Leadership in foreign policy has always required the ability to make difficult decisions under pressure — to balance competing demands, read complex situations accurately, and act decisively when circumstances require it. The Iran crisis was a test of those qualities, and the results were instructive.
The prime minister faced a situation in which every available option carried significant costs. Cooperating promptly with American requests risked alienating Labour MPs whose support the government needed. Refusing risked damaging the special relationship. Cooperating belatedly and conditionally — which is what ultimately happened — risked getting the worst of both options.
Leadership in such situations requires more than a capacity for analysis; it requires judgment — the ability to assess which costs are manageable and which are not, and to act on that assessment with sufficient speed to shape events rather than react to them. The judgment demonstrated in the Iran episode was, by most assessments, not the government’s finest hour.
The speed with which the initial refusal gave way under American pressure suggested that the original position had been adopted without a full assessment of the consequences. Had the government anticipated the presidential reaction — the public rebuke, the social media post, the secretary of state’s conference remarks — it might have made a different initial choice.
What the episode revealed about the current British leadership — its strengths, its limitations, its capacity for learning — was something that time and subsequent events would determine more fully. The Iran crisis was a moment of reckoning, but its full significance would only become clear in retrospect.