UK Walks Away from EU Defence Fund Talks — SAFE Membership Deal Falls Through
London and Brussels fail to bridge financial gaps as UK reverts to 'third-country' status under major European defence programme
Negotiations between the United Kingdom and the European Union over UK participation in the bloc’s flagship defence fund, called Security Action for Europe (SAFE), have collapsed, officials announced on Friday.
The dispute — centred on the size of Britain’s financial contribution — marks a major setback for a post-Brexit reset in defence cooperation.
Under the terms discussed, the UK would have joined SAFE’s €150 billion fund, giving British defence firms access to lower-cost, EU-backed loans for joint procurement and boosting their bid competitiveness across Europe.
Yet efforts to hash out the final deal broke down when Brussels and London proved unable to agree on an acceptable contribution.
While the EU reportedly reduced the entry payment demanded from the UK from as high as €6.7 billion to around €2 billion, British leaders viewed even that sum as excessive and incompatible with value-for-money and national-interest tests.
A UK minister for European-Union relations said talks had been conducted “in good faith” but stressed that any agreement must serve the interests of British taxpayers and the domestic defence industry.
With no accord reached by the deadline, the UK will remain a “third-country” partner — a status that still allows participation in SAFE-funded projects, but only under restrictive conditions: non-EU firms may supply no more than 35 per cent of contract value.
The failed negotiations mark a blow to ambitions of reintegrating UK and EU defence industrial bases after years of rupture following Brexit.
UK industry leaders expressed disappointment at losing full access, warning the outcome limits British capacity to compete on equal footing with firms in EU countries and undermines the “reset” ambitions envisaged in the broader security pact signed in May 2025.
Brussels expressed regret but left the door open for future discussions.
It emphasised that SAFE remains open by design for third-country participation — albeit with stricter limits — and underscored continuing commitment to broader UK-EU defence and trade cooperation under the 2025 Security and Defence Partnership.
For now, British participation in SAFE will be limited, and the full strategic ambitions of closer defence integration with Europe remain on hold as both sides reassess terms and trust ahead of possible renewed talks.