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UK to launch new radar against ‘severe’ Russian threat

Britain's defence minister Gavin Williamson said a new radar off Scotland's Shetland Islands would help tackle the "severe and real" threat from Moscow. In a return to the Cold War days when Shetland had hosted an early warning radar, the new Royal Air Force facility is being built to track unidentified military or civilian aircraft.…

A handout picture released by the British Ministry of Defence on January 27, 2018 shows Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Stephen Hillier (R) talking to Bob Skilling (L), FCOS Clerk at works at the platform for the new RAF radar facility at Saxa Vord, on the Island of Unst, in the Shetland Islands off the northern coast of Scotland on January 26, 2018.<br />A new 10-million-GBP RAF radar facility aimed at reinforcing the UKís ability to track unidentified military or civilian aircraft is nearing completion, Defence Chiefs heard during a visit to the remote RAF station in Shetland on January 26, 2018. The Remote Radar Head facility will improve RAF and NATO understanding of the airspace north of Britain and further out across the Norwegian Sea, improving the UKís sovereign capability at a time of heightened Russian military activity, a statement of the MOD said. / AFP PHOTO / MOD / CPL Babbs ROBINSON

Britain’s defence minister Gavin Williamson said a new radar off Scotland’s Shetland Islands would help tackle the “severe and real” threat from Moscow.

In a return to the Cold War days when Shetland had hosted an early warning radar, the new Royal Air Force facility is being built to track unidentified military or civilian aircraft.

“We will always protect our skies from Russian aggression,” Williamson said Friday, describing the radar as vital to British defences.

“Russia’s actions are not limited to Europe’s eastern borders — the threat to British livelihoods is severe and real,” he added.

The £10 million ($14.1 million, 11.4 million euro) radar on Unst, Britain’s most northerly inhabited island, is due to be fully operational soon, the Ministry of Defence said.

Once launched it will feed into the country’s quick reaction alert system, which in the past has been used to scramble RAF jets to intercept Russian aircraft.

On January 15 two fighter jets were launched to monitor two Russian military aircraft, which the Ministry of Defence said did not respond to air traffic control authorities.

A total of 69 such operations have been carried out in the past five years, the ministry said without detailing how many involved Russian aircraft.

Williamson’s praise for the radar comes as he and defence chiefs up their rhetoric against Russia.

On Thursday the defence minister accused Moscow of spying on Britain’s crucial infrastructure, as part of possible plans to create “total chaos” in the country, in comments published in the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

His intervention came after the head of the British army warned Russia poses the “most complex and capable” security challenge since the Cold War.

Chief of the General Staff Nick Carter warned Monday that Britain struggled to match Russia’s military capabilities, saying the ability to respond to threats would be eroded “if we don’t match up to them now”.

The comments come as Williamson, in the post since November, is reportedly pressuring finance minister Philip Hammond for more money.

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