Farage U-Turns to Say UK Shouldn’t Get Involved in Iran War

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Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

Nigel Farage reversed his position on the UK’s involvement in the Iran war on Tuesday, saying Britain should not get involved in the conflict.

Speaking in a publicity stunt at a gas station in Derbyshire, central England, during which he subsidized the fuel of motorists as he announced his party’s plan to cut fuel duty, the Reform UK leader said much of the world was losing respect for the UK because of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s tentative response to the conflict. But he also suggested that he would not have acted much differently. 

“Given that we can’t even send a Royal Navy vessel to defend British sovereign territory and an RAF base, we certainly don’t have the capability to offer anything of any value to the Americans or the Israelis,” he said, referring to a British base in Cyprus that was hit by a drone. “If we can’t even defend Cyprus, let’s not get ourselves involved in another foreign war.”

Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

Farage’s latest comments — coming after a spike in oil prices — contradict those he gave at a press conference last week. “I’m normally incredibly nervous about intervening in foreign wars — I believe this is the right one,” he said last Wednesday.

“Nigel Farage spent the past week calling for escalation that would make cost of living pressures even worse,” Labour Party Chair Anna Turley said in a statement. “If he had been prime minister he would have already dragged our country into this war and wouldn’t be able to u-turn like he has done today.”

Farage has been caught in a bind over the conflict, which was catalyzed by strikes against Iran by the US and Israel. While he has tried to avoid being too critical of President Donald Trump, a personal friend, polling shows UK voters are broadly opposed to getting involved — and rising oil prices threaten to drive up the cost of living, which is one of the top concerns among Britons. 

Starmer turned down a US request to use British bases ahead of the initial strikes against Iran. He’s since allowed their use for the US to launch strikes on Iranian missile depots, while limiting Britain’s direct involvement to defensive operations. 

Though Farage didn’t indicate how he would have gone further, had his party been in government, he continued to be critical of Starmer’s stance. It was a mistake for the government to initially bar the US from using British bases to attack Iran, Farage said on Tuesday, adding: “I absolutely want us to be supportive.”

He said that the US and Israel had started the war, and must “remove the nuclear threat” in Iran. “If they don’t do that, they will have failed,” he said.

At the press stunt in Derbyshire, Farage unveiled plans to reverse a planned rise in UK fuel duty that sets in from September, and fund the tax cut by scrapping green policies such as subsidies for boiler upgrades and electric cars.

Farage brushed off concerns over the soaring price of oil, saying that oil would be back close to $80 a barrel “if the Straits of Hormuz are cleared,” though he accepted that was an unknown condition.

©2026 Bloomberg L.P.

By Lucy White

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