This article appeared in the Jerusalem Post on 3 January 2022
Israeli presidents and prime ministers do not
normally act as the advance guard for visits abroad by foreign ministers, but
that is how events panned out in the dying days of 2021. All three chanced, or managed, to visit the
UK during the month of November. By the
time Yair Lapid touched down at London’s Heathrow on Sunday 28 November, both
President Isaac Herzog and prime minister Naftali Bennett had come, held the
friendliest of exchanges with UK prime minister Boris Johnson, and his new
foreign secretary Liz Truss, and departed. Yair Lapid, his path made smooth for
him, scored a remarkable success in the UK, the echoes of which still
reverberate.
"British-Israeli relations have
entered a golden era” trumpeted a headline in the UK’s prestigious Jewish
Chronicle a week or so after Lapid had left. The article, by Jake Wallis Simons its
editor, went on to claim that British officials and parliamentarians were
“falling over each other in their love for the Jewish state.”
Back in July, shortly after Naftali Bennett had formed his coalition government, Johnson was on the phone inviting him to the UK. Bennett flew to Britain on November 2 to attend the international Cop26 meeting, hosted by the UK in Glasgow. Meeting Johnson, Bennett said: “You're a huge friend to Israel; that's no secret. What we'll be discussing is how we bring our relationship to the next level."
With
so much good will between Britain and Israel already expressed, and the
groundwork firmly laid, Lapid did not face a difficult time when he landed in
the UK on November 28. Even so, he could scarcely have anticipated the
diplomatic success he achieved.
In his Jewish
Chronicle article, Simons revealed he had
been present at 10 Downing Street for a Hanukah reception attended by prime
minister Johnson and Lapid. The chemistry between them, he wrote, was
obvious. “They had spent all day
together, an honor that is not normally accorded to a visit from a prime minister
of a country with a population of less than 10 million,” let alone, he might
have added, a mere foreign minister. Their
close relationship, he asserts, is based on the time, 10 years before, when the
two of them as journalists had enjoyed Tel Aviv’s nightlife together. Lapid himself, in a media interview on
December 24, confirmed that he has cherished a close personal friendship with
Johnson for many years.
On the day after Lapid arrived, November 29,
the Daily Telegraph achieved a journalistic coup – an article written
jointly by the British and Israeli foreign ministers, Liz Truss and Yair
Lapid. Headed: “Together we can
propel both our nations to safety and prosperity”, the piece heralded a new
UK-Israeli agreement, to be signed later that day, which they described as “a
major step forward, transforming our close friendship into an even closer
partnership by formally agreeing a new strategic plan for the next decade
spanning cyber, tech, trade and defense.”
Lapid later described this UK-Israel Strategic Partnership as “a major
moment in the relationship between the United Kingdom and Israel.”
The ministers noted that Israel and the UK have already built up their
bi-lateral trade to an annual £5 billion (nearly $7 billion), and quoted two
major examples: the UK’s Rolls-Royce is supplying
jet engines to Israel’s national airline, and the Israeli pharmaceutical giant
Teva is supplying one in six of the medicines prescribed in the UK’s National
Health Service.
In a further agreement, Israel and Britain were opening negotiations
on a new bespoke free trade deal which would help both nations seize new
opportunities in the industries of the future.
Moreover, Israel will officially become a Tier One cyber partner for the
UK.
Lapid had stopped off in the UK on his way to attend the latest round of talks, being held in
Vienna, on reactivating the nuclear deal between world powers and Iran. One of the most eye-catching aspects
of the joint article by the two ministers is a renewed commitment to stop
Tehran ever getting nuclear weapons. Making
President Herzog’s earlier ask of Britain a reality, they affirmed that the UK
and Israel will “work night and day to prevent the Iranian regime from ever
becoming a nuclear power. The clock is ticking, which heightens the need for
close cooperation with our partners and friends to thwart Tehran’s ambitions.”
The joint article
concludes: “Israel and the UK are the closest of friends, and today we are
deepening that partnership to become even closer. Together, we will forge ahead
and ensure the future is defined by liberal democracies who believe in freedom
and fairness.”
That is as firm an
expression of friendship and solidarity between two nations as it is possible
to envisage. Notable by its absence is any
reference to the Israel-Palestinian dispute, the two-state solution, the
expansion of settlements, or any lack of proportionality in Israel’s response
to being bombarded with rockets and missiles from the Gaza strip. Doubtless
Britain has an official policy on these matters which possibly varies from
Israel’s. Given the new warmth in
UK-Israeli relations, might a chance exist for the two nations to reach a
common view even on these? That is a
matter for Lapid to ponder, while he awaits his turn in the prime ministerial
chair.
Published in the Jerusalem Post on line:
https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-691392
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