Difference between revisions of "Document:Priti Patel's Israel links undermined British diplomacy in the Middle East"

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|source_URL=https://www.newarab.com/opinion/why-priti-patels-israel-links-undermine-british-diplomacy
 
|source_URL=https://www.newarab.com/opinion/why-priti-patels-israel-links-undermine-british-diplomacy
 
|authors=Martin Linton
 
|authors=Martin Linton
|subjects=Priti Patel, Hamas, Israeli–Palestinian conflict
+
|subjects=Priti Patel, Hamas, Israeli–Palestinian conflict, Al-Qassam Brigades, Avi Shlaim, Jack Straw, Tony Blair, Crispin Blunt, Conservative Friends of Israel
 
|image=Priti_Hamas.jpeg
 
|image=Priti_Hamas.jpeg
 
|image_width=300px
 
|image_width=300px
 +
|image_caption=[[Boris Johnson]] was a big fan of [[Priti Patel|“the Prittster”]]
 
|description=Home Secretary [[Priti Patel]], who was fired from her previous government post by [[Theresa May]] for holding secret meetings with [[Israeli]] ministers, spearheaded the blacklisting of [[Hamas]] as a "[[terrorist]] organisation" in a move that angered [[Palestinians]] and undermined [[British]] diplomacy  
 
|description=Home Secretary [[Priti Patel]], who was fired from her previous government post by [[Theresa May]] for holding secret meetings with [[Israeli]] ministers, spearheaded the blacklisting of [[Hamas]] as a "[[terrorist]] organisation" in a move that angered [[Palestinians]] and undermined [[British]] diplomacy  
 
}}
 
}}
It seems that the British Home Secretary [[Priti Patel]] cannot resist the temptation to interfere in the [[Israel/Palestine conflict]] – even when it’s not a part of her job.
+
It seems that the British Home Secretary [[Priti Patel]] cannot resist the temptation to interfere in the [[Israel/Palestine conflict]] – even when it’s not a part of her job.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/patel-apologises-calling-muslim-man-hate-preacher "Priti Patel apologises for UK report falsely calling Muslim man 'hate preacher'"]''</ref>
  
In 2017 when she was the [[UK]]’s aid minister under [[Theresa May]], [[Patel]] was sacked after it emerged that she had held 17 secret meetings with [[Israeli]] government ministers while she was supposedly ‘on holiday’ in [[Jerusalem]].   
+
In 2017 when she was the [[UK]]’s aid minister under [[Theresa May]], [[Priti Patel|Patel]] was sacked<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/patel-resigns-after-misleading-officials-over-secret-meetings "UK minister Priti Patel 'resigns' after misleading officials over secret Israeli meetings while 'on holiday'"]''</ref> after it emerged that she had held 17 secret meetings with [[Israeli]] government ministers while she was supposedly ‘on holiday’ in [[Jerusalem]].<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/uk-minister-apologises-over-undisclosed-israel-meetings "UK aid minister Priti Patel apologises over 'undisclosed Israel meetings'"]''</ref>  
  
As if that wasn’t enough, Patel tried to divert UK aid money to an [[IDF|Israeli army]] hospital in the [[Golan Heights]]. She was found guilty of a breach of the ministerial code and was sent back to the back benches.  
+
As if that wasn’t enough, [[Priti Patel|Patel]] tried to divert UK aid money to an [[IDF|Israeli army]] hospital in the [[Golan Heights]].<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/uk-minister-priti-patel-faces-sacking-over-israel-meetings "UK minister Priti Patel 'likely to be sacked' over Israel meetings"]''</ref> She was found guilty of a breach of the ministerial code and was sent back to the back benches.  
  
Less than two years later she was back in the Cabinet as [[Home Secretary]], and it wasn’t long before she started interfering in the [[Middle East]] again, this time with the full support of Prime Minister [[Boris Johnson]].
+
Less than two years later she was back in the Cabinet as [[Home Secretary]], and it wasn’t long before she started interfering in the [[Middle East]] again, this time with the full support of Prime Minister [[Boris Johnson]].<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/inside-boris-johnsons-new-cabinet "Boris Johnson appoints minister sacked for 'undisclosed Israel government meetings' to new UK cabinet"]''</ref>
  
"Given that Patel was sacked for interfering in [[Israel]]-[[Palestine]] affairs when she was the aid minister, there is even less justification for a [[Home Secretary]] to be interfering in what is normally a purely diplomatic decision"
+
"Given that [[Priti Patel|Patel]] was sacked for interfering in [[Israel]]-[[Palestine]] affairs when she was the aid minister, there is even less justification for a [[Home Secretary]] to be interfering in what is normally a purely diplomatic decision"
  
[[Patel]] seized the opportunity when last month, at a speech to a right-wing think-tank in [[Washington]], she announced her plan to extend the designation of [[Hamas]] as a “[[terrorist]]” organisation – which current applies only to its military wing, the [[Al-Qassam Brigades]] – to encompass the entire political party.  
+
[[Patel]] seized the opportunity when last month, at a speech to a right-wing think-tank in [[Washington]],<ref>''[https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/priti-patels-speech-to-heritage-foundation "Priti Patel's speech to Heritage Foundation"]''</ref> she announced her plan to extend the designation of [[Hamas]] as a “[[terrorist]]” organisation – which current applies only to its military wing, the [[Al-Qassam Brigades]] – to encompass the entire political party.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/uk-plans-ban-hamas-terror-group "UK Home Sec Priti Patel plans to ban Hamas under UK Terrorism Act"]''</ref>
  
 
Her reasoning was plausible, almost technical, as she justified the decision by saying, {{QB|“The current listing of [[Hamas]] creates an artificial distinction between various parts of that organisation” and stating that she was merely trying to “update” it.}}  
 
Her reasoning was plausible, almost technical, as she justified the decision by saying, {{QB|“The current listing of [[Hamas]] creates an artificial distinction between various parts of that organisation” and stating that she was merely trying to “update” it.}}  
  
But this proscription – which went through the [[House of Commons]] a week later with very little opposition and without even a vote – contains two very big contradictions which will cause endless trouble in the future.   
+
But this proscription – which went through the [[House of Commons]] a week later with very little opposition and without even a vote – contains two very big contradictions which will cause endless trouble in the future.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/uk-bans-hamas-its-entirety "UK bans Hamas in its entirety"]''</ref>  
  
Firstly, as Oxford professor [[Avi Shlaim]] asked, {{QB|“Why was the latest anti-[[Palestinian]] policy shift announced by the [[Home Secretary]] rather than the [[Foreign Secretary]]?”}}  
+
Firstly, as Oxford professor [[Avi Shlaim]] asked,<ref>''[https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/uk-israel-palestine-hamas-criminalisation-betrayal "Hamas terror listing is yet another UK betrayal of the Palestinians"]''</ref> {{QB|“Why was the latest anti-[[Palestinian]] policy shift announced by the [[Home Secretary]] rather than the [[Foreign Secretary]]?”}}  
  
 
Given that [[Patel]] was sacked for interfering in Israel-Palestine affairs when she was the aid minister, there is even less justification for a [[Home Secretary]] to be interfering in what is normally a purely diplomatic decision.  
 
Given that [[Patel]] was sacked for interfering in Israel-Palestine affairs when she was the aid minister, there is even less justification for a [[Home Secretary]] to be interfering in what is normally a purely diplomatic decision.  
  
There are two reasons why she got away with it this time. One is that she now has the support of the Prime Minister, who is a big fan of “the Prittster” as he called her when he was trying to save her from the sack.   
+
There are two reasons why she got away with it this time.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/pm-jokes-about-britain-being-saudi-arabia-penal-policy "UK PM jokes about Britain being 'Saudi Arabia of penal policy' under Home Secretary Priti Patel"]''</ref> One is that she now has the support of the Prime Minister, who is a big fan of “the Prittster” as he called her when he was trying to save her from the sack.<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/nov/12/no-10-faces-legal-challenge-to-pms-support-for-priti-patel-on-bullying-claims "No 10 faces legal challenge to PM’s support for Priti Patel on bullying claims"]''</ref>    
  
 
Secondly, [[Patel]] has tried to argue that [[Palestine]] is in some way a domestic issue. She told her American audience that the designation of [[Hamas]] would “strengthen the case against anyone who waves a [[Hamas]] flag in the [[United Kingdom]],” adding by way of explanation that flag-waving was “bound to make [[Jewish]] people feel unsafe.”  
 
Secondly, [[Patel]] has tried to argue that [[Palestine]] is in some way a domestic issue. She told her American audience that the designation of [[Hamas]] would “strengthen the case against anyone who waves a [[Hamas]] flag in the [[United Kingdom]],” adding by way of explanation that flag-waving was “bound to make [[Jewish]] people feel unsafe.”  
  
Professor Shlaim summed up the situation well:{{QB| “Patel claims that designating the whole of [[Hamas]] as a [[terrorist]] organisation should be seen through a domestic prism: it will help to protect [[Jews]] in this country. This is preposterous.”  
+
[[Avi Shlaim|Professor Shlaim]] summed up the situation well:{{QB| “[[Patel]] claims that designating the whole of [[Hamas]] as a [[terrorist]] organisation should be seen through a domestic prism: it will help to protect [[Jews]] in this country. This is preposterous.”}}
  
[[Patel]] seems unaware of the fact that [[Hamas]] is a political party that confines its activities to the historical borders of [[Palestine]] and is bound by its constitution to do so. [[Patel]] has come forward with no evidence of [[Hamas]] “[[terrorist]]” activity in the [[UK]].   
+
[[Patel]] seems unaware of the fact that [[Hamas]] is a political party that confines its activities to the historical borders of [[Palestine]] and is bound by its constitution to do so.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/opinion/hamas-34-anti-fatah-fatah-20 "Hamas at 34: From anti-Fatah to Fatah 2.0"]''</ref> [[Patel]] has come forward with no evidence of [[Hamas]] “[[terrorist]]” activity in the [[UK]].   
  
Yet despite this lack of evidence, the [[House of Commons]] has agreed to a change in the law which will mean that anyone who expresses support for [[Hamas]], flies their flag or arranges meetings for the organisation will be in breach of a law that has a maximum jail sentence of 14 years.  
+
Yet despite this lack of evidence, the [[House of Commons]] has agreed to a change in the law which will mean that anyone who expresses support for [[Hamas]], flies their flag or arranges meetings for the organisation will be in breach of a law that has a maximum jail sentence of 14 years.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/hamas-blasts-britains-plan-designate-it-terror-group "Hamas blasts Britain's plans to designate it a 'terror' group"]''</ref>
  
 
But there is a second, even more important, reason why [[Patel]]’s intervention should be resisted, if the [[House of Lords]] even gets to debate it.   
 
But there is a second, even more important, reason why [[Patel]]’s intervention should be resisted, if the [[House of Lords]] even gets to debate it.   
  
As the Conservative MP [[Crispin Blunt]] points out, “The difficulty we are giving ourselves here is that the jurisdiction of [[Gaza]] is run by [[Hamas]]. Nearly two million people are administered” by [[Hamas]]. In 2006, when [[Hamas]] emerged the unexpected winner of the [[Palestinian]] parliamentary elections, the then Labour government adopted a policy asserting that the [[UK government]] should have “no contact” with members of a [[Hamas]] government.
+
As the Conservative MP [[Crispin Blunt]] points out,<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/hamas-terror-ban-will-have-terrible-chilling-effect-mp "UK terror ban of Hamas will have 'terrible, chilling effect': Tory ex-minister"]''</ref> “The difficulty we are giving ourselves here is that the jurisdiction of [[Gaza]] is run by [[Hamas]]. Nearly two million people are administered” by [[Hamas]]. In 2006, when [[Hamas]] emerged the unexpected winner of the [[Palestinian]] parliamentary elections, the then Labour government adopted a policy asserting that the [[UK government]] should have “no contact” with members of a [[Hamas]] government.
 
{{QB|"The “[[terrorist]]” designation will fundamentally undermine the ability of the [[UK]] to push forward the process of reconciliation or negotiation, as well as undermine the motivation of the [[Palestinians]] to hold elections and build the [[Palestinian]] state"}}
 
{{QB|"The “[[terrorist]]” designation will fundamentally undermine the ability of the [[UK]] to push forward the process of reconciliation or negotiation, as well as undermine the motivation of the [[Palestinians]] to hold elections and build the [[Palestinian]] state"}}
  
That policy remains in place to this day, even though [[Israel]] has regular discussions with [[Hamas]] (a genuine policy of "no contact" would be inoperable), and the Foreign Office, then foreign secretary [[Jack Straw]] and even [[Tony Blair]] all now recognise that this approach was misguided.     
+
That policy remains in place to this day, even though [[Israel]] has regular discussions with [[Hamas]] (a genuine policy of "no contact" would be inoperable), and the [[Foreign Office]], then foreign secretary [[Jack Straw]] and even [[Tony Blair]] all now recognise that this approach was misguided.<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/oct/14/tony-blair-hamas-gaza-boycott-wrong "Tony Blair: ‘We were wrong to boycott Hamas after its election win’"]''</ref>    
  
The “[[terrorist]]” designation will fundamentally undermine the ability of the [[UK]] to push forward the process of reconciliation or negotiation, as well as undermine the motivation of the [[Palestinians]] to hold elections and build the [[Palestinian]] state. Why hold an election, and why vote in an election, if the [[US]], [[UK]] and [[EU]] will refuse to recognise all except one result?
+
The “[[terrorist]]” designation will fundamentally undermine the ability of the [[UK]] to push forward the process of reconciliation or negotiation, as well as undermine the motivation of the [[Palestinians]] to hold elections and build the [[Palestinian]] state.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/palestinians-vote-local-elections "Palestinians vote in local elections amid rising anger with Abbas"]''</ref> Why hold an election, and why vote in an election, if the [[US]], [[UK]] and [[EU]] will refuse to recognise all except one result?
  
“At a deeper level,” says Professor Shlaim, “the shift in British policy was a product of the close ties between [[Israel]] and the [[Conservative Party]].”   
+
“At a deeper level,” says [[Avi Shlaim|Professor Shlaim]], “the shift in British policy was a product of the close ties between [[Israel]] and the [[Conservative Party]].”   
  
[[Priti Patel]] has been a fervent supporter of [[Conservative Friends of Israel]] ever since she was elected to Parliament in 2010. She was present at a private meeting in 2012 where backbenchers harangued Foreign Secretary [[William Hague]] for being under the thumb of a “pro-Arabist” [[Foreign Office]]. [[Patel]] was one of the new Conservative MPs at that meeting and urged the Foreign Secretary to be “more critical of the Palestinians”.   
+
[[Priti Patel]] has been a fervent supporter of [[Conservative Friends of Israel]] ever since she was elected to Parliament in 2010.<ref>''[https://www.newarab.com/news/former-uk-minister-accuses-pro-israel-lobby-disgusting-interference "Ex-UK minister Alan Duncan accuses pro-Israel lobby of 'disgusting interference'"]''</ref> She was present at a private meeting in 2012 where backbenchers harangued Foreign Secretary [[William Hague]] for being under the thumb of a “pro-[[Arab]]ist” [[Foreign Office]]. [[Patel]] was one of the new Conservative MPs at that meeting and urged the Foreign Secretary to be “more critical of the Palestinians”.   
  
Many see this as a pivotal point in cementing the dominance of Conservative Friends of Israel over successive foreign secretaries of state, forcing them to follow every twist and turn of Israeli government policy and to consign the UK’s official policies to declaratory statements only.
+
Many see this as a pivotal point in cementing the dominance of [[Conservative Friends of Israel]] over successive foreign secretaries of state, forcing them to follow every twist and turn of [[Israeli]] government policy and to consign the [[UK]]’s official policies to declaratory statements only.
  
As [[Avi Shlaim]] says of [[Patel]] in particular, she “needs no prompting to do [[Israel]]'s bidding”.
+
As [[Avi Shlaim]] says of [[Patel]] in particular, she “needs no prompting to do [[Israel]]'s bidding”.<ref>''[[Document:The UK government is on the wrong side of history… again]]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
<references/>

Latest revision as of 17:33, 20 November 2023

Home Secretary Priti Patel, who was fired from her previous government post by Theresa May for holding secret meetings with Israeli ministers, spearheaded the blacklisting of Hamas as a "terrorist organisation" in a move that angered Palestinians and undermined British diplomacy

Disclaimer (#3)Document.png Article  by Martin Linton dated 23 December 2021
Subjects: Priti Patel, Hamas, Israeli–Palestinian conflict, Al-Qassam Brigades, Avi Shlaim, Jack Straw, Tony Blair, Crispin Blunt, Conservative Friends of Israel
Source: The New Arab (Link)

★ Start a Discussion about this document
Priti Patel's Israel links undermined British diplomacy in the Middle East



It seems that the British Home Secretary Priti Patel cannot resist the temptation to interfere in the Israel/Palestine conflict – even when it’s not a part of her job.[1]

In 2017 when she was the UK’s aid minister under Theresa May, Patel was sacked[2] after it emerged that she had held 17 secret meetings with Israeli government ministers while she was supposedly ‘on holiday’ in Jerusalem.[3]

As if that wasn’t enough, Patel tried to divert UK aid money to an Israeli army hospital in the Golan Heights.[4] She was found guilty of a breach of the ministerial code and was sent back to the back benches.

Less than two years later she was back in the Cabinet as Home Secretary, and it wasn’t long before she started interfering in the Middle East again, this time with the full support of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.[5]

"Given that Patel was sacked for interfering in Israel-Palestine affairs when she was the aid minister, there is even less justification for a Home Secretary to be interfering in what is normally a purely diplomatic decision"

Patel seized the opportunity when last month, at a speech to a right-wing think-tank in Washington,[6] she announced her plan to extend the designation of Hamas as a “terrorist” organisation – which current applies only to its military wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades – to encompass the entire political party.[7]

Her reasoning was plausible, almost technical, as she justified the decision by saying,

“The current listing of Hamas creates an artificial distinction between various parts of that organisation” and stating that she was merely trying to “update” it.

But this proscription – which went through the House of Commons a week later with very little opposition and without even a vote – contains two very big contradictions which will cause endless trouble in the future.[8]

Firstly, as Oxford professor Avi Shlaim asked,[9]

“Why was the latest anti-Palestinian policy shift announced by the Home Secretary rather than the Foreign Secretary?”

Given that Patel was sacked for interfering in Israel-Palestine affairs when she was the aid minister, there is even less justification for a Home Secretary to be interfering in what is normally a purely diplomatic decision.

There are two reasons why she got away with it this time.[10] One is that she now has the support of the Prime Minister, who is a big fan of “the Prittster” as he called her when he was trying to save her from the sack.[11]

Secondly, Patel has tried to argue that Palestine is in some way a domestic issue. She told her American audience that the designation of Hamas would “strengthen the case against anyone who waves a Hamas flag in the United Kingdom,” adding by way of explanation that flag-waving was “bound to make Jewish people feel unsafe.”

Professor Shlaim summed up the situation well:

Patel claims that designating the whole of Hamas as a terrorist organisation should be seen through a domestic prism: it will help to protect Jews in this country. This is preposterous.”

Patel seems unaware of the fact that Hamas is a political party that confines its activities to the historical borders of Palestine and is bound by its constitution to do so.[12] Patel has come forward with no evidence of Hamasterrorist” activity in the UK.

Yet despite this lack of evidence, the House of Commons has agreed to a change in the law which will mean that anyone who expresses support for Hamas, flies their flag or arranges meetings for the organisation will be in breach of a law that has a maximum jail sentence of 14 years.[13]

But there is a second, even more important, reason why Patel’s intervention should be resisted, if the House of Lords even gets to debate it.

As the Conservative MP Crispin Blunt points out,[14] “The difficulty we are giving ourselves here is that the jurisdiction of Gaza is run by Hamas. Nearly two million people are administered” by Hamas. In 2006, when Hamas emerged the unexpected winner of the Palestinian parliamentary elections, the then Labour government adopted a policy asserting that the UK government should have “no contact” with members of a Hamas government.

"The “terrorist” designation will fundamentally undermine the ability of the UK to push forward the process of reconciliation or negotiation, as well as undermine the motivation of the Palestinians to hold elections and build the Palestinian state"

That policy remains in place to this day, even though Israel has regular discussions with Hamas (a genuine policy of "no contact" would be inoperable), and the Foreign Office, then foreign secretary Jack Straw and even Tony Blair all now recognise that this approach was misguided.[15]

The “terrorist” designation will fundamentally undermine the ability of the UK to push forward the process of reconciliation or negotiation, as well as undermine the motivation of the Palestinians to hold elections and build the Palestinian state.[16] Why hold an election, and why vote in an election, if the US, UK and EU will refuse to recognise all except one result?

“At a deeper level,” says Professor Shlaim, “the shift in British policy was a product of the close ties between Israel and the Conservative Party.”

Priti Patel has been a fervent supporter of Conservative Friends of Israel ever since she was elected to Parliament in 2010.[17] She was present at a private meeting in 2012 where backbenchers harangued Foreign Secretary William Hague for being under the thumb of a “pro-ArabistForeign Office. Patel was one of the new Conservative MPs at that meeting and urged the Foreign Secretary to be “more critical of the Palestinians”.

Many see this as a pivotal point in cementing the dominance of Conservative Friends of Israel over successive foreign secretaries of state, forcing them to follow every twist and turn of Israeli government policy and to consign the UK’s official policies to declaratory statements only.

As Avi Shlaim says of Patel in particular, she “needs no prompting to do Israel's bidding”.[18]

References