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The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Des Freedman, Declassified UK

How the UK media are covering up British spy flights for Israel

This article was published in collaboration with Declassified UK.


BRITAIN’S mainstream media have not carried out a single investigation into the extent, impact or legal status of the more than 500 surveillance flights over Gaza the RAF has carried out since December 2023.

The Ministry of Defence continues to insist the operations carried out by Shadow R1 aircraft based at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus are designed purely to assist with the discovery of Israeli hostages taken by Hamas on October 7, 2023.

It appears that Britain’s obedient defence correspondents have no appetite to challenge this or even to raise the slightest concern about the legal or ethical implications of providing intelligence support to Israel in the middle of a genocide.

Yet thanks to dogged work by campaigners, independent journalists and pro-Palestine MPs, we know both that the flights are continuing to operate – as they did even throughout the ceasefire – and that spikes in the number of flights have coincided with especially deadly Israeli attacks on Gaza.

The lack of curiosity on the part of mainstream media is perhaps not surprising but it is deeply troubling.

www.declassifieduk.org/britain-sent-over-500-spy-flights-to-gaza/

What spy flights?

ACTION on Armed Violence, which has investigated the flights, points to the opacity of the intelligence and criticises the UK Government for its repeated refusal to talk about how it has been used and who it has been shared with, adding: “Once shared with Israel or the United States, Britain loses control of how the data is used.”

​​Israel’s incendiary attack on Iran on June 13 has led to a flurry of stories mentioning RAF Akrotiri as a potential target for Iranian retaliation given its status as the UK base for what the BBC admitted is a “rapid deployment force available for contingencies in the Middle East”.

The defacing of two military planes at RAF Brize Norton by members of Palestine Action – which led to the unprecedented decision by the Home Secretary to proscribe the group – saw many mainstream news outlets briefly citing the activists’ claim that the RAF was involved in what most stories referred to as “military operations in the Middle East”.

Unusually, the BBC’s account did at least mention the activists’ claim that Britain was continuing to “fly spy planes over Gaza”. However, neither these stories nor indeed any of the ones since the flights started operating in December 2023 have actually investigated these claims.

Of the 1359 pieces in UK-based media between December 2, 2023 and June 14, 2025 referencing “Akrotiri”, none in the mainstream media has focused specifically on the spy flights. This is in direct contravention of a significant public interest in covering the flights as an ongoing controversy.

Even Google’s AI overview acknowledges this. Based on search results for “surveillance flights, Gaza AND Cyprus”, Google’s conclusion is that “it appears there has been considerable discussion and concern surrounding British surveillance flights operating out of RAF Akrotiri, a military base in Cyprus, and flying over Gaza”.

Despite the fact that independent sources such as The National, Declassified UK and Middle East Eye have repeatedly drawn attention to the flights and the implications of supplying intelligence to Israeli forces, mainstream news media have refused to amplify this “discussion and concern”.

The vast majority of stories that reference Akrotiri are instead in relation to its role as a base for attacks on Houthi rebels in Yemen in January 2024 (“Brits hits Houthis” was the headline in The Sun), the repatriation of UK citizens from Lebanon in summer 2024 and the surveillance of the base by an alleged Iranian spy in June 2025.

www.declassifieduk.org/bbc-chief-downplays-britains-military-support-for-israel/

Hard news

THIS lack of coverage is certainly not because the flights exist only in the imaginations of Declassified UK journalists or pro-Palestine activists. When pressed, the Ministry of Defence admits they are taking place.

For example, on December 2, 2023, the BBC acknowledged the launch of surveillance flights to Gaza in order to “search for Hamas hostage locations”, still the official MoD narrative. The following October, the BBC reported that the UK was willing to hand over “Gaza intelligence” to the International Criminal Court, if requested, as part of the ICC’s investigation into alleged war crimes carried out by Israel.

Other than that, however, the BBC has remained silent on the nature of this “intelligence” and whether the flights might make the UK complicit with war crimes if found to be the case by the ICC. It has utterly failed to follow up the story. Search the BBC’s “Ministry of Defence” thread and you will find it bare.

When challenged about this by Declassified, the BBC’s director of news content, Richard Burgess, said: “I don’t think we should overplay the UK’s contribution to what’s happening in Israel.”

The Guardian has published three comment pieces – by Jeremy Corbyn MP, Bradford University professor Paul Rogers and commentator Owen Jones – and a joint signatory letter, all of which have made brief reference to the spy flights.

In hard news, however, the newspaper has barely acknowledged the existence of the flights: confined to one line in a Patrick Wintour story on Foreign Office staff being told to resign after challenging UK policy on Gaza, and a mention of “500 surveillance flights” in response to the activities of Palestine Action.

The i paper ran a single story in October 2024 stating that “British military aircraft have reportedly flown hundreds of reconnaissance missions over Gaza in the past year to gather intelligence for Israel” but, like so many other news outlets, has not returned in any meaningful way to the topic since.

www.declassifieduk.org/the-bbc-isnt-telling-the-truth-about-israels-nuclear-arms/

Deafening silence

DESPITE official acknowledgement that the flights continue to take place, and despite multiple questions raised in Parliament by concerned MPs such as Jeremy Corbyn, Shockat Adam, Scott Arthur, Brendan O’Hara and Calvin Bailey, the silence on the intelligence-gathering nature of the spy flights has been deafening.

It’s hard to reconcile this silence with the energy with which mainstream media have investigated Russian spy planes flying over Ukraine and other military manoeuvres related to Putin’s invasion.

It is all the more hypocritical considering their claim to be watchdogs scrutinising Government actions. Only recently, Katharine Viner, the editor of The Guardian, wrote about her paper’s record in “scrutinising power with complete independence for decades”.

In reality, it’s precisely the opposite. Leading news organisations are amplifying MoD talking points and Foreign Office priorities but then remaining quiet and toeing the line when it comes to identifying potential military support for Israel’s genocide.

This is similar to the total lack of critical voices in their reporting of the defence review announced last month by Keir Starmer.

Out of 993 stories on the “defence review” in UK media on June 2, a tiny handful took the time even to acknowledge the existence of significant public opposition to increases in defence spending, particularly at the expense of cuts to public services.

The vast majority of published criticism of Labour’s defence plans come from the Conservatives, or military voices arguing “this is too little, too late” or that it isn’t clear where the money will come from.

There is, apparently, no space for hard news content that investigates whether increased defence spending is either effective or necessary.

Meanwhile, the mainstream media’s continuing silence on RAF spy flights over Gaza is a flagrant abdication of their stated responsibility to ask tough questions of military planners.

Far from holding power to account, mainstream media – through their silence and meekness – are allowing the UK Government to get away with murder in Gaza.

Des Freedman is a professor of media and communications at Goldsmiths, University of London and a founding member of the Media Reform Coalition

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