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Timmermans’ folly: When dismantling Iron Dome becomes ‘progressive’

The Dutch Labour party’s call for an embargo on parts used by Israel’s missile defense sparks Jewish exodus and national outrage

June 30, 2025 12:53
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Leader of the Dutch Labour Party (PvdA) Frans Timmermans delivers a speech during the conference of his party and of the Green Left party (GroenLinks) (Image: Getty)
3 min read

“What this resolution really says is: ‘just flatten Israel’.” Michel Waterman, columnist for the Dutch Jewish weekly New Israelite Weekly (NIW), wrote these words explaining why he resigned his membership of the Dutch Labour Party after 49 years. “I can no longer be a member of this party, not even for a minute,” he added.

The resolution he called “abhorrent” demanded an arms embargo against Israel, including components used in Iron Dome, the missile defence shield credited with saving hundreds, if not thousands, of civilian lives—particularly since Iran began attacking Israeli cities after IDF strikes on its nuclear weapons programme.

Kati Piri, the Labour Party (PvdA) spokesperson in the Lower House who introduced the resolution, claimed that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu uses Iron Dome “as an offensive weapon”, and that dismantling it could “de-escalate” the conflict with Iran and its proxies, Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. The fact that the PvdA – once staunchly pro-Jewish and pro-Israel – called on the government to leave Israeli civilians defenceless under Iranian rocket fire shocked not only Dutch Jews but much of the political spectrum, from centre-left to far-right.

Even so, PvdA leader Frans Timmermans doubled down, arguing it was acceptable to leave civilians defenceless since “in a democracy they are responsible” for their government’s actions. He reiterated this stance at the Labour conference, saying “Israel feels invulnerable” and that boycotting Iron Dome might pressure it to stop committing “war crimes”.