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Martin Bright

ByMartin Bright, Martin Bright

Analysis

Diplomacy - or mixed messages?

May 5, 2011 10:04
1 min read

It is becoming increasingly difficult to trace the twists and turns of the government's position on Israel. First, David Cameron used a speech in Ankara to describe Gaza as a prison camp and condemned Israel's boarding of the Turkish flotilla as completely unacceptable; then he told the CST that Israel has the right to search shipping that enters its territorial waters.

The coalition has pressed on with reform of the law on universal jurisdiction in an apparent bid to improve diplomatic relations with Israel, while expressing a growing frustration with the intransigence of the Netanyahu government.

The latest statements from Mr Cameron and Mr Hague welcoming the Fatah-Hamas unity deal take the policy confusion on to a whole new plane.

This is not the first time William Hague has found himself overtaken by history. Before the Arab Spring, the Foreign Secretary was determined to develop better relations with Syria in order to prise the Assad regime away from Iran.