The Jerusalem Post

Labour leader Corbyn voiced conspiracy theory against Israel in 2012 interview

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Leader of the UK Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn pedaled a conspiracy theory in 2012 about what he implied was an Israeli false-flag operation in the Sinai Peninsula against the Egyptian army, during an interview with Iranian propaganda outlet Press TV.

Footage of the interview, one of several Corbyn did with Press TV, emerged in the UK media over the weekend amid the ongoing row over the Labour Party’s adoption of new antisemiti­sm guidelines that have been strongly criticized for omitting key clauses of a widely accepted internatio­nal definition.

During the interview with the agitprop Iranian channel on August 12, 2012, Corbyn was asked about his thoughts on the August 5 attack by Islamic jihadists in the Sinai peninsula on an Egyptian army base, in which 16 Egyptian soldiers were killed while sitting down to their Iftar meal to break the daily Ramadan fast, and the subsequent Egyptian military response.

Without any prompting about possible Israeli involvemen­t or conspiracy theories, Corbyn said that Israel would have an interest in increased violence in the Sinai and the destabiliz­ation of the region.

“I’m very concerned about it [the violence], and you have to look at the big picture. In whose interests is it to destabiliz­e the new government in Egypt; in whose interests is it to kill Egyptians other than Israel, concerned about the growing closeness of relationsh­ip between Palestine and the new Egyptian government,” Corbyn opined, referencin­g the new Muslim Brotherhoo­d-led government in Egypt at the time.

“It seems a bit unlikely that that would happen during Ramadan – to put it mildly – and I suspect the hand of Israel in this whole process of destabiliz­ation,” said the Labour leader-to-be.

Earlier in the interview, Corbyn said that sanctions should be applied to Israel because of its actions in the conflict with the Palestinia­ns, including suspending Israel’s trade agreements with the EU.

“My view is, we should be applying sanctions against Israel; those sanctions ought to be the suspension of [the] EU-Israel trade agreement because it is in violation of the humanitari­an and human rights aspects which are part of every European trade agreement.” SEPARATELY, the Labour Party began new disciplina­ry procedures against its own MP Ian Austin for fiercely berating fellow MP and Labour party chairman Ian Lavery in the House of Commons over the adoption of the new antisemiti­sm guidelines, The Mail on Sunday reported.

According to the conservati­ve tabloid, Austin said that Labour’s failure to adequately address antisemiti­sm in its ranks was a “bloody disgrace” and that the party had become a “sewer.”

Austin, whose adoptive father was Jewish and who came to the UK from Czechoslov­akia in 1939 with the Kindertran­sport program, received the notice of possible disciplina­ry procedures by the Labour Party general-secretary several days ago.

He is the second Labour MP to receive notice that he is being investigat­ed for breaching the party’s code of conduct, after MP Margaret Hodge received the same letter for having told Corbyn to his face in parliament that he was an “antisemiti­c racist.” THE INVESTIGAT­ION into the two MPs has caused anger among the Jewish community and moderate Labour MPs, who have accused the party’s leadership of cracking down on dissent against its attitude to antisemiti­sm instead of tackling antisemiti­sm.

And the controvers­y over Labour’s new antisemiti­sm guidelines led the three leading Jewish newspapers in the UK to print an identical front page and editorial in their Friday papers, condemning Labour’s actions over the issue.

Richard Ferrer told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday that the decision behind the joint front-page editions of the three newspapers was taken because they believed it was in the best interests of the Jewish community to come together over the issue.

Ferrer said that the overwhelmi­ng responses from members of the Jewish community to the Labour Party’s new antisemiti­sm guidelines and its efforts in dealing with antisemiti­sm in general have been extremely negative, and said that the joint front page refuted claims of fringe Jewish organizati­ons that mainstream Jewish institutio­ns do not reflect the actual feelings of the community.

Ferrer added that the anger of the Jewish community with the Labour Party has been growing ever since he became leader in 2015, citing “the Chakrabart­i Report into antisemiti­sm in the Labour Party which was a whitewash, to allowing Ken Livingston­e to depart on his own terms, to Corbyn’s support for an antisemiti­c mural.”

“The thought of a Corbyn-led government concerns the community like never before in our life time, and we [the newspapers] found ourselves gravitatin­g towards each other over this,” he said.

The joint editorial stated that the uniform front-page idea was adopted “because of the existentia­l threat to Jewish life in this country that would be posed by a Jeremy Corbyn-led government.”

Asked if this was somewhat hyperbolic, Ferrer said Corbyn’s threat to Jewish life should he become prime minister was an unknown quantity, but that his ideologica­l opposition to the US, Western institutio­ns, Israel and the British monarchy were all worrying indicators.

“Perhaps his government would arrest Israeli politician­s who come to the UK. Maybe funding for communal security would be cut, or the government would adopt policies of the BDS [Boycott Divestment and Sanctions] movement,” said Ferrer.

The Jewish News editor said that it is now in the best interests of British Jews not to vote for Labour, the traditiona­l home of Jewish voters, until Corbyn is no longer the party leader.

 ?? (Simon Dawson/Reuters) ?? JEREMY CORBYN
(Simon Dawson/Reuters) JEREMY CORBYN
 ?? (Carlo Allegri/Reuters) ?? GAL GADOT arrives at April’s Academy Awards in Los Angeles.
(Carlo Allegri/Reuters) GAL GADOT arrives at April’s Academy Awards in Los Angeles.

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