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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Friends uninvited to the party

David Cameron’s description of Gaza was no gaffe; he meant it — for all the outcry among his ‘friendly’ Israel supporters

August 12, 2010 10:10
3 min read

My dictionary defines a "gaffe" as "a blatant mistake or misjudgment". Prime Minister David Cameron has recently been accused of having made several political gaffes in the course of various ill-judged foreign policy initiatives.

Speaking in the USA at the end of July, he asserted that the UK had been the junior partner fighting Nazism in 1940, when in reality the UK had then stood alone against Hitlerism and continued to do so until the entry of the USA into the war at the end of the following year. Cameron has had to apologise numerous times for this risible ignorance of historical fact.

No sooner had he offered the latest of these apologies than - at the same meeting at Hove town hall last week - yet another gaffe fell from his lips, namely his insistence on "the fact that Iran has got a nuclear weapon". An embarrassed Downing Street spokesperson rapidly offered the clarification that what the Prime Minister had meant to say was that Iran was seeking a nuclear weapon.

Meanwhile, the PM has had to weather yet another diplomatic storm of his own making, arising from ill-judged remarks he made in Turkey relating to the culpability of certain interests in Pakistan for the terrorism of the Taliban in neighbouring Afghanistan. Even if this accusation was correct (and there is a substantial body of evidence to suggest it was), these were not remarks that should have been made by a British Prime Minister in public on the eve of a state visit here by the Pakistani president.