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Ukraine 2025-09-01

01 September 2025

Lead MP

The Secretary of State for Defence John Healey

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

UkraineDefenceClimate
Other Contributors: 35

At a Glance

The Secretary of State for Defence John Healey raised concerns about ukraine 2025-09-01 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

UkraineDefenceClimate
Government Statement
Yesterday, the UK secured a £10 billion contract with Norway to supply at least five Type 26 frigates. This marks the biggest British warship deal in history, supporting 4,000 British jobs and 400 businesses for years to come. Turning to Ukraine, the House stands united for the country's freedom and sovereignty. The Prime Minister hosted President Zelensky in London, chaired coalition of the willing meetings with President Macron and joined European leaders at a meeting with President Trump. These efforts aim to secure peace after any deal and disrupt Russian oil revenues. Intense fighting continues along the frontline, despite reduced military activity in Kharkiv and Sumy oblasts. The UK provides £4.5 billion in military aid this year—the highest ever level—delivering nearly 5 million rounds of munitions, around 60,000 artillery shells, rockets and missiles, 2,500 uncrewed platforms, 30 vehicles and engineering equipment, and 200 electronic warfare and air defence systems. Next week, the UK will co-chair the 30th Ukraine Defence Contact Group meeting with Germany. Peace is possible, but preparations for any potential deployment are ongoing. Admiral Sir Tony Radakin is stepping down after a distinguished career; his successor is Air Chief Marshal Rich Knighton.

Shadow Comment

James Cartlidge
Shadow Comment
Putin's claim that understandings reached at the Alaska summit open the way to peace in Ukraine are utterly cynical. The blame for this war lies squarely with Putin’s territorial ambitions, and all civilian and military bloodshed is the result of his unprovoked and illegal invasion. We need to keep tightening the screws on Putin’s war machine by denying safe harbours for tankers and profits and banning Russian oil and gas sooner than 2027. The coalition should lead a new pincer movement to further constrain Russia’s energy revenues and stop Putin from getting his hands on military equipment.
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