James Sunderland cautiously welcomes donation of Storm Shadow missiles to Ukraine

Following the Defence Secretary’s statement on Russia’s attacks on civilians and critical national infrastructure in Ukraine, James Sunderland welcomes reassurances that the long-range Storm Shadow missiles being donated by the UK will only be used on targets inside Ukraine and asks if this deployment might pre-empt other medium and long-range weapons being deployed from other NATO nations.

James Sunderland (Bracknell) (Con)

Storm Shadow is a potent weapon, so I cautiously welcome the announcement today on the basis of what the Secretary of State has reported to the House. I am also reassured by the undertaking that Storm Shadow will be used only to prosecute targets inside Ukraine, because NATO’s aim has to be to eject Russia from Ukraine, not to wage war against Russia. My point is this: in the same way that Challenger 2 pre-empted the deployment of Abrams and Leopard 2, can we assume in this case that the deployment of Storm Shadow might pre-empt other medium and long-range weapons being deployed from other NATO nations? Also, can he give an answer specifically on what it will take for F-16s to be deployed?

The Secretary of State for Defence (Mr Ben Wallace)

There are other nations with similar but not exactly the same types of weapons system, and I have seen already that our next bidding round for the international fund will include deep-strike and long-range fires that we will procure through this international fund, which includes Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands and so on. There is more to come from both the market and from gifting, depending on what that is. What I would say is that the assessment is that the Storm Shadow we are so far planning to gift—for operational reasons, I will not say the exact number—is currently enough to satisfy Ukrainian demand for that capability. We will keep that under review to ensure we can make the difference.

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