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Martin Bright

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Martin Bright,

Martin Bright

Analysis

Cameron's comments are a measure of Israel's PR failure

July 29, 2010 11:46
2 min read

David Cameron's description of Gaza as a "prison camp" during a visit to Turkey may have caused deep offence in Israel and parts of the Jewish community around the world, but the Prime Minister can be safe in the knowledge that his comments are relatively uncontroversial elsewhere.

Like most British politicians of his generation, Mr Cameron has no great knowledge of foreign affairs. But ignorance cannot explain why the Ankara speech did not make the usual diplomatic nod towards Hamas extremism and the threat to Israel's security.

Mr Cameron has built his political career by surfing the zeitgeist. As a fundamentalist centre-ground politician he is always painfully sensitive to the consensus. This is why Ankara is such a significant moment for Israel's relationship with Britain.

Mr Cameron's analysis may be naïve. Gaza is not a prison camp. But the Israeli government should not be surprised that he feels he has the licence to use such language. There is no nuance in the court of public opinion and Mr Cameron knows that during his first major tour of world capitals few, if any, will pull him up for his comments.