The Ministry of Defence published a communiqué proposal on 18 June 2026 recognising progress through the European Long Range Strike Approach, with six European defence nations agreeing to move mature work clusters into standalone implementation groups.
The proposal concerns cooperation between France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom on conventional long-range strike capabilities. The Ministry of Defence said cooperation with NATO partners on enhanced strike capabilities supports collective security within the Alliance.
The communiqué marks the outcome of work launched two years ago by Defence Ministers from the six participating nations. It sets out how selected clusters will move from coordinated development work into more focused implementation structures.
UK Recognises ELSA Progress
The Ministry of Defence said the UK recognises the positive development achieved through the European Long Range Strike Approach. The announcement highlights cooperation with NATO partners on enhanced strike capabilities and points to work completed within clusters led or jointly led by the UK.
The approach was launched after Ministers identified conventional long-range strike as an important capability in contemporary warfare. The shared aim was to support European defence industry and technology work to develop, produce and deliver equipment at suitable scale and within suitable schedules.
- Participating nations: France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom are named in the communiqué proposal.
- Policy area: The proposal focuses on conventional long-range strike capability, from sensors to launch platforms and effectors.
- UK involvement: The UK highlighted work it has led and jointly led across air-launched, ground-launched and low-cost long-range strike clusters.
Ministers Move Work Into Implementation Groups
The communiqué states that several mature clusters will continue as standalone ELSA Implementation Groups. These groups will focus on development and procurement projects, building on a network of national experts already working across long-range strike cooperation.
The move also allows further collaboration with new partners where appropriate. The six nations said the transition reflects progress from shared requirements work into more direct implementation activity.
Long Range Strike Clusters Identified
The ELSA work identified capability areas across the full long-range strike spectrum. The clusters cover airborne early warning, suppression of enemy air defences, air-launched strike, ground-launched strike systems and lower-cost one-way attack effectors.
Several clusters have already been translated into cooperation projects, according to the communiqué. The announcement does not provide procurement values, delivery dates or named equipment systems.
- Air domain: Airborne early warning, long-range SEAD and air-launched long-range strike are included in the listed clusters.
- Ground systems: Ground-launched systems are grouped across 300–500km, 500–2000km and 2000km-plus ranges.
- Lower-cost capability: The communiqué includes 500km-plus one-way attack effectors as a low-cost long-range strike area.
Capability Areas
The ELSA programme covers capability areas across the long-range strike spectrum, including airborne early warning, suppression of enemy air defences, air-launched strike systems, ground-launched missiles and lower-cost one-way attack systems. The communiqué said several of these workstreams have now progressed into implementation-focused cooperation projects.
European Defence Cooperation Strengthened
The six nations described ELSA as an incubator for European defence cooperation in long-range strike. The approach first relied on a small core of nations to accelerate convergence of requirements and identify workable solutions.
The communiqué says the approach then expanded to enable cooperation projects to emerge. The six nations reaffirmed their intention to strengthen long-range strike capabilities and accelerate acquisition and development.
ELSA Transition Indicators
| Indicator | Recent Movement | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Launch Point | Two years of work completed | The communiqué says the approach was launched two years ago by the six Defence Ministers. |
| Cluster Maturity | Several clusters ready to continue | The communiqué says mature clusters will move into standalone ELSA Implementation Groups. |
| Implementation Focus | Development and procurement | The new groups will focus on development and procurement projects under lead nation arrangements. |
| Cooperation Model | Expanded from a core group | The communiqué says ELSA began with a small core of nations before enabling wider cooperation projects. |
UK Role In Long Range Strike Work
The Ministry of Defence highlighted the UK’s role in clusters it has led and jointly led. These include air-launched long-range strike, ground-launched long-range strike and low-cost long-range strike.
The UK framing connects the work to NATO collective security and European defence capability. The announcement places the UK within a wider six-nation structure rather than presenting the work as a separate national programme.
Stakeholder Comments
Defence Ministers of France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom said;
“ELSA represents a meaningful advancement in European cooperation in the field of long-range strike capabilities.”
Defence Ministers of France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom said;
“The six nations reaffirm their intention to undertake significant efforts to enhance long-range strike capabilities.”
The European Long Range Strike Approach is moving from shared cluster work into standalone implementation groups covering development and procurement. The communiqué places the UK alongside France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Sweden in a structured defence cooperation process. The next phase will focus on maturing long-range strike workstreams and supporting European capability development within a NATO security setting.
Sources: Ministry of Defence.
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News, an independent news organisation delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analysed research with human-edited accuracy and context.




