Starmer must not break promise to proscribe Iran’s IRGC
On October 7 last year, Hamas terrorists invaded Israel and brutally murdered more than 1,200 men, women, and children. They kidnapped another 250, to prolong their suffering.
For many, this was a catastrophe that occurred far, far away. Understandably, the massacre, and ensuing war between Israel and Hamas, is not a daily priority for most people here in Britain.
But what if I was to tell you the threat is much closer to home? What if I told you that Hamas, a brutal terrorist organisation, has some of its agents walking our streets?
And that its masters in Iran work to sow division in our communities, operating from buildings in the UK where we know they are plotting attacks on British residents.
This is the reality. Iran, with its malevolent ayatollahs in Tehran screaming that the UK is Little Satan to America’s Great Satan, seeks to undermine our way of life.
The world’s chief sponsor of terror, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), uses its £5 billion budget to spread chaos, not just across the Middle East, but here in the UK too.
They control armies of terrorists who even threaten the shipping lanes we all rely on for goods and food we have here in Britain.
To the far south, the Houthis in Yemen, fire rockets at our ships as they approach the Suez Canal.
Only last week, we learnt that Iran has sent 200 ballistic missiles to Russia for the dictator Vladimir Putin to rain down on our allies, the people of Ukraine.
In return, our intelligence agencies suspect Russia is sharing nuclear secrets with Iran, a regime set on building a nuclear bomb to wipe Israel off the map.
Making up this axis of autocracy is China, the economic superpower bankrolling Russia and Iran by buying large quantities of their oil they cannot sell elsewhere.
All the while, China grows in power, threatening not just Taiwan, but the values of freedom and equality we share in the West.
President Xi Jinping continues to pick off weaker nations with loans that can never be repaid, seizing ports and territory with economic blackmail.
Sir Keir Starmer has only been Prime Minister for a couple of months.
In that time it’s difficult to even begin solving some of these bigger problems we face.
But already he is making serious mistakes which are setting our country on a dangerous path.
In the face of Chinese hostility, his Government cowers, refusing to call them a threat to our national security despite MI5 warning that Chinese espionage is taking place on an “epic scale”.
Labour carelessly talks once again of the UK handing over the Chagos territory, strategic islands in the Indian Ocean, which both we and our allies rely upon for projecting power.
The plan is to give the islands to Mauritius, a tiny nation over which China exerts great influence. In government we blocked this. We must hope Labour does not buckle.
Vital protections for free speech at our universities have been reversed, reportedly to placate Beijing.
In the face of Russian aggression, Sir Keir has delayed a critical increase in defence spending.
And on Iran, Labour dithers.
In opposition Sir Keir’s party repeatedly made a virtue of their promise to proscribe, or ban, the IRGC, designating it a terrorist organisation.
David Lammy told how Labour’s government would ban the IRGC, again and again. Now, he tells us climate change is a bigger threat than terrorism. Try to explain that to the victims of terror attacks.
Instead of forking out £11 billion for overseas climate aid, he should be prioritising spending on our under-powered military and increasing defence spending to three per cent of GDP.
As a minister in government, I consistently argued behind the scenes for proscription of the IRGC.
Alongside colleagues, including staunch campaigner on this issue Sir Iain Duncan Smith, I brought a backbench motion to ban the IRGC.
Sadly we did not win the argument within government, in large part because of a Foreign Office orthodoxy that sought to block all these moves, with vague reports of the brilliant access we gained by not banning the Iranian Guards.
But now Labour must hold true to their promise, for the safety of our people and the world.
On our streets we know that the IRGC has supported groups sowing division with attacks on Jewish people and Israel, which I visited in the aftermath of the Oct 7 attacks.
They support mosques, charities and schools to radicalise people in our communities against our British way of life.
And they use criminal gangs and thugs to intimidate people on our streets, forcing journalists out of our country last year.
MI5 and police revealed they had foiled 15 Iranian assassination plots over a year against UK residents who the regime wants rid of.
Proscribing the IRGC would allow UK authorities to crack down much more tightly against groups linked to the Iranian regime’s terror sponsors.
This is vital for our security.
It will send a clear signal that the IRGC’s actions in the UK, and around the globe, are a threat to our way of life, and that we draw a clear line that must not be crossed.
We cannot be pushovers. Because to lack confidence now, to fail to stop Iran in its tracks, only stores up bigger problems for the future.
It’s a lesson the world has learnt to its cost before. And one that we must not forget.