The Daily Telegraph

Sunak warns Netanyahu over revenge attack

Prime Minister tells Israeli leader that strike on Iran would leave his country ‘less secure’ in phone call

- By Ben Riley-smith and Jotam Confino in Tel Avivi

RISHI SUNAK has warned Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone call that launching a retaliatio­n attack on Iran for Saturday’s strikes would leave Israel less secure.

Mr Sunak told the Israeli prime minister that a “significan­t escalation was in no one’s interest”, according to a Downing Street readout of the 30-minute call yesterday afternoon.

The conversati­on makes the Prime Minister the second world leader to talk to Mr Netanyahu since Iran’s missile and drone attack. Joe Biden, the US president, told Israel to call off immediate revenge in a call on Saturday night during the Iranian attack.

Mr Sunak’s call with Mr Netanyahu had been delayed by more than 24 hours, with the Isreali leader locked in war cabinet meetings.

The UK joined the US and France in helping Israel shoot down some of the 350 drones, missiles and rockets fired by Iran on Saturday night.

During the call Mr Netanyahu thanked Mr Sunak for the UK’S “rapid and robust support” for Israel in the attack, according to the read-out circulated by Number 10.

A Downing Street spokesman said: “The Prime Minister said Iran had badly miscalcula­ted and was increasing­ly isolated on the global stage, with the G7 coordinati­ng a diplomatic response.

“He stressed that significan­t escalation was in no one’s interest and would only deepen insecurity in the Middle East. This was a moment for calm heads to prevail.”

It is understood that Mr Sunak explicitly said on the call that Israel would become more insecure if a retaliatio­n strike on Iran was launched.

The call is the latest attempt by the West to urge restraint on Israel after what was seen militarily as the successful interventi­on of Iran’s rockets.

Mr Biden reportedly told Mr Netanyahu that he would not support any counter-attack against Iran in what has been seen as having a significan­t impact on Israeli government thinking.

Emmanuel Macron, the French president, had not yet spoken to Mr Netanyahu when Mr Sunak had his call. He has said “we will do all we can to avoid things flaring up, escalating”.

Israeli media reported last night that the war cabinet has agreed that any attack should be measured and take place on Iranian soil but that it cannot lead to a wider conflict with Iran.

One source told The Telegraph the cabinet has agreed that the retaliatio­n should be “strategic but painful”.

Iran’s president told Vladimir Putin that Tehran’s strikes on Israel were limited and that it wanted to avoid further escalation in the allies’ first phone call since Sunday’s missile and drone attack. The Russian president spoke to Ibrahim Raisi, with the Kremlin saying Russia hopes that all sides will show “reasonable restraint and prevent a new round of confrontat­ion fraught with catastroph­ic consequenc­es for the entire region”.

Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, also showed support for Iran, saying that Beijing thinks Iran can “handle the situation well and spare the region further turmoil”.

The United States believes that Israel is considerin­g a narrow and limited strike inside Iran, US officials have said.

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