logo
UK and France order more Storm Shadow missiles and step up military co-operation

UK and France order more Storm Shadow missiles and step up military co-operation

Storm Shadow, or as the French call it SCALP, is a long-range missile which has been supplied by both the British and French to Ukraine, allowing Kyiv to strike targets deep inside Russian territory.
The two countries have discussed co-operation on a replacement for years but, as French president Emmanuel Macron visits the UK, the nations will commit on Thursday towards the next phase of the project for Storm Shadow's successor.
The joint development will help to sustain more than 1,300 jobs in the UK, according to the Government.
On the third day of Mr Macron's UK state visit, he and Sir Keir Starmer will also agree to deepen nuclear ties.
Britain and France, the only two nuclear powers in Europe, will state in a declaration that their nuclear deterrents – while independent – can be co-ordinated, with the aim of deterring threats like Russia from attacking Europe.
The declaration comes at a time when Donald Trump's US administration is calling on European Nato powers to take on a larger role in the alliance.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: 'From war in Europe, to new nuclear risks and daily cyber-attacks – the threats we face are multiplying.
'As close partners and Nato allies, the UK and France have a deep history of defence collaboration and today's agreements take our partnership to the next level.
'We stand ready to use our shared might to advance our joint capabilities – equipping us for the decades to come while supporting thousands of UK jobs and keeping our people safe.'
Defence Secretary John Healey said: 'The UK and France are stepping up together to meet today's threats and tomorrow's challenges. We are committed to driving defence as an engine for growth, delivering better fighting capabilities faster, and ensuring our armed forces can operate side by side – from the High North to the Black Sea.
'This partnership strengthens our leadership in Europe, ensures continued support for Ukraine, and sends a clear signal to our adversaries that we stand stronger, together.'
Building on the 2010 Lancaster House treaties between France and the UK, the two countries will also bolster a shared military venture, known as the Combined Joint Force.
They also plan to forge closer military industrial ties, including in AI and direct energy weapons, as part of a programme dubbed the 'Entente Industrielle' by the UK Government.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mhairi Black: UK is following a familiar script over Gaza
Mhairi Black: UK is following a familiar script over Gaza

The National

time23 minutes ago

  • The National

Mhairi Black: UK is following a familiar script over Gaza

On Thursday, at least 15 Palestinians – of which eight were children – were killed in an Israeli strike while queuing for nutritional supplements in front of a clinic in central Gaza. For more than 20 months, Israel has decimated Gaza with unconditional and unrestrained bombardment, and has created a man-made famine. Israeli strikes have continually targeted schools, hospitals and aid centres – all of which constitute war crimes. Yet, if you watched the UK news over the last two weeks, you might think the biggest horror facing the world right now was two bands performing at Glastonbury. READ MORE: TRNSMT main stage act calls out politicians' attempts to cancel Kneecap A report from Al Jazeera said there are satellite images showing Israeli plans to create a concentration camp in southern Gaza. The images show large tracts of land being cleared of buildings in preparation for the forced transfer of Palestinians. We know to expect this since Israel's defence minister has said it is its intention to forcibly move the entire population of Gaza – more than two million people – out of their homes. Given the atrocities inflicted upon Jewish people during the Second World War, you would expect there to be a natural degree of horror at the thought of building new concentration camps, and forcibly seeking to move or destroy an entire group of people. Of course, there is a deep history and link between the experiences and historic persecution of Jews and the creation of the state of Israel. However, it is crucial to remember that Israel is exactly that – a state. It is not a religion. Yet, our leaders in Britain continually capitulate to the idea that to criticise the actions of the Israeli government in any way is antisemitic. For example, the BBC claims to be an impartial source of news and a beacon of free speech, yet was more than happy to de-platform the unapologetically pro-Palestine band Kneecap on the basis that they are pro-Palestine. The BBC also apologised for broadcasting punk rap duo Bob Vylan's performance after the singer's 'death to the IDF' chants. You may find this distasteful or even violent but it is not antisemitic. The IDF is a military organisation, not a religion. It is a war machine used by Israel to commit war crimes. Calling for an end to a military organisation that consistently murders innocent civilians fleeing violence perpetrated against them by that very military organisation should not be controversial. The very fact that Keir Starmer, Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage are all more outraged about bands playing Glastonbury than they are at the genocide of the people of Gaza is as barbaric as it is illogical. READ MORE: Protests against Palestine Action ban set to take place this weekend However, when you consider the history of Britain's actions in the world, maybe it is logical? Its history is littered with examples of invading foreign countries to force our will and propaganda onto them, while extracting and profiteering from their wealth and resources at their expense. Any domestic resistance to this exploitation has always been immediately labelled as terrorism. Even if we only consider events from living memory, there were the mass arrests, torture and murders of Mau Mau leaders in Kenya in the 1950s. Up until 1960, in Malaya (now Malaysia), British forces herded hundreds of thousands of people into fortified camps. They heavily bombed rural areas, tortured and murdered innocent civilians for no reason other than to preserve the colonial profits Britain enjoyed from Malaya's rubber and tin. Cocoa and oil were extracted from Nigeria through exploitation. In South Africa, black labour was responsible for British diamond profits under apartheid. In Canada and Australia, indigenous kids were forcibly removed from their families to learn how to live 'sophisticatedly'. The UK's military interventions in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan just so happened to coincide with our oil and gas interests. Through the actions in both Ireland and India, we know that Britain is no stranger to creating a man-made famine. Britain has always been the portrait of privilege built by the pain of others. Modern-day Britain refuses to acknowledge or learn from the racist and imperialist mistakes of the past, mainly because those in power do not view them as mistakes. Our history is soaked with elitism, and the blood and tears of foreign generations whose toil sustained that elitism. The UK still thinks of itself as an imperial world power, able to divvy up land and resources to whoever it pleases, when the reality is that the world has moved on. Today – July 12 – Northern Ireland will see multiple Orange marches similar to the ones held in the west of Scotland last week. READ MORE: How TRNSMT's gender balance is shaping up in 2025 – see the graphs It is difficult to take Starmer and John Swinney seriously when they call for bands like Kneecap and Bob Vylan to be cancelled for an alleged, perceived religious intolerance when they criticise Israel when, simultaneously, local councils are granting marching licences for an organisation whose followers routinely sing chants about being 'up to their knees in Fenian blood', and have built a bonfire with a mock migrant boat filled with brown faces at the very top waiting to be set alight. The hypocrisy and double standards are bewildering. Maybe it is time to stop looking for logic and instead look for – and reward – honesty and bravery.

Pubs in Scotland continue to struggle despite heatwave boost for businesses
Pubs in Scotland continue to struggle despite heatwave boost for businesses

Daily Record

timean hour ago

  • Daily Record

Pubs in Scotland continue to struggle despite heatwave boost for businesses

EXCLUSIVE: Hospitality chiefs have called on the SNP Government to reform the business rates system which puts bars north of the Border at a "competitive disadvantage" to those in England. Pubs across Scotland are continuing to struggle due to rising costs despite enjoying a bumper weekend as a heatwave grips the country. Hospitality chiefs have today called on the SNP Government to reform the business rates system which puts bars north of the Border at a "competitive disadvantage" compared to those in England. ‌ UKHospitality Scotland, which represents members of the licensed trade, said the industry was being squeezed by sky-high energy bills and the impact of employer National Insurance contributions (NICs) being hiked by the UK Government. ‌ The trade body warned pubs and bars were now shedding jobs as a result of the NIC hike and is demanding a rethink ahead of the autumn Budget. Pubs are currently closing across Britain at a rate of one a day. The Record previously revealed how 56 bars closed for good in Scotland last year, compared to 42 that shut down in 2023. Around 1,000 pubs have closed north of the border over the last 20 years, with the total dropping from the more than 5,000 operating in 2004. In a letter to Keir Starmer, the trade body warned the 2024 Budget had directly contributed to a reversal in hospitality's ability to create jobs. Between October 2024 and May 2025, the sector lost 69,000 jobs across the UK. In the same period the previous year, hospitality created an additional 18,000 jobs. Leon Thompson, Executive Director of UKHospitality Scotland, said: "The damaging impact of increasing employer National Insurance contributions (NICs) is being felt by businesses and teams across Scotland, with thousands of Scottish hospitality jobs undoubtedly lost since the Budget. "While the damage caused by employer NICs was a decision made in Westminster, we still need Holyrood to step up and back our businesses with vital support. ‌ "The Scottish Government needs to speed up in delivering its promise to reform the broken business rates system, before it's too late and Scottish businesses are put at a further competitive disadvantage to those in England. "It's also critical that the Scottish Government maintains and extends business rates relief for the sector at the Scottish Budget later this year - this is the lifeline our venues need." Kate Nicholls, chair of UKHospitality, said: "In the years following the financial crisis we created one in five net new jobs and today employ 3.5 million people. The Government needs sectors like hospitality to create jobs and meet their ambition to get more people back into work. ‌ "We have a proven track record of being able to deliver those jobs in every part of the country and for people from all backgrounds. "The NICs change was socially regressive and had a disproportionate effect on entry level jobs." Shona Robison, the Finance Secretary, said: "Businesses are being hit by the impact of the UK Government's decision to raise employers' National Insurance contributions and rising energy costs continue to bite hard. "While many levers to grow Scotland's economy lie with the UK Government, we are providing a package of non-domestic rates reliefs worth an estimated £733 million in 2025-26, including 40% relief – capped at £110,000 per business – for hospitality premises liable for the Basic Property Rate. "Around half of properties in the retail, hospitality and leisure sectors also continue to be eligible for 100% Small Business Bonus Scheme relief – the most generous small business rates relief in the UK.'

Ukraine war briefing: US resumes military supplies to Ukraine, Zelenskyy announces
Ukraine war briefing: US resumes military supplies to Ukraine, Zelenskyy announces

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Ukraine war briefing: US resumes military supplies to Ukraine, Zelenskyy announces

The US has resumed military supplies to Ukraine and senior officials in Kyiv will work on military cooperation next week with Washington's special envoy, Keith Kellogg, the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said on Friday. He restated that Ukraine had received high-level signals from Washington and its other western allies that arms supplies, paused for a time last week, had now resumed. 'We are currently working with partners on new supplies, increased weapons production in Ukraine and better support for our army,' he said. 'Next week, we will continue working with the US side on a military level … We are also preparing new European defence packages.' Kellogg, interviewed by the Ukrainian media outlet while attending a conference about Ukraine in Rome, said: 'We'll be in Kyiv Monday. We'll be there all week.' Donald Trump confirmed he had struck a deal with Nato leaders to supply weapons to Ukraine, Andrew Roth writes. During an interview with NBC News, the US president said: 'So what we're doing is the weapons that are going out are going to Nato, and then Nato is going to be giving those weapons [to Ukraine], and Nato is paying for those weapons.' He added: 'I'm disappointed in Russia, but we'll see what happens over the next couple of weeks.' The EU's top diplomat has said the 27-nation bloc was pondering a new raft of sanctions against Moscow. 'Russia has increased its attacks against civilians to really cause as much pain … and that's unacceptable,' the EU foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, said. Brussels was considering an 18th round of sanctions against Moscow and 'we are also still in negotiations to put the oil price cap on, that would deprive Russia from the means to fund this war', she told AFP. Kallas said she was assured by Laos's top diplomat that Vientiane had 'no intention or willingness' to send military help to Russia, following claims that Moscow was planning to involve military personnel from Laos to bolster its efforts in Ukraine. 'I also expressed that it has consequences for European aid to Laos if something like this is happening,' Kallas said. 'If you [Laos] contribute to that existential threat, we can't have good cooperation,' she warned. Ukrainian drone and shelling attacks killed three people in Russia on Friday. Russian air defence systems intercepted 155 Ukrainian drones overnight, Moscow said. There was one dead in Russia's Lipetsk region and another was killed in the western Tula region from the drone attacks, local officials said. Ukrainian shelling later killed another civilian in the border region of Belgorod, the governor announced. The Russian defence ministry said out of the 155 downed Ukrainian drones, 11 were bound for Moscow. Ukraine said its drones struck a Russian fighter aircraft plant in the Moscow region and a missile production facility in the Tula region, causing explosions and fires at both. Ukraine's military said on Telegram the aviation facility in the town of Lukhovitsy, about 135km (84 miles) south-east of Moscow, produced MiG fighters. The other site was the Instrument Design Bureau, which specialised in producing anti-aircraft missiles and missile-gun systems, it said. 'Defence forces continue to take all steps to undermine the military and economic potential of the Russian occupiers,' the military said. Russian bombardments on eastern Ukraine overnight on Friday forced the evacuation of a maternity centre in Kharkiv and wounded nine people. Zelenskyy said a medical facility was hit in the attack on the country's second-largest city. 'Among the wounded are women in a maternity hospital – mothers with newborns, women recovering from surgery,' he wrote on social media. 'Fortunately, no children were injured.' He added that several other regions were attacked overnight. Nato will need more long-range missiles in its arsenal to deter Russia from attacking Europe because Moscow is expected to increase production of long-range weapons, a US army general told Reuters. 'The Russian army is bigger today than it was when they started the war in Ukraine,' Maj Gen John Rafferty said at a US military base in Wiesbaden, Germany. 'And we know that they're going to continue to invest in long-range rockets and missiles and sophisticated air defences. So more alliance capability is really, really important.' The Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Friday that wartime censorship in Russia is justified amid the conflict with Ukraine and the closure of opposition-minded media. Speaking to Russian magazine Expert, Peskov said that many media outlets have been closed, while some reporters have left the country in the past three years. 'But don't forget the situation we are in. Now is the time of military censorship, unprecedented for our country. After all, the war is going on in the information space too,' Peskov told the magazine. Russian authorities also blocked X, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube. 'It would be wrong to turn a blind eye to the media that are deliberately engaged in discrediting Russia,' he said.

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