Did Starmer let Trump use Diego Garcia for Iran attacks? US bombers may have flown 3,500 miles from British overseas territory


Questions have been raised about whether Sir Keir Starmer allowed the US President and his US bombers to use Diego Garcia so they could fly 3,500 miles to Iran. 

Last week, senior military figures urged the Prime Minister to put national security first and let Donald Trump use British bases for an attack on Iran.  

Meanwhile, the Chagossian First Minister, said he gave his ‘blessing’ for the United States to use the base at Diego Garcia to launch strikes on the Iranian regime. 

Misley Mandarin said they ‘govern’ and ‘decide what happens’ on the island while also giving Trump ‘permission’ to use the base ‘in defence of peace’.

The UK-US base, located in the Indian Ocean, plays a critical role in both countries’ ability to deter their adversaries and transatlantic defence. 

Last May, Labour signed over sovereignty of the Chagos Archipelago to Mauritius in exchange for retaining full operational control of the base on an initial 99-year lease.

And a month before, the US sent an ‘unprecedented’ deployment of its heavy B-2 bombers to the Chagos Islands as tensions grew over nuclear talks with Iran.

Six stealth bombers flew in to the U.S. airbase on Diego Garcia from Missouri in what was said to have been the ‘largest single deployment in US history’ as Trump was queried if he was preparing to strike Iran 3,500 miles away.

Questions have been raised about whether Sir Keir Starmer allowed the US President and his US bombers to use Diego Garcia so they could fly 3,500 miles to Iran

Questions have been raised about whether Sir Keir Starmer allowed the US President and his US bombers to use Diego Garcia so they could fly 3,500 miles to Iran

Donald Trump has condemned Iran's 'vicious' leaders' 47-year 'campaign of bloodshed and mass murder' as he announces strikes on the country

Donald Trump has condemned Iran’s ‘vicious’ leaders’ 47-year ‘campaign of bloodshed and mass murder’ as he announces strikes on the country

Last week, senior military figures urged the Prime Minister to put national security first and let Donald Trump use British bases for an attack on Iran

And as the US and Israel launch a daylight missile attack on Iran with Trump today, vowing to ‘raze their missile industry to the ground’, questions have been raised over whether the President used the British overseas military base. 

Richard Tice, the Reform MP for Boston and Skegness took to X saying ‘the US & Israel rightly aim to protect us all in the West by destroying the dangerous Iranian regime’.

However, he questioned whether ‘Starmer & Labour cowardly refused to allow use of UK bases, including Digo Garcia? 

‘If so, they’ve seriously damaged the special relationship at a critical point in history,’ he added. 

Last week, Downing Street refused to give the US permission to launch air strike from UK and overseas bases, with Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper telling US Secretary of State Marco Rubio that Britain favoured ‘diplomatic and economic pressure’ on Iran. 

Trump was said to be particularly keen to use Diego Garcia as well as RAF Fairford in Suffolk to ‘eradicate a potential attack by a highly unstable and dangerous regime’ in Tehran. 

However, Sir Keir Starmer blocked US plans amid concerns over the legality of the air strikes, which the US minded to launch at the time. 

It is understood that the UK did not participate in the US-Israeli strikes on Iran and that Sir Keir is set to chair a meeting of the Government’s emergency Cobra committee this morning. 

Last week, Labour also came under fire from both the Conservative Party and former top brass over their decision to refuse US permission to launch air strikes saying Iran’s nuclear programme ‘poses a grave threat to Britain and our allies’. 

Reform MP Richard Tice took to X to question whether the Prime Minister had refused to allow the US President to use the oversease British military base

Reform MP Richard Tice took to X to question whether the Prime Minister had refused to allow the US President to use the oversease British military base

Six B-2 bombers seen on the apron of the US military base on Diego Garcia island, April 2

Six B-2 bombers seen on the apron of the US military base on Diego Garcia island, April 2

A US Air Force B-1B bomber takes off from Diego Garcia on October, 7, 2001

A US Air Force B-1B bomber takes off from Diego Garcia on October, 7, 2001

Rear Admiral Chris Parry, a retired Royal Navy officer, said: ‘At a time when our US ally needs to be reassured of Britain’s staunch opposition to brutal regimes and about its access to the Chagos Islands and [UK-US military base] Diego Garcia, our Government is proving unreliable and weak.’

Former Royal Navy Commander Tom Sharpe said: ‘We absolutely should let the US use UK bases in launching targeted strikes against Iran. It would be madness not to. The Americans can use Diego Garcia anyway, as it is a joint base, but we should be actively supporting.’

Last April, when the US launched the ‘largest single deployment in US history’ as they flew six stealth bombers from Missouri to Diego Garcia on the Chagos Islands, Trump was asked whether he was gearing up to strike Iranian nuclear facilities.  

At the time, he said: ‘Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon and if the talks aren’t successful, I actually think it will be a very bad day for Iran if that’s the case.’

However, retired Brigadier General Steve Anderson said refuelling bombers tasked with potentially travelling 3,500 miles from Diego Garcia to the Middle East would prove to be a challenge. 

US Air Force tankers were deployed across the Atlantic en route to the region at the time.  

With the B-2 Bombers, the U.S. would be able to provide vital bunker busters, such as the Massive Ordnance Penetrator (GBU-57), capable of penetrating up to 200ft and putting Iran’s remaining nuclear sites in jeopardy. 

In May 2025, the Pentagon sent fighter jets to the military base in the Indian Ocean to protect assets there, the War Zone military news website reported.

A senior officer from U.S.-Indo Pacific Command said that F-15s had been deployed to ‘provide force protection’, without specifying how many.

In March, satellite imagery showed C-17 cargo planes and KC-135 refueling tankers had been moved to Chagos. And by the end of the month, the U.S. said it had sent ‘several’ additional A-10 Warthogs to the Middle East, along with 300 airmen. 



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