Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu says UK decision to suspend some arms sales to his country ‘shameful’
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli PM, has posted a thread on social media describing the British government’s decision to suspend some arms sales to Israel as “shameful”.
Days after Hamas executed six Israeli hostages, the UK government suspended thirty arms licenses to Israel.
This shameful decision will not change Israel’s determination to defeat Hamas, a genocidal terrorist organization that savagely murdered 1200 people on October 7, including 14 British citizens.
Hamas is still holding over 100 hostages, including 5 British citizens. Instead of standing with Israel, a fellow democracy defending itself against barbarism, Britain’s misguided decision will only embolden Hamas.
Israel is pursuing a just war with just means, taking unprecedented measures to keep civilians out of harm’s way and comporting fully with international law.
Just as Britain’s heroic stand against the Nazis is seen today as having been vital in defending our common civilization, so too will history judge Israel’s stand against Hamas and Iran’s axis of terror.
With or without British arms, Israel will win this war and secure our common future.
Key events
According to Robert Peston, ITV’s political editor, the US government is also unhappy about the UK’s decision to suspend some arms sales to Israel. Peston posted this on social media.
Washington sources tell me the Whitehouse feels let down by Starmer’s and Lammy’s decision to revoke licences for the export of military equipment to Israel. “They assured us they wouldn’t do this” said one.
Tory decision to delay spending review contributed to uncertainty over public finances, says cabinet secretary
The Conservative government’s decision not to set out spending plans for the coming years contributed to uncertainty about the public finances, Simon Case, the cabinet secretary, has said. Case said this in a letter to Jeremy Hunt, the shadow chancellor, first leaked to the BBC. In its report on the story PM Media says:
Case said “sizeable in-year changes to spending plans in recent years” had been caused by the lack of a spending review “in the face of significant pressures which have materialised since budgets were set in 2021”.
That year saw the last spending review, in which the previous government set out its plans until 2024/25, but the Conservatives declined to set out further long-term plans before the election.
Since the election, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has accused her predecessor of leaving a £22bn “black hole” in this year’s spending plans, with departments overspending their budgets and ministers making unfunded commitments.
Case said: “The most effective way to transparently identify, quantify and address these pressures would have been to conduct a prompt spending review.”
He added that, “unlike previous years”, the new government “has set out to parliament the pressures that it is having to manage down and the actions it is taking to do so”.
Case’s letter comes in reply to allegations from Hunt disputing the £22bn figure and saying it was “deeply troubling” that Reeves’ claims appeared to contradict official spending estimates submitted to parliament after the election.
Case insisted that civil servants had acted “appropriately on the basis of decisions and assurances provided by ministers”.
He said the tight parliamentary timetable between the election and the delayed summer recess meant the government had had to submit the estimates prepared by its predecessor or face “cash shortages over the summer which would have disrupted the provision of public services”.
After the BBC reported this story, Hunt published the letter from Case on X.
He said:
If civil servants signed off estimates to parliament that they knew were false, it is a breach of the civil service code irrespective of any decision by the last government to hold a spending review.
But if those estimates were not false – and the Cabinet Secretary says accounting officers acted appropriately – then Labour’s claim of a £22 billion ‘black hole’ is exposed as bogus.
In reality it is a political device to justify tax rises – a political choice the Government made long before the election.
The Treasury has defended its decision to present estimates to parliament in July for 2024-25 public spending only days before saying the real public spending figures would be higher, arguing that it had to use the old figures so that a vote could take place to allow the money to be spent legally.
Renewable energy auction secures enough power for 11m UK homes
Great Britain’s renewable energy auction has secured enough new clean electricity projects to power 11m UK homes after the Labour government made record funding available to suppliers, Jillian Ambrose reports.
The news release about the announcement from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero is here. And you can find the full list of contracts awarded here.
Andrew Mitchell, the shadow foreign secretary, said last night that reading the Foreign Office document explaining the reasoning behind the decision to suspend some arms sales to Israel made him think it was tokenistic. (See 10.07am.) You can read the policy paper here. It is described as a summary of the IHL (international humanitrian law) process.
In the Commons yesterday Andrew Mitchell, the shadow foreign secretary, did not criticise the decision to suspend some arms sales to Israel when he responded to David Lammy’s statement about it. But later he issued a statement on social media saying that he thought the move was a sop to Labour backbenchers that would offend Israel. He said:
Announcing an arms embargo on the day when Israel is burying its murdered hostages, and within weeks of British military personnel and arms defending Israel from Iranian attack, is not easy to swallow. Having now looked at Labour’s memorandum, it has all the appearance of something designed to satisfy Labour’s backbenches, while at the same time not offending Israel, an ally in the Middle East. I fear it will fail on both counts.
Mitchell has certainly been proved right this morning on his second point. (See 9.31am.) He may be right on the first point too (about the move not satifsying Labour MPs), but that is harder to assess because newly-elected MPs may, understandably, be relectant to criticse their government in public, and Keir Starmer’s hardline approach to party discipline must be having a chilling effect too.
Israel Katz, the Israeli foreign minister, has also issued a statement criticising the UK’s decisiont to suspend some arms sales to his country. He said it was one of several decisions taken by the Labour government that Israel finds problematic, and he hinted that the “deep friendship” between the two countries was being put at risk. He said:
This step sends a very problematic message to the Hamas terrorist organization and its backers in Iran.
Israel is disappointed by the British government’s recent series of decisions, including the latest decision regarding security exports to Israel, the British government’s decision to withdraw its request to submit an amicus brief to the ICC, and its stance on UNRWA, as well as the UK’s recent conduct and statements in the UN security council.
Israel is a law-abiding state that operates in accordance with international law and has an independent and respected judicial system – we expect friendly countries, such as the UK, to recognize this all year-round, especially just days after Hamas terrorists executed six Israeli hostages, during intense negotiations for the release of the hostages and for a ceasefire, and in light of the recent threats by the Iranian regime to attack the State of Israel.
A step like the one taken by the UK now sends a very problematic message to the Hamas terrorist organization and its backers in Iran.
We hope that the deep friendship between the UK and Israel, which has been maintained throughout all the years since the founding of the State of Israel, will continue in the future.
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu says UK decision to suspend some arms sales to his country ‘shameful’
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli PM, has posted a thread on social media describing the British government’s decision to suspend some arms sales to Israel as “shameful”.
Days after Hamas executed six Israeli hostages, the UK government suspended thirty arms licenses to Israel.
This shameful decision will not change Israel’s determination to defeat Hamas, a genocidal terrorist organization that savagely murdered 1200 people on October 7, including 14 British citizens.
Hamas is still holding over 100 hostages, including 5 British citizens. Instead of standing with Israel, a fellow democracy defending itself against barbarism, Britain’s misguided decision will only embolden Hamas.
Israel is pursuing a just war with just means, taking unprecedented measures to keep civilians out of harm’s way and comporting fully with international law.
Just as Britain’s heroic stand against the Nazis is seen today as having been vital in defending our common civilization, so too will history judge Israel’s stand against Hamas and Iran’s axis of terror.
With or without British arms, Israel will win this war and secure our common future.
Defence secretary rejects Boris Johnson’s claim suspension of some arms sales means UK ‘abandoning Israel’
Good morning. The Hamas massacre of Israelis on 7 October last year, and Israel’s brutal war in Gaza that has been going on ever since, has had very little impact on the internal politics of the Conservative party, but it has caused endless problems for Labour. Keir Starmer’s initial response, including an interview in which he seemed to say Israel had the right to cut off water supplies to Gaza as part of its retaliation (it took him a while to clarify that that was not what he meant) horrified pro-Palestinian voters, and Labour lost one byelection, and at least four seats at the general election, as a direct result of the backlash in Muslim communities that had previously been solidly Labour.
Now Labour is in office it is in a position to make policy on the Israel/Gaza conflict, and yesterday David Lammy, the foreign secretary, announced that some arms sales to Israel are being suspended.
But if Lammy, Keir Starmer and other Labour ministers thought that this relatively modest rebuke to Israel would go down well in the UK, today they are learning that that has not been the case. Pro-Israeli opinion is outraged, and pro-Palestinian campaigners are saying that Lammy should have gone very much further.
Here are some of the developments overnight and this morning.
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Boris Johnson, the former Tory prime minister, has accused Labour of “abandoning Israel” and suggested they want Hamas to win the war. He posted this on X.
Hamas is still holding many innocent Jewish hostages while Israel tries to prevent a repeat of the 7th October massacre. Why are Lammy and Starmer abandoning Israel? Do they want Hamas to win?
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The UK’s Chief Rabbi, Sir Ephraim Mirvi, has said the announcement “feeds the falsehood that Israel is in breach of international humanitarian law” and said the timing of the move “beggars belief”. He posted this on X.
It beggars belief that the British government, a close strategic ally of Israel, has announced a partial suspension of arms licences, at a time when Israel is fighting a war for its very survival on seven fronts forced upon it on the 7th October, and at the very moment when six hostages murdered in cold blood by cruel terrorists were being buried by their families. As Israel faces down the threat of Iran and its proxies, not just to its own people, but to all of us in the democratic west; this announcement feeds the falsehood that Israel is in breach of International Humanitarian Law, when in fact it is going to extraordinary lengths to uphold it. Sadly, this announcement will serve to encourage our shared enemies. It will not help to secure the release of the remaining 101 hostages, nor contribute to the peaceful future we wish and pray for, for all people in the region and beyond. Britain and Israel have so much to gain by standing together against our common enemies for the sake of a safer world. Surely that must be the way forward.
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John Healey, the defence secretary, has said that the UK’s support for Israel’s right to self-defence remains “unshakeable” despite the announcement. He told Times Radio:
As I said to the defence minister Yoav Gallant yesterday when I spoke to him before the announcement, we have a duty to follow the law, but this does not alter our unshakable commitment to support Israel’s right to self-defence and to the defence of Israel if it comes under direct attack again, just as UK jets back in April helped intercept Iranian drones and missiles that were targeted directly at Israeli civilians.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.30am: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.
10.30am: Tom Tugendhat, the former security minister, launches his bid for the Conservative leadership.
11.30am: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, takes questions in the Commons.
Afternoon: Shona Robison, finance secretary in the Scottish governments, makes a statement to MSPs about spending cuts.
4pm: The six Tory leadership candidates – Tugendhat, Kemi Badenoch, Robert Jenrick, James Cleverly, Priti Patel and Mel Stride – address Tory MPs on after another in a private hustings meeting at Westminster.
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