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UK ‘totally unprepared’ to warn citizens of imminent nuclear threat

Left, a mushroom cloud of an explosion. Top right, Russian soldiers in front of a giant nuclear missile. Bottom right, the nuclear missiles being paraded through Russia on trucks.
A senior Cabinet Office advisor warned the UK Government is ‘totally unprepared’ to alert its citizens (Picture: AFP/Russian Defence Ministry/TASS)

The UK Government is ‘totally unprepared’ to alert its citizens of an incoming nuclear threat and how to protect themselves, a senior Cabinet Office advisor has revealed.

The comments made to the i come as tensions escalate over whether Vladimir Putin will actually push the nuclear button during his war with Ukraine.

When asked on Sunday if he felt Putin could his deadly arsenal, Levelling Up secretary Michael Gove answered ‘yes’.

Ministers have previously expressed their intention to introduce an emergency alert system (ESA) following the outbreak of coronavirus, with Reading involved in a phone alert trial last year.

Penny Mordaunt MP, who was the Paymaster General at the time, said: ‘The Emergency Alerts service will be a vital tool in helping us to better respond to emergencies, both nationally and locally.’

But the service is still yet to launch, with the official ESA webpage stating it is ‘expected to launch in early 2022’.

A source within the Cabinet Office’s Civil Contingencies Secretariat told the i the delays are the result of differences between government departments over who should fund it.

Russian Yars RS-24 intercontinental ballistic missile systems roll through Red Square during the Victory Day military parade in downtown Moscow on May 9, 2019. - Russia celebrates the 74th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty Images
It’s feared Russian President Vladimir Putin could unleash nuclear weapons against Ukraine (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
A Russian Yars RS-24 intercontinental ballistic missile system and other military vehicles move through Red Square during a military parade, which marks the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, in Moscow on June 24, 2020. - The parade, usually held on May 9, was postponed this year because of the coronavirus pandemic. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP) (Photo by ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP via Getty Images)
Putin has put his nuclear deterrence forces on high alert (Picture: AFP via Getty Images)
IVANOVO REGION, RUSSIA - FEBRUARY 26, 2020: Victory Day crews of RS-24 Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launchers line up before marching from their home base in Teikovo to Alabino outside Moscow, to prepare for the Moscow parade on May 9. Vladimir Smirnov/TASS (Photo by Vladimir Smirnov\\TASS via Getty Images)
The comments come after the Ministry of Defence posted a job advert for a ‘nuclear threat reduction’ manager who can help to ‘reduce a range of threats’ (Picture: TASS via Getty Images)

The individual, who was not named, told the newspaper: ‘There is no public warning system because the government has dithered on it, as no one wants to pay for it – whether that’s the Home Office, the [Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs] or the Cabinet Office.

‘We are totally unprepared.’

Meanwhile, a job advert from the Ministry of Defence, with a £40,000 salary, stated the government department is looking for a Warhead Nuclear Threat Reduction Programme Manager to help with ‘meeting [the] UK Government’s need to reduce a range of threats’.

It reads: ‘The programme delivers technical aspects across a number of areas, working to counter nuclear terrorism; combat nuclear proliferation; research nuclear arms control; and support nuclear related international treaties.’

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