Former British prime minister John Major praised Oman’s dictator, Sultan Qaboos, for passing a law that gave him absolute power, describing it as ‘clearly a most imaginative and constructive step forward’. The law enacted in 1996 by the close British ally effectively banned political parties, independent media and criticism of the ruler.
Middle East
‘A lot of people share my opinion within the military’, says soldier who protested against UK arms exports to Saudi Arabia
by PHIL MILLER | 18 December 2020
TAGGED: Saudi Arabia, Yemen
Ahmed Al-Batati, a Lance Corporal in the British army, staged a public protest against British arms sales to Saudi Arabia in August, concerned that “a child was dying every 10 minutes” in Yemen. In his first interview since becoming a civilian, he tells Declassified that others in the army share his view and that he took action because parliament did nothing.
Did the UK’s secret Libya policy contribute to the Manchester terror attack?
by PETER OBORNE | 16 December 2020
TAGGED: Libya, Manchester Bombing, MI6, Terrorism
The official inquiry into the 2017 Manchester bombing has yet to probe the links between the terrorist, Salman Abedi, and UK covert action during the 2011 war in Libya – yet there is no point in the inquiry unless it asks difficult questions the British establishment would rather avoid.
Britain sent Saudi Arabia thousands of spare parts for warplanes amid arms embargo
by PHIL MILLER | 3 December 2020
TAGGED: BAE Systems, Cyprus, Saudi Arabia, Yemen
The UK military supplied 2,323 spare parts for Tornado fighter jets to an arms company in Saudi Arabia last year, despite a court order against exporting weapons for use in the Yemen war, Declassified UK has found.
British spy agency refuses to acknowledge its bases in Gulf dictatorship
by PHIL MILLER | 30 November 2020
TAGGED: GCHQ, Oman
Britain’s largest intelligence agency, GCHQ, is refusing to publish details of its bases in Oman, where it is believed to operate three surveillance sites.
Saudi pilot killed in Yemen was trained by Britain, minister admits
by PHIL MILLER | 19 November 2020
TAGGED: Saudi Arabia, Yemen
A Saudi air force officer who crashed while undertaking ‘operational tasks’ over Yemen was taught to fly by Britain’s Royal Air Force and arms corporation BAE Systems, the UK government has confirmed.
Ties that bind: Britain buys £46m of Israeli military equipment and stations troops in Israel
by DAVID CRONIN | 8 October 2020
TAGGED: Israel
Britain’s deepening military relationship with Israel comes under scrutiny as details emerge from Declassified UK’s information requests.
More than two dozen Saudi Typhoon pilots trained in Britain
by PHIL MILLER | 7 October 2020
TAGGED: Saudi Arabia, Yemen
Britain’s Royal Air Force has trained 25 pilots from Saudi Arabia to fly the powerful Typhoon jet and continues to provide instruction on using missiles involved in devastating attacks on civilians in Yemen.
British training of Saudi pilots continues amid bombing of Yemen
by PHIL MILLER | 23 September 2020
TAGGED: Saudi Arabia, Yemen
UK defence minister admits that training of Saudi Typhoon pilots is continuing despite Riyadh using these British-made jets to conduct airstrikes in Yemen, a country on the brink of famine.
How a British policeman helped normalise torture in a Gulf monarchy
by QAYS ABDULLA | 14 September 2020
TAGGED: Bahrain, Kenya, Police
As two political prisoners face execution in Bahrain, the country’s repressive justice system remains rooted in the career of Ian Henderson – one of the most notorious police officers the British empire ever produced, who caused suffering to scores of Bahrainis including members of my family.