UK PM Starmer and Israeli president clash during ‘tough’ meeting

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Israeli President Isaac Herzog (left) and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer meeting at 10 Downing Street in London on Sept 10.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog (left) and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer meeting at 10 Downing Street in London on Sept 10.

PHOTO: EPA

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LONDON - Israeli President Isaac Herzog said he had argued with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Downing Street on Sept 10 during a “tough” meeting that covered deep disagreements over recent behaviour by each other’s country.

The meeting comes a day after Israel expanded its attacks on Hamas by

launching an airstrike

aimed at killing the Islamist group's political leaders in Qatar, a British ally in the Middle East, which Mr Starmer condemned.

Israel has been

angered by Britain’s plans

to join several other Western countries, including France and Canada, in recognising a Palestinian state later this month - unless Israel meets conditions including a ceasefire in Gaza.

“Things were said that were tough and strong, and clearly we can argue, because when allies meet, they can argue. We are both democracies,” Mr Herzog said, at a later Chatham House event.

He said Mr Starmer's plan for Palestinian statehood and his views on humanitarian aid in Gaza had been the root of the disagreement and added that he had invited the British government to undertake a fact-finding mission to Israel.

He reaffirmed that the UK and Israel were longstanding allies and said he remains committed to working towards an enduring peace for both Israelis and Palestinians.

Earlier, the two men briefly shook hands without smiling on the steps of Downing Street before they entered the building.

Mr Starmer also raised with Mr Herzog

the Israeli airstrike on Qatar

, condemning the incident as “completely unacceptable.”

“He said the strikes were a flagrant violation of a key partner’s sovereignty and do nothing to secure the peace we all desperately want to see,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.

The Gaza war has strained Israel's relations with Britain and other European countries. Britain has blocked Israeli officials from attending its biggest defence trade show taking place this week.

Mr Starmer is under pressure from politicians in his own party to take a tougher approach to Israel, but he told Parliament on Sept 10 that diplomacy was needed to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and to get the Israeli hostages released by Hamas.

Mr Starmer (left) welcoming Mr Herzog to 10 Downing Street in London on Sept 10.

PHOTO: EPA

Mr Herzog’s role as Israel’s president is mainly ceremonial but he caused anger when he said all residents of Gaza were responsible for the Hamas-led attack on Israel after

the Oct 7 attacks

in 2023.

Asked earlier on Sept 10 why he was meeting Herzog, Mr Starmer said: “I will not give up on diplomacy, that is the politics of students.”

Mr Wes Streeting, who is health minister in Mr Starmer’s government, said this week that Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza was leading it to “pariah status”.

Mr Starmer also

hosted Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas

on Sept 8, where they agreed there would be “absolutely no role” for Hamas in the future governance of a Palestinian state.

Britain has promised to recognise a Palestinian state ahead of the UN General Assembly later in September unless Israel meets four conditions, including ending the war in Gaza and allowing more aid into the Palestinian enclave. REUTERS

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