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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 5:58 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

(corrects spelling of Starmer's first name in first paragraph)

Feb 13 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Keir 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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