The Independent

£9m ‘Situation Room’ in Whitehall gets go ahead

- DAISY LESTER

The UK government is due to unveil plans to fit a £9m White House-style bunker beneath Whitehall in an effort to bolster the country’s defences.

Boris Johnson has given the thumbs-up to building the command room – or The Situation Centre (dubbed SitCen) – for use during such emergencie­s as terrorist strikes and crisis’ including pandemics.

Due to open this summer, it will be next door to the Cobra meeting rooms in the basement of the Cabinet Office where ministers currently deal with emergencie­s.

In the reportedly high-tech set-up, Mr Johnson will be able to watch drone strikes and military engagement­s on huge interactiv­e display screens, allowing the PM to track events in real-time. The SitCen project is part of the government’s review of defence, security and foreign policy due to be unveiled on 16 March. The huge overhaul seeks to modernise and evolve the armed forces, intelligen­ce and diplomacy.

The room will reportedly be staffed around the clock by “watchkeepe­r” staff from the National Security Secretaria­t who will use data analysis for “horizon scanning” in order to identify threats.

A conference table for the PM, ministers and intelligen­ce chiefs will take centre place in the room, used to brief government officials and monitor risks up to six months ahead.

Informatio­n will be supplied by the Joint Intelligen­ce Committee, Joint Terrorism Assessment Centre and other Whitehall experts.

In the US, presidents use the White House’s Situation Room for coordinati­ng emergency responses and tackling security threats. Barack Obama used the command room when US special forces killed Osama bin Laden in 2011.

The room demonstrat­es the emphasis on science, technology and data in the upcoming 100-age document titled Global Britain in a Competitiv­e Age.

Also among the advances are a new RAF Space Command set to launch a rocket from Scotland in 2022, a National Cyber Force and artificial intelligen­ce research facilities.

These technologi­cal upgrades will lead to a dramatic reduction in army personal with 12,500 troops set to be lost.

Speaking recently at the Munich security conference, Mr Johnson said: “We will focus our investment on the new technologi­es that will revolution­ise warfare – artificial intelligen­ce, unmanned aircraft, directeden­ergy weapons and many others.”

Extensive refurbishm­ents began in Downing Street last year reportedly so the PM could hold White-House style televised press briefings.

It was revealed through a Freedom of Informatio­n request by the PA news agency that more than £2.6m has been spent on the upgrade, which the Cabinet Office said “reflects” that No 9 is a Grade-I listed building.

 ?? (Getty) ?? The PM at a vaccinatio­n centre in north London yesterday
(Getty) The PM at a vaccinatio­n centre in north London yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom