Israeli leader will join British counterpart next week for working lunch to discuss bilateral ties and trade, Downing Street says

Theresa May is to follow up her visits to Donald Trump and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan by hosting the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, next week, Downing Street has announced.

May will see Netanyahu at No 10 on Monday morning and for a working lunch, her spokeswoman said. It is not yet known if the pair will hold a joint press conference.

It will be the first time the two prime ministers have met, though they did have a “pretty lengthy” phone call in August, shortly after May took office, the spokeswoman said.



Much of the talk would be about general bilateral ties and trade, although May was expected to discuss Israel’s construction of settlements on Palestinian land.



“Of course, alongside that, they are going to want to talk about a range of security and international issues, including the Middle East process,” the spokeswoman said.

“And yes, I would expect the prime minister to set out the government’s position that we think that the continued increases in settlement activity undermines trust. Our focus is on how do we make work a two-state solution with an Israel that is safe from terrorism and a Palestinian state that is viable and sovereign.”

Netanyahu is due to visit Trump imminently in Washington, and is a loud champion of the US president, not least of his controversial plan to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Earlier this week Netanyahu praised Trump’s idea of constructing a wall along the US border with Mexico, tweeting:

Benjamin Netanyahu (@netanyahu) President Trump is right. I built a wall along Israel's southern border. It stopped all illegal immigration. Great success. Great idea 🇮🇱🇺🇸

Asked if May would discuss Trump with Netanyahu, the prime minister’s spokeswoman said: “The priority for this bilateral is the bilateral relationship between the UK and Israel and how we work together on a range of shared challenges, not just looking at the Middle East peace process but also things that affect us both – the situation in Syria, the nuclear threat from Iran.

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“But also one of the things they talked about on their call in August was how do we develop a freer trading relationship once the UK leaves the EU. With regard to the new US administration, obviously the prime minister has recently been.

“Prime Minister Netanyahu was due to visit the following week, so it’s quite possible it will come up in that broader context. But it’s not the focus for the visit.”



On the international nuclear deal with Iran, recently criticised by Trump on Twitter, the spokeswoman stressed that while it needed to be “carefully monitored”, the UK still supported it.

“She was very clear on this when she addressed the Republican retreat last week, and we believe it’s vitally important for regional security,” she said.