- Three UK-designed long-range strike systems have been flight
tested just months
after competition launch, as British defence
industry deliver battlefield capability at record
speed
- Project Brakestop aims to deliver a low-cost weapon
capable of striking targets more than 500km away with a 225kg
warhead.
- British defence firms, including major primes and innovative
SMEs, have taken a concept from competition to live testing in
less than a year.
A major UK project to
develop low-cost advanced long-range strike weapons for
Ukrainian has reached a significant milestone, with three
British-designed systems successfully flight tested just months
after the competition was launched.
Project Brakestop, launched by the Ministry of
Defence's Taskforce Kindred in November 2024, challenged UK
industry to develop a low-cost, ground-launched strike weapon
capable of hitting targets more than 500km away while carrying a
powerful 225kg warhead.
The programme was designed to harness the
speed, innovation and expertise of British
industry to deliver a new capability at a pace rarely seen in
defence. Follow on contracts worth around £15
million each have now been awarded to three
companies.
Ambitious requirements were set for
competitors for the new system, including:
- A range of at least 500km
- Capable of carrying a warhead weighing at
least 225kg
- A speed of more than 600km/h
- Target unit cost of around £400,000 excluding the
warhead
- Ability to produce at least 20 weapons a month
within months of a production order.
27 bids from industry were received when the
competition opened, and MOD experts carried out
detailed technical assessments and held competitive
Dragon's Den style pitches in February 2025. Six
British companies were awarded contracts worth around £5 million
each to design and build prototype weapons for
testing in just seven months.
Minister for the Armed Forces MP
said:
The UK stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine, and we will
continue to provide the support it needs to defend itself against
Russian aggression.
Project Brakestop shows what happens when we combine
that commitment with the talent and ingenuity of British
industry. In less than a year, UK companies have taken an
ambitious concept from the drawing board to flight testing,
delivering a new generation of capability at remarkable
speed.
This is a clear demonstration that Britain has the industrial
strength, innovation and determination to meet the challenges of
modern warfare and support our allies.
By December 2025, only three suppliers remained,
who progressed to flight testing:
- MBDA UK, a long-standing strategic partner of the UK who
produce systems including Storm Shadow.
- MGI Engineering, a UK SME with over 25 years of success
in Formula 1 Brakestop is MGI's
first defence contract.
- Rotron Aerospace, a UK SME with
a strong history of working with the
MOD including the Dismounted Soldier Close Combat
and Defence (DSCDP) programme.
Each of their systems were tested at the MOD Hebrides Range, a
specialist trials site managed by QinetiQ through the Long-Term
Partnering Agreement.
The announcement comes following a week of UK commitments to
Ukraine where the Prime Minister announced at G7, a further £210
million of UK Export Finance support to power Ukraine's nuclear
power plants, and 70 new sanctions targeting Russia's decrepit
shadow fleet, military procurement supply chains and illicit
finance networks.
Whilst on Thursday, The Defence Secretary announced that the UK
will provide 150,000 Ukrainian-produced drones and over 350 air
defence missiles and radars funded from Extraordinary Revenue
Acceleration (ERA) loan.
Project Brakestop demonstrates the ability of UK
industry to rapidly develop and test complex long-range strike
systems.
The 225kg warhead that the systems must be
capable of carrying has already been successfully
developed and tested by another UK company, proving
the destructive power of the system.
The next phase of Project Brakestop is now underway,
with Phase 2 contracts worth around £15 million awarded
to multiple suppliers to further develop and produce 15
improved effectors each, alongside launchers and support
vehicles.
Further testing will take place in the UK in the coming months,
followed by additional trials overseas, including in
Ukraine.
Project Brakestop has been delivered by a
combined MOD team including the National
Armaments (Material and Dstl), 744 Naval Air
Squadron, Air and Space Warfare Centre Air
Wing, 11 Explosive Ordnance Disposal Regiment and Taskforce
Kindred, alongside QinetiQ.