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Opinion

From Trafalgar to Tehran: How October 7 unmasked the enemies within

The Hamas massacres transformed not only the region but also Britain. It revealed not just the brutality of our enemies abroad, but the unsettling number of their sympathisers at home

June 22, 2025 10:28
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Protest in London on June 21, 2025 (Image: Nicole Lampert)
3 min read

The US strikes on Iran’s nuclear programme raise any number of profound issues, the most obvious of which is what comes next.

Geopolitically, the consequences of October 7 continue to astound. The decision to massacre Jews was surely the most counterproductive act of terror in history, leading not only to the near-destruction of Hamas and Hezbollah, the collapse of the Assad regime in Syria and now the seeming destruction of the Iranian nuclear programme. There will be more, much more.

But although it may seem parochial in this context, the domestic impact of October 7 has also been transformational. But not, however, in a positive way.

If you had asked me in December 2019 about the state of antisemitism in Britain, I would have said that the defeat of Corbyn was likely a turning point. He and his acolytes unleashed a terrible wave of hate, the likes of which we had not seen since 1945. The genie was never going to be put fully back in the bottle. But I had not expected that the Corbyn years would seem, in hindsight, merely as the precursor to something much darker and deeper. Nor would I have predicted that the spark which lit the fuse of an explosion in hate would have been the massacre of Jews – a terrible irony.