· RAF and Deutsche Marine aircraft
to jointly conduct defensive patrols for Russian submarines,
working side by side from RAF Lossiemouth, defending NATO's
Eastern and Northern flanks.
· Defence Secretary and German counterpart Boris
Pistorius also launch new cyber partnership on visit to RAF
Lossiemouth to mark first anniversary of Trinity House
Agreement.
· German defence companies to spend
nearly a billion pounds in UK defence industry, boosting growth
and creating 600 high-skilled jobs.
The United Kingdom and Germany are ramping up their cyber and
military cooperation to strengthen European and NATO security -
with the two Armed Forces working closer than ever one year on
from the signing of the landmark Trinity
House Agreement on Defence.
During a joint visit to RAF Lossiemouth tomorrow (Thursday),
Defence Secretary and his German counterpart
Boris Pistorius will mark the first anniversary of the Agreement
by ramping up cooperation on joint cyber security.
The visit will highlight the growing cooperation between the UK
and Germany in the air and on the sea, with the two defence
ministers expected to join an operational flight on one of the
RAF's Poseidon P-8A maritime patrol aircraft. The cutting-edge
P-8A can detect, identify, track, and defend against hostile
ships and submarines.
The new fifth Trinity House Lighthouse project will allow the
UK's new Cyber and Specialist Operations Command (CSOC) and the
German Cyber and Information Domain Service to work more closely
than ever before – enabling them to share data, intelligence and
operational tools securely with each other and NATO allies. This
includes the development of a secure cloud network, a digital
system that allows the sharing of information in real time while
defending against cyber attacks.
The UK and Germany are also stepping up their commitment to NATO,
with closer collaboration to protect the alliance's logistics and
transport networks from cyber threats.
In the coming months, one of the Deutsche Marine's P-8As will
visit Lossiemouth for the first time ahead of future joint
activity side-by-side with the RAF in the North Atlantic to help
defend against Russian aggression.
Since the launch of the Trinity House Agreement last year, German
companies have committed to invest £800 million in the UK defence
industry over the next decade, creating 600 skilled jobs across
locations including London, Telford, Swindon, and Plymouth –
supporting the Government's Plan for Change and making defence an
engine for growth across the UK.
This includes a new Rheinmetall factory in Telford, which will
see the UK manufacture artillery gun barrels for the first time
in a decade, using British steel produced by Sheffield
Forgemasters and creating hundreds of jobs.
Three other German defence companies have announced plans to
invest in the UK defence industry:
· Helsing: New maritime glider
drone factory in Plymouth, backed by £350 million of investment
in Artificial Intelligence.
· ARX Robotics: £45 million of
investment, creating 90 high-skilled jobs at a new facility
producing uncrewed systems.
· Stark: Opening a major drone
manufacturing facility in Wiltshire, creating 100 jobs at their
first site outside Germany.
Defence Secretary, MP, said:
“A year on from the Trinity House Agreement, the UK
and Germany are working closer than ever to keep our
two countries and Europe safe.
“Together we're strengthening NATO, boosting our cyber defences,
and ensuring our Armed Forces can operate side by side with ease
– from patrolling the skies over Scotland to hunting Russian subs
in the North Atlantic.
“This partnership is a cornerstone of European security,
demonstrating unity and strength to our adversaries, and keeping
us secure at home and strong abroad.”
German crews have already twice joined UK P-8A Poseidon maritime
patrol aircraft operating from RAF Lossiemouth as part of NATO's
Baltic Sentry missions, while the Defence Secretary will reaffirm
plans for a joint purchase of advanced Sting Ray torpedoes,
strengthening NATO's underwater defence capabilities.
Signed in October 2024, the Trinity House Agreement set out a
vision for a deeper and more integrated UK–German defence
partnership.
The defence industries of both countries are already working more
closely, turbocharging European defence manufacturing.
Development of a new Deep Precision Strike weapon with a range of
over 2,000 kilometres is rapidly progressing, and new agreements
will boost bridge-building equipment to support land
operations.