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Ukraine to open first drone factory in UK

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Ukraine has opened its first drone factory in the UK. The facility, near a US military base in Suffolk, will mass produce unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for the war with Russia. Arm firm Ukrspecsystems will fulfill the  contract.

Ukrspecsystems’ UK director Rory Chamberlain told the BBC:

The war has changed but this keeps soldiers safe and it keeps the nation fighting.

There is your chessboard and another piece has been added – another player has been added to the board that can do different things and that’s drones in modern warfare.

It’s changed how they have to defend themselves and it’s changed how they attack as well.

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UK’s Minister for Defence Readiness Luke Pollard attended the opening. He told those assembled:

We’ve been supporting Ukraine with training of military personnel for quite a few years now, but for Ukraine to stay in the fight having more assured and resilient industrial production is essential.

That’s what this factory provides, so it is a really important step in the UK-Ukraine partnership, making sure we can keep Ukraine in the fight for longer as we get towards what I hope will be peace.

The UK is also building an arms manufacturing hub in Ukraine.

Ukraine arms base

The British government has said that a three-year fully funded deal has been struck between Ukraine and the UK.

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Defence secretary John Healey said on 16 January:

An Armed Forces is only as strong as the industry that stands behind them.

Healy said the new deal ensured even small UK arms firms could get involved. This was all framed as “supporting Ukraine” “and securing peace”:

This new centre will supercharge that effort and ensure British companies, no matter how small, can support Ukraine in the fight today and help secure the peace we hope to see tomorrow.

The National Armaments Director Group will manage the centre. The current director is Rupert Pearce, appointed in October 2025.

The BBC said the new drone factory in Suffolk:

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It is also close to Elmsett Airfield, near Ipswich, which will be used to train drone pilots and test out the machines before they are deployed to soldiers on the frontline.

The factory will make up to eight types of UAV to send on to Ukraine. Militarisation is accelerating across Europe. President Donald Trump’s demands that European nations stop relying on the US have compounded this. In the clamour to rearm, there is very little space to discuss what a more just and less war-like economy might look like.

Featured image via the Canary

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