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Starmer warns UK cabinet of potential US attack on Iran

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Sir Keir Starmer has put his cabinet on alert for a possible US attack on Iran, just 24 hours after insisting Donald Trump had given no indication he was about to “get involved in this conflict”.

British officials said the situation was “grave and volatile”, while the prime minister’s team discussed whether the president might seek to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities from the joint US-UK air base at Diego Garcia.

Britain has so far stayed out of the Israel-Iran war and is determined not to do anything that could lead to the closure of its embassy in Tehran, a key western diplomatic post in the Middle East.

Starmer discussed the possibility of a US attack on Iran at a meeting of a Whitehall emergency committee on Wednesday, according to officials briefed on the talks.

Participants included senior cabinet ministers, military chiefs, intelligence bosses and US ambassador Lord Peter Mandelson.

The prime minister continued to call for “de-escalation” — the official reason why Britain has not offered any support for Israel in defending itself from Iranian air attacks.

Starmer said at a G7 summit in Canada on Tuesday there was “nothing the president said that suggests he’s about to get involved in this conflict”.

But British officials subsequently admitted Trump was unlikely to share his true thinking over dinner with western leaders — and that the White House’s approach to the crisis was an “iterative process”.

The possible use of Diego Garcia, a base in the Indian Ocean, for US air strikes by B2 stealth bombers would draw Britain closer to the conflict.

One UK official said there was not a clear “yes or no” answer to whether Washington would have to seek approval from Britain to use the base to launch an attack.

The UK last month signed a £3.4bn deal to hand sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius, while retaining a 99-year lease on the air base at Diego Garcia, the largest of the islands.

A US Air Force B-1B bomber takes off from the Diego Garcia base during allied operations in Afghanistan © USAF/DoD/AFP via Getty Images

Israel’s ambassador in London on Tuesday said defensive support from the UK had not been discussed or requested.

This contrasts with how UK Royal Air Force fighter jets helped shoot down drones fired by Iran at Israel in April last year. RAF aircraft also provided assistance during a missile attack by Tehran on Israel last October.

The UK also helped the US last year in military strikes against Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Any British involvement in the current crisis could raise questions about the ongoing presence of UK diplomats in Tehran, a city where the US does not have an embassy.

A Downing Street spokeswoman said after the Whitehall committee meeting: “Ministers were updated on efforts to support British nationals in the region and protect regional security, as well as ongoing diplomatic efforts.”

While Starmer has repeatedly emphasised Israel’s right to defend itself and has said Iran cannot be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon, he has stopped short of saying he would support US involvement in the Israel-Iran conflict. 

Any US attack on Iran could potentially focus initially on the heavily reinforced Fordow nuclear site, which Israel lacks the bombs to destroy.

A satellite image of the Fordow nuclear site in Iran
A satellite image of the Fordow nuclear site in Iran © 2025 Maxar Technologies/AFP via Getty Images

US bunker busting combs capable of penetrating Fordow must be launched from American B2 stealth bombers, and Washington positioned at least six B2-As at Diego Garcia in March as it increased pressure on Tehran to agree a nuclear deal. 

Experts said the US could launch B2 attacks from a home base in Missouri but the additional distance and refuelling needs would be an added complication to any mission.

A UK government spokesperson said they would “not comment on hypothetical operations”.

Meanwhile family members of British embassy and consulate staff in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem “have been temporarily withdrawn as a precautionary measure”, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said.

That decision stands in contrast to the FCDO’s current advice to UK nationals in Israel, who have been invited to register themselves with the British embassy or consulate but have not been told to leave the country.

The British Embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel
The British Embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel © Engin Korkmaz/Alamy

British officials said the number of people registering for advice and other consular help was “in the low thousands”, many of them dual UK-Israeli nationals.

The FCDO has issued advice that it is still possible to leave using commercial land routes through Egypt or Jordan, but has not recommended that UK nationals try to exit Israel.

“Our key message to British nationals is to follow the advice of local authorities and stay close to shelter and to register their presence with the FCDO,” a Number 10 spokesperson said.

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