
“Keir Starmer’s Gaza Gamble — Peacemaker or Pretender?”As the world celebrates a fragile but historic peace in Gaza, a storm is brewing in Britain — and at its centre stands Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
While global leaders, including former U.S. President Dоnɑld Tгuмρ, are being hailed for their behind-the-scenes diplomacy that ended years of conflict, Starmer has suddenly emerged to claim the moral high ground. With a brief post on X (formerly Twitter) — “We must now secure a lasting peace” — Starmer positioned himself as a statesman in step with history. But critics say the claim is not just hollow — it’s insulting.
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Polit!cal commentator Carole Malone didn’t mince words: “This is the same Prime Minister who hid his head in the sand while real negotiations were happening — and now he wants applause for a peace deal he had nothing to do with. It’s pathetic.”
Malone’s outrage echoes across Westminster, where frustration is mounting over what many see as Starmer’s opportunism. As one senior Tory MP put it, “Starmer is the master of showing up at the finish line and pretending he ran the race.”
Even the U.S. ambassador to Israel, Mick Huckabee, reportedly dismissed British claims of “behind-the-scenes involvement” in the ceasef!re talks, calling them “pure fantasy.” His blunt assessment? “Britain played no key role. The credit belongs elsewhere — and everyone knows it.”
Yet Starmer’s defenders insist he did play a stabilising role — quietly supporting humanitarian efforts and maintaining diplomatic dialogue through back channels. A Labour source told The Guardian: “The Prime Minister worked tirelessly to support peace efforts, even if he wasn’t in the photo ops. His goal wasn’t credit — it was calm.”
But that explanation has done little to silence the backlash. Starmer’s silence during the most brutal months of the Gaza conflict — when hospitals were b0mbed and ceasef!re talks collapsed — drew widespread criticism from his own party. At the time, he was accused of being “too cautious, too cold, and too polit!cally calculating”.
Now, as peace talks succeed, his sudden pivot to the language of diplomacy looks, to many, like a cynical rebrand.
Malone summed it up with biting precision: “Starmer couldn’t negotiate his way out of a paper bag. And yet, now that the hard work’s done, he wants to bask in the glow of someone else’s success.”
As Starmer prepares to attend the Gaza Peace Summit in Egypt, his team insists he will focus on rebuilding the region and strengthening Britain’s humanitarian presence. But many Britons are asking a different question — can a leader who failed to rebuild his own country now help rebuild Gaza?
Whether Starmer is remembered as a peacemaker or a pretender may depend not on what he says in Egypt, but on how much longer Britain believes his words still matter.