JOBS will be created in Bolton after weapons firm MBDA landed a multi-million pound deal to manufacture "battle-winning" missiles.
A total of 130 new jobs will be created and a further 270 jobs sustained at the company site in Bolton as well as in Stevenage.
The Ministry of Defence has signed a £400 million deal to launch battle-winning Brimstone missiles from RAF Typhoon jets.
The "ultra-accurate" Brimstone is said by the MOD to have a successful track record, "playing a critical role from Tornado fighter jets in the fight against Daesh in Syria and Iraq". And the deal will now see the missile upgraded to become compatible with Typhoons.
The £400 million Brimstone 2 Capability Sustainment Programme with MBDA UK will also build new equipment to support the capability and develop a stockpile of weapons available for operations
Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said: "Our world-class defence industry is a key foundation on which our great military is built, and the weapons it produces like the pinpoint Brimstone missiles have been crucial in helping our fighter pilots on missions such as driving down Daesh territory in the Middle East.
"This massive £400m investment is a huge boost to the proud workforce equipping our Armed Forces and will create and protect hundreds of jobs across the country, bolstering both the power of the Typhoon jet and British prosperity."
The new missile will arm Typhoon when it takes over as the RAF’s principal ground-attack aircraft in 2019.
Brimstone is currently in use by the UK’s Tornado squadrons in Iraq and Syria as part of Operation Shader and has also been used on operations in Afghanistan and Libya.
Chief of Material Land at the MOD’s procurement organisation, Lieutenant General Paul Jaques said: “The Brimstone 2 CSP contract enables us to continue to deliver a world class air to surface missile in support of the RAF’s Typhoon Squadrons on operations worldwide.
“It is excellent news not only for our troops but also for the UK economy, with jobs and skills being sustained across the country.”
The programme will also allow the weapon to be further developed for use on future aircraft. Brimstone is among weapons being considered for use by the British Army’s new AH-64E Apache attack helicopters and the RAF’s next-generation Protector unmanned aerial system.
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