England, featuring the Spinnaker Tower and Gosport's Haslar Marina.
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Major UK bases targeted for attack would include the Navy’s three main ports at Portsmouth, above, Plymouth and ClydeCredit: Alamy
HMNB Clyde, Faslane, home of the UK's nuclear submarines.
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The Naval Base Clyde, Faslane, Scotland, would be another targetCredit: Getty
Illustration of UK under threat from drones and missiles, showing potential military and non-military targets and UK defenses.
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These five methods are:

  • Attacks on the armed forces in the UK and on overseas bases
  • Air and missile attacks from long range drones, cruise and ballistic missiles targeting military infrastructure and vital national infrastructure
  • Increased cyber attacks
  • Attempts to disrupt the UK economy - especially the industry that supports the armed forces - through cyber attacks, intercepting shipping trade and attacks on space-based infrastructure
  • Efforts to manipulate information and undermine social cohesion and political will

Bases, ports and airfields in Britain and around the world be the first to get bombarded.

And everything from oil rigs and subsea cables to satellites and merchant ships would also face cyber attacks and sabotage.

Read more

The dossier warned: “Based on the current way of war, if the UK were to fight a state-on-state war as part of Nato in 2025, it could expect to be subject to some or all of the following methods of attack:

“Attacks on the armed forces in the UK and overseas bases."

Major bases would include the Navy’s three main ports at Portsmouth, Plymouth and Clyde as well as outposts around the world, such as the Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean and RAF Akoritiri in Cyprus.

The report also warned of: “Air and missile attack from long-rage drones, cruise and ballistic missiles, targeting military infrastructure and critical national infrastructure in the UK.”

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and two others in hard hats and safety vests.
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Keir Starmer warned that 'a step change in the threats we face demands a step-change in British defence to meet them'Credit: PA
A Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launching from a site in Plesetsk, Russia.
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The test firing of an ICBM belonging to Russia's nuclear deterrence forcesCredit: Alamy
Drone in flight.
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A drone is seen during a Russian aerial strike in KyivCredit: Reuters
Hacker using laptop to attack software.
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Everything from oil rigs and subsea cables to satellites and merchant ships would also face cyber attacksCredit: Getty

The UK has no land based missile defence systems and relies on its six Royal Navy destroyers to intercept ballistic or hypersonic missile which Russia has used to blitz Ukraine.


Strategic Defence Review: Five Key Defence Pledges

  • Up to 12 new nuclear-powered submarines to be built under the Aukust pact
  • £15bn investment in the UK's nuclear warhead programme to maintain and modernise the deterrent
  • New Cyber Command to be established, with £1 billion invested in digital warfare capabilities
  • Up to 7,000 UK-built long-range weapons to be purchased, supporting 800 defence jobs
  • More than £1.5bn in extra funding to repair and renew armed forces housing

But the government has pledged to invest £1bn in a new Iron Dome-style defence system to “protect the homeland”.

Other attacks in an all out war would include “increased sabotage and cyber-attacks affecting on and offshore critical national infrastructure.”

The report warns Britain is already “under daily attack” in the so-called grey zone, which includes cyber hacks and sabotage “beneath the threshold of war”.

It also warned the citizens to expect “attempts to disrupt the UK economy, especially the industry that supports the armed forces, including through cyber attack, the interdiction of maritime trade, and attacks on space-based critical national infrastructure”.

Finally, it warned the UK would face a massive propaganda blitz designed “to manipulate information and undermine social cohesion and political will.”

The review sets out plans to grow the Army, renew Britain’s nukes and recruit up to 250,000 cadets to get the country ready for “whole of society approach” to defence and resilience.

Read More on The Sun

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer warned that, “a step change in the threats we face demands a step-change in British defence to meet them”.

He added: “We need to see the biggest shift in mindset in my lifetime to put security and defence front and centre – to make it the fundamental organising principle of government.”

Russian Air Force MiG-31K jet carrying a missile.
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A Russian Air Force jet carries a high-precision hypersonic aero-ballistic missileCredit: AP
Silhouette of a drone flying in a sunset sky.
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Air and missile attack from long-rage drones are also a riskCredit: Getty
Royal Navy ship at HMS Drake maintenance depot.
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Devonport Royal Navy maintenance depot at HMS Drake, PlymouthCredit: Alamy
HMS Vigilant submarine at HM Naval Base Clyde.
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HMS Vanguard, Britain's first Trident submarine, enters its base on the River Clyde, ScotlandCredit: PA

Vital War Chest

AFTER years of Whitehall deciding that defending the nation didn’t matter, the Government is right to now increase spending as part of today’s Strategic Defence Review.

Given massive global uncertainty, the UK should be on a war footing.

Yet there are concerns that the review doesn’t go far enough.

There is still doubt over whether or when Labour will spend three per cent of GDP on defence.

Planned submarines and weapons factories are also still decades away.

Then there’s Britain’s appalling record on procurement which has wasted
billions on dud kit.

There is still a great deal more for this Government to do.

Vladimir Putin at a meeting announcing a successful missile test.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia, 2024Credit: EPA
Plymouth waterfront with many boats moored and apartment buildings in the background.
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Bases, ports and airfields in Britain and around the world be the first to get bombardedCredit: Neil Hope
A Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launching from a site in Plesetsk, Russia.
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A Yars intercontinental ballistic missile is test-fired as part of Russia’s nuclear drillsCredit: Alamy

NO11 CONFLICT

By Jerome Starkey, Defence Editor

THE Government’s Strategic Defence Review spells out three things fairly clearly: 

The scale and nature of the threats, how best to respond and the need to do it quickly. 

But one phrase keeps cropping up that will be music to Putin’s ears: “When funding allows.” 

Wars don’t start “when funding allows”, but when deterrence fails. 

It’s good news that Labour wants to boost the Armed Forces. 

But the “small uplift in Army regulars”, the 20 per cent boost to reserves, the urgent digitisation of defence acquisition, will all happen only “when funding allows”. There is a hot war raging in Europe while America pivots away. 

But the MoD has lost its battle with Rachel Reeves. The review’s authors were clear that their plan relies on three per cent of GDP spent on defence by 2034 — but they think it should happen faster. 

For the review to be credible, it has to be properly funded. 

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