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Review: Margaret Thatcher and the Middle East by Azriel Bermant

Cambridge University Press, £64.99

November 11, 2016 16:13
Mrs Thatch Mrs Thatch

ByRobert Philpot, Robert Philpot

2 min read

There is little about which Israel’s political leadership agrees, but the death of Margaret Thatcher, three years ago, brought about a rare moment of consensus. From left and right, the former Prime Minister was lauded as a friend of the Jewish state and its people.

The plaudits were deserved but, as Azriel Bermant suggests, the picture was more complex than the tributes suggested. One of Mrs Thatcher’s first foreign visitors after she entered Downing Street was Menachem Begin. It was not a meeting of minds.

Despite her attempts to reassure him — “We only think of the good of Israel, we are friends,” Mrs Thatcher stated as she, Begin and her Foreign Secretary rowed about settlements and the future of the West Bank — it set the seal on a distinctly frosty relationship during much of her first term in office.

Begin was furious at her decision to join other European leaders in signing the Venice Declaration recognising the Palestinians’ right to self-determination and suggesting that the PLO be “associated” with any future negotiations.
Mrs Thatcher, in turn, was full-throated in her condemnation of the bombing of the Osirak nuclear reactor and the invasion of Lebanon.