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Features

Events target Strategic Defence Review ambitions

Rear Admiral (Ret’d) Jon Pentreath CB, OBE, DSEI Senior Military Advisor, examines the role of international exhibitions in helping realise the aims of the UK's Strategic Defence Review.

Image courtesy Clarion

As the Ministry of Defence (MoD) published its Strategic Defence Review (SDR) in early June, it signalled a decisive shift towards warfighting readiness, technological innovation and a ‘NATO first’ posture. In this context, international exhibitions such as DSEI UK will be essential instruments to deliver the Review’s ambitions, bringing together government, industry and allies to advance capability acquisition, interoperability and resilience.

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The SDR sets out a vision to stop the hollowing out of the United Kingdom’s Armed Forces, investing in a more integrated and lethal force, accelerating defence procurement and fostering defence-industrial growth with a target of 2.5% of GDP being spent on defence by 2027 and aiming for 3% and beyond in the next Parliament. DSEI UK 2025, taking place in the Excel London in September, helps to realise that vision, under its theme of ‘Preparing the Future Force’.

With more than 50,000 attendees expected, including senior political figures, Chiefs of Defence, international delegations and representatives from across the defence and security industry, DSEI 2025 will be a catalyst for political and military discussions, innovation and commercial opportunity. 

As calls for increased spending across NATO rise, with the UK signalling 5% of GDP being spent on defence and security by 2035 and key European allies such as Germany, France and Poland also rapidly raising defence budgets, DSEI UK serves as a timely forum to demonstrate not only UK intent but also capability and interoperability in practice.

The SDR’s ‘NATO first’ principle requires the Armed Forces and industry to align with alliance needs and international attendees at DSEI – including nations with newly designated international pavilions such as Poland, Czechia and Luxembourg – reinforce this message.

It is not just a UK centric event. The rapid growth of DSEI Japan and the forthcoming DSEI Germany in 2027, reflect deeper regional partnerships. DSEI Japan, held in May, demonstrates the UK’s Indo Pacific engagement, whilst DSEI Germany will support European cooperation and industrial collaboration.

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The SDR places clear emphasis on a whole of society resilience, rapid procurement reform, sovereign industrial growth and digital readiness. Defence trade shows like DSEI UK validate this strategy by offering a real time marketplace for defence technology, policy alignment and multinational collaboration. They catalyse the SDR’s ambition to fuse advanced technology – AI, autonomy, cyber and space – with conventional warfighting. DSEI UK also reinforces the UK’s role as a defence leader within NATO and beyond.

By bringing together global stakeholders, live demonstrations of high end capabilities and showcasing investment projects under way from the SDR, DSEI UK magnifies the MoD’s messages: Britain is rebuilding its forces, is leading in innovation and is ready to deter in the Euro Atlantic, the Indo Pacific and further afield.

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