Campaigners from the PARC Against DARC group, which launched in May 2024 to block the proposed US military DARC radars proposed at Brawdy in Pembrokeshire say it’s only a matter of time until the proposed radars receive national scrutiny.

This follows Cefin Campbell MS submitting a Statement of Opinion on DARC radar in the Senedd.

The move comes after a vote at Plaid Cymru’s national conference last October where the Party unanimously backed a motion to oppose DARC and support the campaign to halt its development.

Plaid Cymru Senedd Member Cefin Campbell who tabled the Statement of Opinion is one of four regional MS’s representing Mid and West Wales.

“Plaid Cymru has a long and honourable history of promoting peace around the globe and opposing militarism at every level. We cannot therefore support the construction of DARC and give space to American militarism on our land,” he said.

“Furthermore, no assessment at all has been completed on its impact on the community in terms of tourism, health, or the economy, and the assumption is that it will be harmful on each count.”

Statements of Opinion are a mechanism within the Senedd by which elected MS’s can register their concerns on particular issues as a means to gauge feeling from other Senedd Members who can then support or oppose the statements.

This is a similar mechanism to ‘Early Day Motions’ which are used in Westminster and are considered to be an effective way to raise awareness over certain issues with an aim of escalating to plenary debates within the Senedd chamber later on.

PARC Against DARC say they worked closely with Cefin Campbell, and other Sendd Members to draft the Statement of Opinion which reads:

This Senedd - 1. Notes:

a) the opposition by Pembrokeshire residents to the Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) proposal by the Ministry of Defence;

b) concerns regarding the visual and tourism impact of 27 large radar dishes in view of a coastal national park of significant UK importance and national heritage in nearby St Davids;

c) concerns regarding unaddressed health risks and regional security implications; and

d) the petition of 16,000 signatures against the proposal.

2: Calls on the Welsh Government to commission an authoritative impact assessment of the plan to better inform residents and decision-makers

Protest Solva PARC
Members of the PARC Against DARC campaign group at one of the MOD’s Public engagements events in Solva last year. (Pic supplied)

The campaign, which has asserted its view that the proposed 27 dish radar array would give President Trump and the United States the ability to militarily dominate all of space from Pembrokeshire and two other proposed sites located in Australia and the US, won a campaign in the 1990s to fight off a very similar proposal.

A spokesperson from PARC Against DARC said: “The successful campaign in the 90’s became an issue of national and international importance which was debated in UK parliament and subsequently cancelled very publicly by the then Conservative government.

“We fully expect the DARC radar proposal to receive the same level of national scrutiny this time round and we believe it’s only a matter of time before decision makers are forced to u-turn on this very unpopular proposal.

“With Trump now at the helm in the US, which is terrifying enough in itself, who in their right mind would support giving over a precious piece of Pembrokeshire’s landscape to the US military so that Trump, along with his incoherent foreign policies would be able to control space from here?!

“Especially when you consider that DARC directly breaches several international treaties which dictate that space must be kept for peace and never used for military purposes.

PARC Against DARC
Protests were held outside each of the MOD’s Public engagements events in Solva and St Davids - with the PARC Against DARC campaign group mobilising a large crowd of opponents against the 27 dish Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability proposals. (Pic supplied)

With other local infrastructure projects currently at pre-planning stages which campaigners assert DARC would be reliant on, they also believe that the planning application for DARC should include these as part of the wider application, inline with current planning legislation and regulations.

These include the new pylons DARC would need, the proposed Newgale bypass and a data Cable which Vodafone hopes to lay from Ireland to Brawdy.

“Given that the MOD admits there would be hundreds of lorries per day needed to construct DARC,” say campaigners.

“It is very apparent to everyone concerned that DARC would not be viable without the new road and the other elements of additional infrastructure, therefore the MOD should be forced to adhere to current planning law and apply for them all at once.”

Last year, campaigners in Pembrokeshire slammed the Military of Defence’s handling of public consultation meetings over proposals surrounding plans to redevelop Cawdor Barracks to host the radar initiative.

Protests were held outside each of the MOD’s Public engagements events in Solva and St Davids with the PARC Against DARC campaign group mobilising a large crowd of opponents against the 27 dish Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability proposals.

A large number of anti-DARC locals attended the PR meetings inside and asked questions, but labelled the meetings as quite visibly an ‘utter shambles’.

PARC Against DARC
Campaign group PARC Against DARC’s impression of what the radar base could look like. (Picture: PARC Against DARC.)

Those opposing the plans said they asked a series of technical questions at the consultation events on safety and other issues, but stated that that they received no responses of any meaningful value or reassurance.

Campaigner Jim Scott stated: “The MOD’s handling of this engagement process has just gone from bad to worse!”

This month [Wednesday, February 12] Roy Jones, a leading activist of PARC Against DARC travelled to Cardiff Bay to hand deliver letters to all 60 Members of the Senedd.

The letters raise multiple concerns about DARC as well as imploring the MS’s to support Cefin Campbell’s Statement of Opinion and to meet with the Campaign at an event they will be hosting at the Senedd on March 5.

The Campaign has urged anyone with concerns about DARC to write to their local and regional MS’s asking them to support the Statement of Opinion.

They added: “With the 2026 Senedd elections also seeing an increase in the number of MS’s from 60 to 96 as well as a move to proportional representation across the board, we are sure that this will become a pivotal issue as the candidates and parties begin vying for votes in the build up to the 2026 elections.

“Our 16,000 strong petition demonstrates how unpopular DARC already is among locals and we believe that as awareness grows so will the pressure for candidates to join with public opinion and stand up against DARC.”

PARC and Plaid
Pictured (left to right) at the Plaid conference - Jim Scott, PARC against DARC; Sam Bannon, Heddwch Ar Waith; Jill Evans, former Plaid Cymru MEP and CND Cymru Vice Chair; Roy Jones - PARC Against DARC. (Pic supplied)

The campaign says it also has its sights set on similar processes in Westminster and are already receiving help from several MPs.

“A matter of such hugely significant national interest cannot be decided by a few planning officials at Pembrokeshire County Council and must therefore be escalated to the appropriate levels of government for real scrutiny and thorough investigation.

On Wednesday, March 5 as part of the United Nations international day of disarmament and non-proliferation awareness, with Heddwch ar Waith a Welsh Peace network, PARC Against DARC, along with other campaigns such as CND Cymru, Stop the War and the Peace Pledge Union will be hosting presentations in the Peirhead building at the Senedd including a lunchtime session where all Senedd Members will be invited to come along and learn more about the dangers of the DARC proposal and the growing levels of militarism in Wales. Heledd Fychan MS will sponsor the day’s proceedings.