Pro-Palestinian
activists have broken into RAF Brize Norton and sprayed two military
planes with red paint in a major security breach.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has condemned the action as "disgraceful", saying that it was an "act of vandalism".
Footage
posted online by Palestine Action on Friday showed two people inside
the Oxfordshire airbase in darkness, with one riding on a scooter up to
an Airbus Voyager and spraying paint into its jet engine.
The
Ministry of Defence, which has also condemned the move, is now expected
to conduct a review of security at UK military bases. It is working
with Thames Valley Police, which is leading the investigation.
Palestine Action said the activists
evaded security and claimed they had put the air-to-air refuelling
tankers "out of service".
However,
RAF engineers are assessing the damage and a defence source told the BBC
they did not expect the incident to affect operations.
In
a statement, a Palestine Action spokesperson said: "Despite publicly
condemning the Israeli government, Britain continues to send military
cargo, fly spy planes over Gaza and refuel US and Israeli fighter jets."
RAF
Brize Norton serves as the hub for UK strategic air transport and
refuelling, including flights to RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus. The air force
has conducted reconnaissance flights over Gaza out of the Cyprus base.
The base is encircled by a large
perimeter fence, with security camera and sensors in the area in
addition to manned security checkpoints. Patrols around the base are
also carried out from time to time.
But a defence source said these measures would not have been able to provide complete cover around the large airbase.
Palestine
Action has engaged in similar activity since the start of the current
war in Gaza, predominantly targeting arms companies. In May, it claimed
responsibility for the daubing of a US military plane in Ireland.
It also said they caused "further damage" using crowbars - though this is not visible in the bodycam footage it provided.
Video shows the activists then roaming around the airbase.
The
protesters did not spray paint on the Vespina aircraft - used by the
prime minister for international travel - which was also on the base.
The MoD told the BBC that RAF Voyager aircraft had not been involved in refuelling or supporting Israeli Air Force jets.
The
group said the activists who entered RAF Brize Norton used repurposed
fire extinguishers to spray red paint into the planes' engines.
It also said they caused "further damage" using crowbars - though this is not visible in the bodycam footage it provided.
Video shows the activists then roaming around the airbase.
The
protesters did not spray paint on the Vespina aircraft - used by the
prime minister for international travel - which was also on the base.
The MoD told the BBC that RAF Voyager aircraft had not been involved in refuelling or supporting Israeli Air Force jets.
A
spokesman said Voyagers have been used in the Middle East to refuel RAF
Typhoon jets involved in the ongoing international efforts to tackle
the so-called Islamic State in eastern Iraq and Syria.
They have also been used in operations in the Red Sea in the past in operations against Yemen's Houthi rebels.
Thames Valley Police confirmed it had received a report about people gaining access to the base and causing criminal damage.
"Inquiries are ongoing to locate and arrest those responsible," the force said.
Lord
West, Labour minister for UK security and former head of the Royal
Navy, said earlier that while he was not aware of the full details, the
break-in was "extremely worrying".
"We
can't allow thing like this to happen at all," he told BBC Radio 4's
Today programme, adding that breaches like it were "really a problem"
for national security.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenochsaid the security breach was "deeply concerning".
"This is not lawful protest, it is politically motivated criminality," she said in a statement.
"We must stop tolerating terrorist or extremist groups that seek to undermine our society."
Shadow
armed forces minister Mark Francois told the BBC any attempt to
interfere with the engines of large aircraft was "totally
reprehensible".
He added there were
"serious questions for the MoD to answer" about how protesters were able
to "gain access to what is supposed to be a secure RAF airbase".
The local Liberal Democrat MP Charlie Maynard described the activists' actions as "stupid and dangerous".
He
said the investigations should establish "how this happened and what
can be done in future to make sure no further breaches occur".
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