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Martin Bright

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Martin Bright,

Martin Bright

Analysis

Analysis: Fallout puts strain on new coalition

June 10, 2010 12:52
1 min read

The new government's pro-Israel stance has been sorely tested by the fiasco of the raid on the Gaza flotilla. William Hague is said to have been taken aback by the level of anger from Conservative MPs after news of the deaths of the operation broke last week. The deaths of nine Turkish nationals and the presence of British activists made Israel's actions impossible to defend in the immediate aftermath.

The immediate diplomatic aftermath has been an increased pressure on the Israeli government to lift the Gaza blockade. The Foreign Office is pressing the Quartet to urge Israel to switch from a "white list" to a "black list" system. In other words, there would no longer be a list of goods allowed in to Gaza, but a list of banned items. This would be combined with end-user certificates to assure the Israelis that dual-use items, such as circuit boards, would not be used in weapons.

But thus far, William Hague's tone as Foreign Secretary has been less strident than his predecessor in critcising Israel. Although Middle East minister Alistair Burt spoke to the Israeli ambassador Ron Prosor immediately after the event, there are no plans to call him in for a carpeting.

Senior community leaders met Mr Burt on Wednesday to raise concerns about the hostile tone of the debate over Israel. This followed a strongly-worded statement from the Board of Deputies, warning of "the disproportionate attention paid to Israel while larger, more significant conflicts, some involving far greater loss of life, are virtually ignored".

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