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UK advised to stockpile food as Russian Attack fears grow

(37 Posts)
Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 18:50:44

apple.news/AcaYNPZprRaOD02g_AMbobg

Bit scary some narrative below for those unable to access via link:-

“ Stockpile food in case of Russian cyber attack, No 10 to tell public
Households to be advised on how to prepare for emergencies as threat of conflict rises”

“ “Later this year, ministers will launch a public information campaign to advise households on how to prepare for emergencies, including creating a stockpile of food, medicines and basic survival tools.

It comes amid rising concerns of a Russian attack on a Nato country and near-constant cyber attacks on the UK’s critical national infrastructure.”

Excerpt From
“Stockpile food in case of Russian cyber attack, No 10 to tell public”
Tony Diver
The Telegraph
apple.news/AcaYNPZprRaOD02g_AMbobg
This material may be protected by copyright.”

BlueBelle Tue 14-Jul-26 22:07:26

I will save or buy nothing different its done to panic us into buying more
Remember all those empty shelves in Covid

Greyduster Tue 14-Jul-26 21:42:22

There is a Swiss Army knife on the kit list. I knew mine would come in handy one day (if only because it has a corkscrew and a pair of tweezers!!).

M0nica Tue 14-Jul-26 21:38:36

I am glad we have a wood burning stove. If power and gas are down in a cold snap we will have heating and cooking facilities.

Desdemona Tue 14-Jul-26 21:25:37

LtEve

I have loo rolls and wine so feel I’m well equipped. (Do have tins of beans etc too but not in industrial quantities)

If you have loads of wine and beans you will need industrial amounts of loo roll (or at least I would!!)

Oh I don't know. How much planning can an individual do? I have a few standby tins of soup and beans in the cupboard, some tea lights and matches, a few bottles of spring water.

In the event of something major going down, we are quite helpless really, and just need to hope it doesn't happen.

Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 21:17:05

Fallingstar

Always have plenty of loo rolls and pasta - probs because they ran out during Covid - also I tend to stockpile tinned goods, beans, soups, sardines, tuna, and jars of pasta sauce. I also have candles matches and a lighter and torches, have just always had these things. Plus a well stocked first aid box.

Me too! It’s not alarmist, it’s simply sense.

There’s so many reason why mam of us might be “cut off” or need a weeks supply of food etc around.

Not just various forms of attacks, but also extreme weather, our own illness, strikes of all kinds (I mean workers strikes)

It’s certainly not daft to ensure we have enough, without panic buying.

Dickens Tue 14-Jul-26 21:15:57

Graphite

Important not to panic over this kind of thing.

Full Telegraph piece with paywall removed:

archive.ph/20260714175544/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/07/14/defence-russia-public-stockpile-food-russian-cyber-attacks/#selection-4125.0-4129.30

Extract:

Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister, announced on Tuesday that the Government would also wargame a “hybrid” attack on the UK by a foreign adversary next year.

The “national home defence exercise” will see hundreds of civil servants plan their response to a crisis from inside Whitehall.

...

^Sir Keir Starmer revealed last month that Western intelligence agencies believed an attack by Russia on a Nato country could come within four years.^

Important not to panic over this kind of thing.

When this becomes general knowledge - a visit to your local supermarket might indicate that this advice will have been well and truly ignored.

I still remember the 'panic-buying' of stacks of toilet-paper during Covid - people swooshing numerous tins of food and bread into their trollies... watched by most other shoppers with a mix of disdain and amusement.

There's a section of the British public who - when told to act 'responsibly', take it as a signal to do the exact opposite.

Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 21:13:19

watermeadow

Whatever rubbish have you been reading? Daily Mail? Get your news from a reputable source, BBC, broadsheet newspaper, and you won’t be worried by fake news and scams.

It’s actually from The Telegraph. I have Apple News app which delivers my daily news from all reputable sources.

LtEve Tue 14-Jul-26 21:10:49

I have loo rolls and wine so feel I’m well equipped. (Do have tins of beans etc too but not in industrial quantities)

Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 21:10:34

Casdon

I know a lot of people prefer to stick their fingers in their ears and sing la la la to this sort of advice, but we live in dangerous times, and it would only take a major cyber attack to plunge the country into chaos. No Internet transactions means no food, no petrol, no water, no power.

Without going OTT! I’m prepared, the only thing I haven’t yet got is a solar battery set up, which I’d like as a back up for power cuts anyway.

👍👍👍

Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 21:09:41

FriedGreenTomatoes2

As much as I’d love to face down the Russians with powdered milk and a tin of beans, I can’t help feeling there’s a better solution. 🤔

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

Casdon Tue 14-Jul-26 21:09:14

Desdemona

FriedGreenTomatoes2

As much as I’d love to face down the Russians with powdered milk and a tin of beans, I can’t help feeling there’s a better solution. 🤔

This, exactly.

In the event of nuclear attack on the UK, a can of beans and a packet of porridge will not save you.

Yes, but a nuclear attack is not the most likely way that we would be attacked. You can’t save yourself from a nuclear attack, but you can protect yourself from the impact of other forms of attack, particularly cyber attacks, which are probably the most likely. I don’t really understand why people would be averse to taking sensible steps to protect themselves.

Fallingstar Tue 14-Jul-26 21:06:15

Always have plenty of loo rolls and pasta - probs because they ran out during Covid - also I tend to stockpile tinned goods, beans, soups, sardines, tuna, and jars of pasta sauce. I also have candles matches and a lighter and torches, have just always had these things. Plus a well stocked first aid box.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Tue 14-Jul-26 21:05:34

This is straight out of the Soviet political guidebook. "Keep your citizens in a state of alarm to keep them in a state of compliance".

Covid masks anyone?

greyfur Tue 14-Jul-26 21:05:00

petra

greyfur

FriedGreenTomatoes2

Oh, well. Cheaper than paying for national defence, I suppose.

We are a tiny little island, not a world player.
Where would you like the funding to come from?

We are a small island, not tiny.
I’m assuming you have no knowledge of the intelligence sharing group known as 5 eyes. That would be just 5 countries worldwide.
Note that not one European country is a member.
You are not small and insignificant to belong to this group.

policyexchange.org.uk/events/the-importance-of-the-five-eyes-in-an-era-of-global-insecurity/

Possibly best not to assume too much.

Casdon Tue 14-Jul-26 21:03:54

Government guidance watermeadow.

Desdemona Tue 14-Jul-26 21:03:15

FriedGreenTomatoes2

As much as I’d love to face down the Russians with powdered milk and a tin of beans, I can’t help feeling there’s a better solution. 🤔

This, exactly.

In the event of nuclear attack on the UK, a can of beans and a packet of porridge will not save you.

watermeadow Tue 14-Jul-26 21:01:34

Whatever rubbish have you been reading? Daily Mail? Get your news from a reputable source, BBC, broadsheet newspaper, and you won’t be worried by fake news and scams.

Casdon Tue 14-Jul-26 21:01:13

That’s why the advice is to keep a supply of bottled water to last a few days.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Tue 14-Jul-26 20:58:15

Without water we’d be stuffed anyway.

GrannyGravy13 Tue 14-Jul-26 20:56:49

The only thing everyone should do is have cash in the house…

Casdon Tue 14-Jul-26 20:54:29

I know a lot of people prefer to stick their fingers in their ears and sing la la la to this sort of advice, but we live in dangerous times, and it would only take a major cyber attack to plunge the country into chaos. No Internet transactions means no food, no petrol, no water, no power.

Without going OTT! I’m prepared, the only thing I haven’t yet got is a solar battery set up, which I’d like as a back up for power cuts anyway.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Tue 14-Jul-26 20:39:51

As much as I’d love to face down the Russians with powdered milk and a tin of beans, I can’t help feeling there’s a better solution. 🤔

Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 20:07:52

* gas hob! (Though dear husband might think gas gob a better description of me!)

Cossy Tue 14-Jul-26 20:07:07

I have no issue with having emergency packs, torches and radios which wind up, plentiful supply of batteries, charged up spare power banks for phones, matches, candles, dried food, canned food, water.

We have most of these anyway.

We have an electric oven and gas gob, but if we have power cuts we have no means of cooking!

David49 Tue 14-Jul-26 19:44:06

I wouldn't be storing food in a freezer if there was a war, electricity will be one of the first targets, dry food, flour, canned, preserves are much more useful

This is linked to a civil defence exercise being planned, a cynical person might say it's a distraction from the parlous state of the UK defence capability. We know from other disasters and conflicts one of the first failures is likely to be the phone and communication network