This article is reproduced, in slightly edited form, from Declassified UK, with thanks.
Begin as you mean to go on. That is the defining position of Britain’s blueprint regarding Israel.
It was Britain that gave the colonial project that morphed into the state of Israel its initial blessing via the Balfour declaration in 1917, to create the conditions for the establishment of a jewish “national home” in historic Palestine – where jews constituted less than 10 percent of the population at the time.
This laid the groundwork for the start of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. And at every step of the way, as Israel has consolidated its power and oppression, Britain’s blessing has been on hand. Israel’s latest attempt to wipe out Gaza is no different.
More than 4,000 Palestinians have been murdered, at least 1,000 of whom are children. At least 11 Palestinian journalists, 28 medical staff and 14 United Nations workers have been killed.
Residents of Gaza have been forced to dig wells near the sea to fetch water, whilst hospitals – those that are still standing – are at full capacity and severely lacking power.
Nowhere is considered safe in Gaza, especially as “safe routes” have been bombed by Israel and the only crossing that allows civilians to flee has been repeatedly struck.
Human rights experts have said Israel’s actions amount to collective punishment, a war crime under international law. It matters little since Israeli officials have not attempted to hide their intentions.
“Gaza will become a place where no human can exist,” declared a retired major general. “The emphasis is on damage, not accuracy,” proclaimed the IDF spokesperson.
This carnage has never been about Israel defending itself. The onslaught on Gaza, just like every other time, is another excuse to implement the strategic objective of annihilating the Palestinians, or as Israel calls it, “mowing the lawn”.
And, as a British Palestinian, it will forever be etched in my memory how my fellow Palestnians were being mercilessly slaughtered, and the British political class gave Israel its full-throated, unconditional support.
Prime minister Rishi Sunak offered multiple versions of the same moral backing, from “full solidarity” to promising to always “stand” with Israel. He continued to echo those sentiments when he landed in Israel on Thursday, yet could not answer when asked if he would call for Israeli restraint.
The lobbying group Conservative Friends of Israel was once described as “the largest organisation in western Europe dedicated to the cause of the people of Israel”. It consequently makes the unwavering championship of Israel among the Conservative hierarchy unsurprising.
But the Labour party is now operating on the same spineless wavelength. As Israel pounded Gaza, party leader Keir Starmer regurgitated the robotic recitations about Israel’s right to defend itself.
The former human rights lawyer then insisted Israel has the “right” to withhold power and water from Gaza, even as UN experts made clear the imposition of sieges that endanger lives of civilians are prohibited under international law.
The fish ostensibly rots from the head. Shadow attorney general Emily Thornberry could not answer whether Israel cutting off power supplies to Gaza is in line with international law.
On Israel’s evacuation orders that have displaced thousands of Palestinians, shadow foreign secretary David Lammy failed to condemn them.
As Labour councillors across the country resigned en masse to protest against their party’s complicity, Starmer’s feeble letter in response made no mention of a ceasefire and maintained the line simply that Israel has the right to defend itself.
The leader who has equivocated and sat on the fence on every political issue since his election to the helm of the party has finally remained firm on a decision, and it is to offer unyielding support for the massacre of Palestinians.
Acorss the political spectrum, Israel knows it has a dependable ally.
Importantly, Britain’s support goes beyond the diplomatic domain. Since 2015, it has licenced £472m worth of arms sales to Israel.
In the 2021 bombardment of Gaza, British military hardware was used by Israel. That remains a possibility this time too.
However, already the British government has made clear it has no plans to suspend arms sales to Israel. Britain is thus not just implicated in Israel’s atrocities against the Palestinians, but it appears to consider them fair game too.
Yet both main parties keep up the pretence they’re fundamentally committed to an alternative that liberates Palestinians. The two-state solution is still the main policy stand for both.
But nobody can in good faith deny that Israel has locked in the one-state reality of apartheid. Hence, this position is ignorant at best and deliberately performative at worst; offering the veneer of compassion towards Palestinian self-determination even as the facts on the ground scrupulously neutralise the possibility.
Indeed, in 2015, Benjamin Netanyahu said there will be no Palestinian state “on my watch”. Israel must “crush” Palestinian statehood ambitions, he reiterated this year.
True to his word, Netanyahu’s cabinet in 2023 have taken major steps towards annexation of the West Bank. A peak number of illegal settlements have been advanced by Israel this year concurrent with a ramping up in the number of house demolitions and subsequent forcible displacement of Palestinian communities.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu’s finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, who advocated for the wiping out of a Palestinian town, believes every part of Israel and the occupied territories was promised to jews by God, and Palestinians should either emigrate, be killed or forego their national aspirations if they want to reside – with unequal rights.
It is not surprising to find that Israel is flattening Gaza with such fascists in high office.
And when the time comes to hold Israel to account for its harrowing war crimes, Britain will inevitably try to shield it from any accountability and block the attempts of the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice, as it did in 2021 and again this year.
All whilst the mass murder of Palestinians continues unabated.
This is the tragic story that has defined the Palestinian existence. In 1948, at least 750,000 Palestinians were expelled as their homes, villages and communities were systematically destroyed and occupied.
Many were murdered trying to protect their homes, like my paternal grandmother’s brother and his son. Others who escaped in that period, like my paternal grandmother and my maternal great grandmother, died in exile.
Now there are warnings from the United Nations that the atrocities in Gaza amount to another instance of Palestinian ethnic cleansing. But the reality is the Nakba was not a chapter confined to history. It has been an ongoing project since 1948.
That’s why, whilst Israel pulverises Gaza, it is simultaneously murdering Palestinians in the West Bank. There is no worthwhile Hamas influence there, nor any Israeli hostages. Just more Palestinians who need to be exterminated to guarantee jewish supremacy from the river to the sea.
Nobody should be under any illusion: Britain is dripping in the blood of Palestinian massacres, and the stain will never wash out.