Teleri Glyn Jones,Wales political reporter and

Mark Palmer,Assistant editor, Wales politics

BBC The green Ajax armoured vehicleBBC

The Ajax armoured vehicle is “lethal against our adversaries on the battlefield”, according to a minister

Defence Minister Luke Pollard said he is “confident” that export sales of the “incredible” and “lethal” armoured vehicle will secure the future of the plant.

Pollard told BBC Wales: “It has had problems in the past. It was right that trials were paused to look at those problems, but it was also right that the company got on top of them, working with the army, working with the Ministry of Defence and General Dynamics to fix them.”

“We now have an incredible, capable, next generation capability, that’s safe for the men and women of our forces to use, but importantly, is lethal against our adversaries if used on the battlefield”.

“So it’s a really key part of our next generation British Army capabilities. But as a minister, I would not be putting it into service if I had any doubts about its safety.”

General Dynamics has two sites in south Wales, with Merthyr Tydfil’s armoured vehicles using communications equipment developed at Oakdale in Caerphilly county.

Apprentice Charlie Penfold said he was really proud to work on the project.

“It’s incredibly prestigious when you work with the military and if you speak to friends or family and you say ‘I build armoured vehicles’ – there’s always a bit of a wow factor.

“I get to come here every day and look at these amazing vehicles.”

A large group of workers standing inside the Merthyr factory, with a large Welsh flag and Union flag on the wall at the back of the plant

General Dynamics employs more than 700 people at its Merthyr Tydfil plant

Design engineer Dinda Khairani said General Dynamics played a significant role in the community.

“The company also supports the graduates and apprentices to go to, for example to different local schools to introduce engineering and everything, so I feel like the industry is growing in south Wales so that’s a good place to start,” he said.

The defence minister said: “I think the workforce here should be incredibly proud of what they have produced, a really capable, lethal platform that will make such a big difference to our armed forces.

“It’s because of that incredible capability that I’m confident that our allies are looking at this now and thinking about whether it can enhance their deterrence, their war fighting abilities.

“The UK government, working with the Welsh government, have been promoting this platform to our allies, because I think there’s real opportunities to sell this platform to our allies, to export it, to see Ajax vehicles built in Wales, with a British supply chain supporting over 4,000 jobs being used by our allies within Nato and potentially further afield as well.”

Earlier this year, the UK government promised to increase defence spending from 2.3% to 2.5% of national income by 2027 to prepare the country for “war-fighting readiness”.