One approach is to use normal string-manipulation techniques to translate your string from a form that you're expecting to a form that SimpleDateFormat will understand. You haven't said exactly what range of time-zone formats are acceptable, but one possibility is something like this:
private static Date parse(String dateString) throws ParseException
{
final SimpleDateFormat dateFormat =
new SimpleDateFormat("E, dd MMM yyyy kk:mm:ss Z");
dateString = dateString.replaceAll("(GMT[+-])(\\d)$", "$1\\0$2");
dateString = dateString.replaceAll("(GMT[+-]\\d\\d)$", "$1:00");
return dateFormat.parse(dateString);
}
That would support GMT plus-or-minus a one-or-two-digit hour offset, in addition to still supporting anything already supported by SimpleDateFormat, such as EST or GMT+1030.
Alternatively, if you know it will always be GMT, then you can just set the time-zone on the formatter, and ignore the time-zone in the string:
private static Date parse(String dateString) throws ParseException
{
final SimpleDateFormat dateFormat =
new SimpleDateFormat("E, dd MMM yyyy kk:mm:ss");
dateFormat.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("GMT"));
return dateFormat.parse(dateString);
}
You can also split the difference. I notice that the time-zone format in your string matches what's expected by TimeZone.getTimeZone(). Is that intentional? If so, you can grab that time-zone format out of the string, pass it to dateFormat.setTimeZone beforehand, and then ignore it during actual parsing:
private static Date parse(final String dateString) throws ParseException
{
final SimpleDateFormat dateFormat =
new SimpleDateFormat("E, dd MMM yyyy kk:mm:ss");
if(dateString.indexOf("GMT") > 0)
dateFormat.setTimeZone
(
TimeZone.getTimeZone
(dateString.substring(dateString.indexOf("GMT")))
);
return dateFormat.parse(dateString);
}