Some thrillers hit harder because they feel like they’re playing five minutes into the future. This one has always lived in that uncomfortable space, where the danger is not a masked killer or a bomb under a table, but a line of code, a foreign adversary, and the horrible realization that an entire country can be destabilized before most people know anything is happening. Now, the series is returning with a fresh wave of tension, and the timing still feels annoyingly plausible.
The Undeclared War returns on August 27, 2026, with the new season set in 2024 as the elite Malware Department at GCHQ deals with the aftermath of a devastating Russian cyber-attack. Just when it seems the UK has gained the upper hand, Danny and his team discover a mole in their midst and uncover a far more dangerous threat. So, yes, a normal day at work, if your job involves national security, betrayal, and everyone pretending not to panic in government offices.
The cast includes Simon Pegg (Shaun of the Dead, Mission: Impossible — Fallout) as Danny Patrick, Siân Brooke (Sherlock, Blue Lights), Hannah Khalique-Brown (The Undeclared War, Red Rose), Alex Jennings (The Crown, A Very English Scandal), Danny Sapani (Black Panther, Penny Dreadful), Ed Stoppard (The Pianist, Knightfall), and Chloe Pirrie (The Queen’s Gambit, The Victim).
Why Is ‘The Undeclared War’ Still So Unnerving?
When the first season launched, Pegg spoke about the real-world anxieties behind the show and why its cyber-war setup felt so frightening. Discussing the series on The Chris Evans Breakfast Show with Sky, Pegg said one of the most interesting things he discovered was the existence of troll farms where people pretend to be British online, use British slang and hashtags, and deliberately provoke arguments that are then amplified by bots.
“The discourse just becomes shouting, and it destabilises our society. That’s actively happening,” Pegg said. He also warned that people engaging in political conversations online may be interacting with “a foreign adversary without realising it,” adding, “It’s so pervasive and other places are all over it.”
The Undeclared War is not just about hackers typing very fast in dark rooms, though, legally, every cyber-thriller must include at least some of that. Pegg also said that “nothing in the show hasn’t happened, or hasn’t been war gamed by our Ministry of cyber defence,” calling the subject “pretty scary.” He later summed up the show’s nastiest idea in one blunt line: “Information is power. Really now it’s becoming about not who’s telling the truth, but who’s telling the biggest lie the loudest. That’s terrifying.”
The series is created by Peter Kosminsky and Colin Callender, with Colin Teevan, Amy Ng, Emily Marcuson, and Roland Walters writing the new season. Paul McGuigan directs, while executive producers include Callender, Daniel Gratton, and Noëlette Buckley for Playground, Kosminsky for Stonehenge Films, Teevan, and McGuigan. The series comes from Playground, Stonehenge Films, and Universal International Studios, a division of Universal Studio Group.
The Undeclared War returns August 27, 2026 on Peacock.
- Release Date
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2022 – 2022-00-00
- Network
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Channel 4
- Directors
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Peter Kosminsky
- Writers
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Declan Lawn, Amelia Spencer
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Alex Reid
Colonel Pauline Keele
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Daniel O’Meara
Newscaster
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David Prosho
Steve Cleary
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Kerry Godliman
Angie McMurray
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