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Satnews Daily
April 21st, 2009

Britain Reviews Role of Reconnaissance Satellites After Israel's Assault on Gaza


Gaza According to the U.K.'s foreign minister Britain will review of all its weapons' exports to Israel after the country's assault on the Gaza Strip. Even though Britain supplies less than one percent of Israel's military imports, it was acknowledged that some U.K.-supplied components were "almost certainly" used in the assault. Photo courtesy of guardian.co.uk: "On December 2008 Israel began a series of air attacks on Gaza in response to rocket attacks that restarted after the expiry of a six-month ceasefire just over a week earlier. After eight days of attacks during which more than 400 Palestinians and four Israelis were killed, Israeli tanks entered Gaza on January 4, 2009. On January 18, after Hamas and Israel agreed a ceasefire, Israeli troops began to withdraw. More than 1,300 Palenstinians and 13 Israeis had been killed." British Foreign Secretary David Miliband told lawmakers that all current and future export licenses to Israel were being looked at "in light of recent events in Gaza."

The government was pressured by lawmakers to ensure that British-made weapons or weapon components weren't used by Israeli forces in their attack on Gaza, which lasted more than three weeks and left about 1,400 dead, according to one Palestinian count. Israel launched the assault in late December in an attempt to stem the barrage of rockets being fired from Gaza onto Israeli territory.

Some of the weapons and parts were used in F-16 combat aircraft, radar and navigation equipment used on Apache attack helicopters, and parts for a gun used on Israel's Saar-class corvettes.

Miliband added that minor components supplied to Israel for use in its reconnaissance satellites "may have been involved" in preparing for the assault. But he said that, contrary to reports carried by media and human rights groups, there was no evidence that U.K.-supplied equipment for Israel's unmanned aircraft industry were used by the Israel Defense Forces or that U.K. components were used to build Merkava tanks or D9 armored bulldozers used by Israel in the conflict.

Miliband did not say whether the export of the U.K.-made parts used in the assault would be restricted in any way, saying only that their use by Israel's military would be taken into account when officials licensed technology for export.

The Israeli Embassy in London did not immediately return a call seeking comment.