Benjamin Netanyahu
"Exactly what President Biden said he didn't want," Sky News presenter Yalda Hakim noted.
The Israeli PM claimed he was there to "set the record straight" – but it seems many present did not want to hear it.
The Israeli prime minister accused his British counterpart of sending "mixed messages" about the war in Gaza.
Netanyahu called the decision "shameful" and the US has made it clear it will not be following the UK's example.
Foreign secretary David Lammy said there was a "clear risk" the equipment would be used to break international humanitarian law.
Labour has pivoted away from the Tory approach towards Israel.
The Watergate Hotel in Washington said it has been sanitised after the disturbance, which preceded the Israeli prime minister's controversial address to Congress.
Over 100 congressional interns and dozens of Democratic lawmakers reportedly skipped Netanyahu's speech in protest.
“You have to oppose Netanyahu," Zahiro Shahar Mor told HuffPost. "It’s not that you’re an antisemite — you’re truthful.”
The minister described Israel as an "imperfect" state which is trying to protect its population.