In a stark assessment that has sent ripples through Whitehall, veteran BBC correspondent Jeremy Bowen has warned that the current trajectory of US and Israeli policy risks entrenching a permanent crisis in the Middle East. His comments come as UK intelligence agencies quietly reassess their strategic assumptions about the region, signalling a shift in how London views the conflict.
Bowen, speaking from Jerusalem, did not mince words. He argued that the Trump administration's unwavering support for Netanyahu's far-right coalition, combined with the prime minister's own political survival instincts, is creating a feedback loop of escalation. "Every time Netanyahu feels the ground shifting under his feet domestically, he doubles down on military action," Bowen noted. "And Trump, ever the transactionalist, sees political advantage in unconditional backing."
The warning is particularly resonant because it echoes a growing unease within British intelligence circles. Sources say MI6 and the Joint Intelligence Committee have been quietly updating their assessments, moving away from the assumption that the conflict can be "managed" indefinitely. Instead, they now model scenarios where the region spirals into a protracted, multi-front confrontation.
On the ground, the human cost is becoming impossible to ignore. In Gaza, the death toll continues to climb, with entire neighbourhoods reduced to rubble. The displacement of over a million people has created a humanitarian catastrophe that the UN describes as "beyond critical." But it is not just Gaza. The West Bank is experiencing its deadliest period in decades, with settler violence unchecked and the Palestinian Authority losing all credibility.
The cultural shift in Israel itself is equally alarming. A new generation of settlers and far-right activists no longer pay lip service to a two-state solution. They openly talk of annexation and transfer. This is not a fringe view, it is now mainstream in Netanyahu's coalition. Bowen's point is that this radicalisation is being met with a similar hardening on the Palestinian side, where armed groups gain recruits from the rubble.
For the UK, the reassessment is politically delicate. The government has been cautious, avoiding direct criticism of Israel while calling for restraint. But the intelligence community's revised outlook suggests that this approach is no longer tenable. A permanent crisis would destabilise Jordan, threaten Iraq's fragile peace, and embolden Iran. It would also generate waves of refugees and terrorism that would wash up on European shores.
What does this mean for ordinary people? On the streets of London, the protests have become a weekly ritual, but they reflect a deeper anger. British Muslims feel their government is complicit in what they see as a genocide. Jewish communities feel under siege from rising antisemitism. The social fabric is fraying along lines we thought had healed.
Bowen's warning is not just about geopolitics, it is about the erosion of any hope for a shared future. The two-state solution was already on life support. Now, the very concept of a negotiated peace is being buried under the rubble. The UK's intelligence reassessment is a quiet admission that the old playbook is obsolete. But what replaces it remains unclear. In the meantime, the human cost mounts, one airstrike at a time.










