British Prime Minister David Cameron yesterday said he plans to double Britain’s drone fleet and warned about the prospect of Britain’s exit from the EU.
Cameron said the government would purchase 20 Protector drones and spoke confidently about the prospects of a parliamentary vote to join airstrikes targeting the Islamic State group in Syria.
He said Britain’s fleet of 10 Reapers drones would be replaced by 20 new models as part of the country’s Defense Review this year.
Photo: AP
“This will be combined with increasing the capacity of our special forces, so that the country remains ready to address any threats to our nation’s security,” he said in a statement.
The Protectors, to be imported from the US, can be used as surveillance craft but can also be armed, the British Ministry of Defense said yesterday.
More drones will “keep us safe and ... give us the intelligence and information and potentially give us the capacity to hit people who are potentially planning to hit us,” Cameron told the Sunday Telegraph.
Cameron last month said that a Royal Air Force drone strike killed two British Islamic State fighters and another militant in the group’s stronghold of Raqa in August.
In his first newspaper interview since winning a May general election, Cameron also spoke about his negotiations with fellow European leaders about EU reforms.
He described the talks as “bloody hard work.”
“I think the right answer is for Britain to stay in a reformed European Union, but I’ve always said if we don’t get those things that we are asking for I rule nothing out and I am very serious about that,” he said.
Cameron has promised to hold a referendum on whether Britain should stay in or leave the EU by 2017 at the latest, but has said he wants to renegotiate its terms of membership. He has said he plans to push for broad changes including protecting sovereignty, opting out of the EU’s commitment to “ever closer union,” limiting access to benefits for migrants and boosting competitiveness.
The interview came ahead of yesterday’s annual conference of Cameron’s Conservative Party in Manchester.
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