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Britain's Starmer set to call for multinational defence initiative, FT says

- - Britain's Starmer set to call for multinational defence initiative, FT says

ReutersFebruary 13, 2026 at 7:43 AM

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Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer looks on during a press conference at the UK-EU summit at Lancaster House on May 19, 2025 in London, England. Carl Court/Pool via REUTERS

Feb 13 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Kier Starmer is set to make the case for Britain and its Western allies ‌to launch a multinational defence initiative that could oversee joint ‌weapons procurement and cut rearmament costs, the Financial Times said on Friday.

Starmer is expected ​to raise the idea at this weekend's Munich Security Conference, the newspaper added, citing British government officials.

He is also set to call for closer defence cooperation with allies in a speech on Saturday, as well ‌as in private discussions ⁠with other leaders at the three-day event, it added.

A Downing Street spokesperson pointed Reuters to a statement issued ⁠on Thursday saying Starmer will meet with European leaders in Munich on Friday afternoon, including German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and French President Emmanuel Macron.

Starmer ​will deliver ​a speech on Saturday outlining his ​vision for the future of ‌European defence and security, that statement added.

The Munich Security Conference, one of the world's top security forums, will be held from February 13-15 this year.

Earlier this month, Starmer said his government would consider applying to join a second possible multi-billion-euro European Union fund for defence ‌projects.

The European Commission is considering launching a ​second edition of its SAFE loans scheme ​as Europe seeks to ​bolster its defences due to growing fears of Russia ‌and doubts about U.S. security commitments ​to Europe under ​President Donald Trump.

A British plan to join the original 150 billion-euro ($177 billion) SAFE fund broke down in November after Starmer's government ​refused to pay ‌a financial contribution to join, in a setback for a ​post-Brexit reset of relations.

(Reporting by Hyunsu Yim in Barcelona; Editing ​by Christopher Cushing and Michael Perry)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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