🚨 Britain is set to slash its order of early-warning radar jets, redrawing a controversial contract awarded without competition in bid to save money
MoD has drawn up plans to revise order for E-7 Wedgetail jets from five to three, I'm told
US figures unhappy with move
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Officials reopened discussions with Boeing about the £2.1bn programme over the summer with a view to achieving better value for money.
Wedgetail is designed to rapidly identify airborne & maritime threats, and guide combat jets to targets in bombing raids.
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Critics of programme argue cheaper options to provide a similar capability may be on horizon soon
MoD is thought to believe reducing (but not scrapping) Wedgetail order could save hundreds of millions of pounds over 10 years, while maintaining several hundred skilled jobs
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US figures unhappy, after Boeing invested in initiatives to boost UK industry
Source: "The Americans are pretty angry about it. It's bad for Boeing &... the UK has welched on its pre-agreed commitments when the US have been pretty accommodating in trying to help them plug a gap"
Initial contract was controversial - sparking consternation after it was signed off by Gavin Williamson without being put to competitive tender.
European defence giants Airbus & Saab were understood to have been in talks about combining capabilities to challenge Boeing for deal.
Tobias Ellwood, Tory chairman of the Commons defence committee, has urged the MoD to stick to initial Wedgetail order, arguing the fleet will be crucial to UK fulfilling its commitment to Nato.
He predicted that cutting order would not achieve the scale of savings anticipated
First RAF Wedgetail expected to be in service in 2023 and UK jets will contribute to Nato’s awacs aircraft fleet.
Compromise could yet be struck in which UK only reduces order by one, taking total to four jets, I understand.
MoD spokesman said: “We regularly discuss equipment programmes with our partners, particularly when it comes to making savings & cutting costs, where appropriate.”
Boeing spox: “Wedgetail is the world’s most advanced, capable and reliable command-and-control aircraft... It will provide the RAF with a combat-proven capability that is low risk and unmatched. We don’t comment on commercial matters.”
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🚨 Give me until end of 2023 before you judge me, Liz Truss tells public
Asked for deadline by which voters can judge her programme, PM tells @TimesRadio her priorities are helping Britons through this winter and getting economy moving. ‘I’d expect that to happen during 2023.’
PM distances herself from Chx’s hint of more to come re tax cuts
Does she agree with Andrew Griffith that she’d like to cut inheritance tax?
‘We have been clear about our tax plans - keeping corp tax low & reversing the NI increase… We have no more plans on that front.’
Truss insists no cuts to frontline services
Do you stand by your July vow ‘I’m not planning public spending reductions’?
PM: ‘I do… There will be some… projects the govt is doing that we don’t think should go ahead. What I’m not talking about is reducing frontline services.’
Exc: Ministers have raised concerns about Ireland’s open-door policy to Ukrainian refugees, arguing it creates UK security risk.
Dublin joined EU-wide scheme welcoming refugees for 3 years, via which Ukrainians can travel to UK (Common Travel Area) without biometric checks
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Govt source: “Ireland has basically opened the door to everyone in Ukraine, which creates a problem due to the CTA.
“We've seen before with migrants from Albania that they hv come through Dublin, into Belfast & across to the mainland to L'pool. That's created a drug cartel route
Source adds: “It's the Home Office that will get the blame if in three or fives’ years time there are problems with those who come. That’s why the security checks have to be done carefully now.”
Ireland has said it expects to welcome more than 100,000 Ukrainian refugees
Invasion has reduced both ministerial bandwidth & appetite for major political row with EU before purdah starts on March 26
Gvt source says momentum had been growing for "narrow" triggering of A16 on food, as "v difficult for the EU to argue against without looking unreasonable"
Senior Govt source says: “Before the Ukraine war, it was more likely that we could have triggered Article 16 before purdah kicks in. But now it's looking pretty uncertain.
"The whole of Govt is entirely focused on the Ukraine war, there's very little ministerial capacity"