Inside Britain’s £1.4billion spy drone ‘unmitigated disaster’ as they’re branded too heavy and struggle in bad weather

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Inside Britain’s £1.4billion spy drone ‘unmitigated disaster’ as they’re branded too heavy and struggle in bad weather
Inside Britain’s £1.4billion spy drone ‘unmitigated disaster’ as they’re branded too heavy and struggle in bad weather

The British stealth drones cost an eyewatering £5million each

Britain’s fleet of spy drones has been labelled an "unmitigated disaster" as the devices are too heavy and struggle in bad weather.

The Ministry of Defence has so far stumped up £1.4billion of taxpayers’ money on 54 Watchkeeper WK450 drones to be used by the UK’s armed forces.

But multiple crashes are being blamed on endless add-ons - including 265 user requirements and 1,910 system modifications.

They are also restricted to certain weather conditions, critics claim, while eight have been written off at a cost of £40million.

Tory MP and former Armed Forces Minister Mark Francois said the drones - which cost £5million each - are already "obsolete".

Mr Francois is leading a Commons Defence Committee investigation into the issue and said the scheme has been an "unmitigated disaster, arriving years late and effectively already obsolescent", reports The Times.

The Watchkeeper drone has been slammed for being too bulky qeituidxiqrtinv

The Watchkeeper drone has been slammed for being too bulkyCredit: Getty

A Watchkeeper drone surveys the English Channel

A Watchkeeper drone surveys the English ChannelCredit: Getty

The Watchkeeper was based on the Israeli Elbit Hermes 450

The Watchkeeper was based on the Israeli Elbit Hermes 450Credit: AFP 

The Watchkeeper drones are based on Israel’s Hermes 450 drone, nicknamed the ’Zik’, which is understood to be is use over Gaza and in Lebanon.

The unmanned Israeli aircraft has been called the "best drone in the world" by retired Army major Chris Lincoln-Jones - who was asked to analyse it as part of the development of the Watchkeeper.

The Hermes 450 can spy on targets for up to 17 hours at an altitude of 18,000ft.

The British alternative is not thought to be used in deployments but rather training exercises.

Ministers have called on the MoD to rethink its protocols and use cheaper, less complex equipment.

A Telegraph investigation last year quoted an army source which said the Watchkeepers were for "visual meteorological conditions only".

They were originally due to enter service in 2010 but this was delayed until 2018.

An MoD spokesperson told The Sun: “Built in the UK, Watchkeeper is a powerful Intelligence Surveillance Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance (ISTAR) platform and since 2010 it has accumulated over 4,000 hours of flying, providing vital situational awareness for soldiers on the ground.

“It has been successfully deployed across the world, including Afghanistan, where it played a crucial protective role for British troops.”

Emma Davis

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