The Daily Telegraph

EU could block weapons to Britain if Nato goes to war with Putin

- By Joe Barnes Brussels Correspond­ent

THE EU could block exports of weapons to Britain if war breaks out with Russia, it was announced yesterday.

A top official said plans had been drawn up to prevent overseas shipments of arms and civilian technologi­es to make up for the bloc’s own shortfalls in a “security crisis”.

“To counter the return of high-intensity war on our border, we have decided to kick up a gear,” Thierry Breton, the EU’S industry commission­er, told reporters as he announced plans to put the bloc’s defence industry on a war-footing.

The proposed overhaul is part of a wider strategy to boost Europe’s military support for war-torn Ukraine and prepare for the mounting threat posed by Vladimir Putin’s Russia. Brussels wants to boost joint weapons production and procuremen­t among its 27 member states with the ambition of strengthen­ing the continent’s security and reducing reliance on the US.

The European Commission is calling for new powers to control military exports from the bloc to secure its capitals in case the war in Ukraine escalates over its borders.

Mr Breton said: “The European Defence Investment Programme [EDIP] has prioritisa­tion measures in it.

“EDIP contains a fully fledged security of supply pillar that is in it for crisis situations.

“Once this stage is declared, specific measures can be applied, including priority-rated orders on civilian products or defence products depending on the situation.”

About 40 per cent of the weapons and ammunition currently produced in the bloc are shipped overseas, Josep Borrell, the EU’S top foreign diplomat, said while outlining the scope of the potential export blockade. “We have a powerful industry of defence because we export a lot,” he added. “Certainly when there is a big push on demand, which might happen with a war, we have to ask for extra input.”

Member states would have to vote on the crisis situation, which includes security or more general shortages in weapons, before the export ban could be applied. The measure resembles the export controls introduced by the EU on vaccine shipments at the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which sparked a jabs war with Britain.

While the EU promised to “team up with strategic, like-minded and internatio­nal partners”, the UK is excluded from any of its new schemes to boost defence production. Ukraine will be treated as a “quasi member state” as Brussels seeks to make up for its recent failure to give Kyiv a promised one million artillery shells.

The scheme will also limit EU countries from purchasing weapons from Uk-based firms, such as BAE Systems, if they want to benefit from financial incentives paid out of the bloc’s budget.

The EU’S 27 member states have spent more than €100 billion (£85.4billion) on defence purchases since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Margrethe Vestager, the commission’s vice president, said.

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