Israeli diplomat plotted to ‘take down’ U.K. politicians
LONDON — In a deeply embarrassing episode revealed on Sunday, a senior employee of the Israeli Embassy in Britain was recorded plotting to “take down” senior British politicians critical of Israel and calling Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson “an idiot” who “has become minister of foreign affairs without any responsibilities.”
The Israeli ambassador, Mark Regev, offered a formal apology on Friday, according to a statement from the Israeli Embassy. The embassy also said that the employee, Shai Masot, who describes himself as a former major in the Israeli Army now working as a political officer, would soon leave his job.
Masot made the comment in October, in footage filmed in a London restaurant and obtained by the newspaper The Mail on Sunday. The recording was made by an Al-Jazeera reporter acting undercover.
The conversation involved Masot and Maria Strizzolo, an aide to Robert Halfon, an education minister and former political director of Conservative Friends of Israel.
Masot was particularly eager to target Alan Duncan, a minister in the Foreign Office who has been critical of Israel and its settlements in occupied Palestinian territory, a sensitive issue in British politics. Duncan, he said, “is causing a lot of problems.”
In the footage, Masot asked Strizzolo, “Can I give you some M.P.s that I would suggest you would take down?” he asked. He went on to say that she knew which M.P.s — members of Parliament — he was referring to.
She asked him to remind her. “The deput y foreign minister,” he said, referring to Duncan. She said, “You still want to go for it?” His reply was ambiguous, but he said that Duncan was still causing problems. Strizzolo then asked, “I thought we had, you know, neutralized him just a little bit , no?” Masot answered, “No.”
Masot also mocked the opposition Labour leader, J e r e my C o r b y n , w h o m he called “crazy,” and his “weirdo” supporters.
Strizzolo told the newspaper that her conversation with Masot was “tonguein-cheek and gossipy.” But Crispin Blunt, a member of Parliament and chairman of the select committee on foreign affairs, said the “apparent activity of a diplomat of a foreign state,” was “formally outrageous and deserving of investigation.”