We Support Palestine Action

Editorial

24th June 2025
SHARE

Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper have announced they will proscribe Palestine Action as a 'terrorist group'.

We at Organise Magazine would like to express our support of Palestine Action. Making a statement such as this will shortly become punishable by up to 14 years in prison. Such support does not come without criticism and nuanced analysis, however there is a time and place for such fine pointing and it is not as our comrades face a tidal wave of legal brutality which would criminalise their rightful, anti-genocide, political action.

The proscribing of Palestine Action (PA) is the latest increase in authoritarian control in the UK. Throughout the 21st century successive UK governments have been twisting the definition of terrorism. Outside of the halls of parliament, when people hear the word it brings a specific meaning in mind; the indiscriminate killing of civilians in a way intended to spread fear in the wider population. Where as inside parliament it has been broadened to mean almost any act of violence - as long as the people doing it are opposed by the UK government. If the UK or its allies are the ones doing the violence, it is either a brave and necessary military operation, or an unfortunate incident of collateral damage. The biggest expansion to this definition came when the term 'Terrorism' was merged with 'Extremism'. Extremism itself had already been expanded to mean any political views that disagreed with 'established norms', direct and disruptive political actions, and even considerably more mild actions such as sustained letter writing campaigns. With extremism now considered just another part of terrorism, any act of resistance can make you a terrorist. We live in a country where it is possible to be a pacifist terrorist.

People like Palestine Action who seek to prevent the creation and use of weapons in a genocide are more violent in the eyes of the state than those who actually enable the genocide. PA are the latest in a long line of those in Britain and Ireland who have taken non-violent action to resist war, all would of course now be branded terrorists by the government. The anarchists and fellow travellers who decommissioned the EDO arms factory in 2009, The Pitstop Ploughshares Christians who smashed a US navy plane in 2003, the four 'hammer women' who destoryed a jet destined for East Timor in 1996, and the hundreds of women at Greenham Common in 1982. All the members of the first three groups were found not guilty in courts, and many of the latter were never even taken to court. Keir Starmer however, would have them all branded as terrorists for resisting the military industrial complex. His views reveals the lie of Liberal Democracy, the pretence that we live under fair and just laws.

Behind the scenes the state has always viewed us this way. Those of us who ask too many questions, stand up against injustice, and those of us who risk committing the worst crime of all - successfully bringing about change. The family of Steven Lawrence who were seeking justice after his murderers were let off due to police racism were investigated by counter terrorism police. Countless thousands of protesters have had their personal information stored on databases of potential 'domestic extremists'. Prevent has reported school children to the police and intelligence services for holding extremist views like 'maybe we shouldn't kill the planet we live on for profit'. In fact declassified documents have shown the UK government has spent a century or more spying on nearly every left-wing, anti-war, anarchist, environmentalist or anti-racist group that has existed here.

The more public statements and actions about how our 'right' to protest needs to be curtailed have been pretty unmissable as well. The over dramatic rhetoric in the papers is near constant background noise; 'outside agitators', 'dangerous anarchists', 'aggressive protesters', 'uncontrollable thugs'. There have of course been many more concrete steps. The rise of Extinction Rebellion's disruptive actions in the capital drew not just ire from the (then ruling) Tories, but the creation of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act. This made it clear the UK state was more than willing to criminalise dissent. It was followed by Lord Walney's report on 'political violence'. Alongside much discussion of Extinction Rebellion, the report spoke extensively about the Kill The Bill movement attempting to prevent the Act from passing. Perhaps not surprising that this direct challenge to the police state was seen as a priority, and we know our friends in Bristol Anarchist Federation consider their many mentions in this section a badge of honour. Despite a lot of chatter, including anarchism and Extinction Rebellion being listed as an 'extremist ideology' by counter terror police. The Tories never went as far as proscribing any of these groups, but they laid the ground work. Everything the UK state was preparing would fall into place under Starmer's LAbour.

Palestine Action is being singled out for a number of reasons. For a start they are effective. Their disruption and damage of arms factories linked to the genocide being perpetrated by the Israeli state is impossible to ignore. They aren't just doing damage, they were doing so as part of a mass popular movement in support of Palestine, one that largely refuses to condemn them or their tactics. They are also relentless with no signs of going away any time soon. Then there is the diplomatic pressure. Israel is one of the UK's closest allies, and they have been open in their fury at this continuing affront to their power. They haven't been alone with the British establishment echoing their anger at any solidarity demonstrated with Palestine. The final key reason was that the foundations had already been laid. Under eight different Prime Ministers the work to make dissent in the UK synonymous with terrorism has been continuing, now ready, it just needed a group and an excuse. The group in the state's crosshairs was Palestine Action, and the daubing of paint on planes at an RAF base was the excuse. If it hadn't been this, it would have been another action. If Palestine Action hadn't provided one Keir Starmer and Yvette Cooper would have simply lied about one. Much like Yvette's fabrication that Palestine Action had terrorised the public by throwing 'smoke bombs' in Glasgow. Back in reality Palestine Action had just sat on a roof holding flares as staff calmly left.

The UK government has been building a police state brick by brick for a number of decades now. While in opposition our political parties may speak out against it, but once in power they go awfully quiet. They don't roll back the repressive laws, and they don't put in new guarantees of freedom. We cannot vote ourselves out of this authoritarian nightmare. We must stand against every aspect of it. Surveillance, anti-protest laws, 'liberal' use of the word terrorism, and of course a media landscape designed to whip up fear and support for it all. If we let ourselves be picked off one by one we've already lost, if people across the spectrum from 'polite but concerned lefty' to 'angry anarcho punk' can stand in solidarity we're in with a shot. If we all stand up and say:


In solidarity with the people of Palestine, and with all those who fight such appalling brutality at the hands of the state.

The Organise Editorial Collective
24/06/2025

Essential Reading: Defend Dissent & Kill The Bill


Palestine Action's Statement:

Read More

/

30th June 2025
Squat Solidarity: Prague | Reportback

I recently went to Europe and stayed for roughly a month, traveling between different cities in Germany, Hungary and the Czech Republic, mainly staying in Prague. I got to network with various European anarchists and made many valuable connections with comrades. During my stay, I got the pleasure to attend a jail demonstration in Prague. […]

Read More
20th June 2025
Hull Court Blockade Statement | Current Events

Trans rights activists staged a protest at the Kingston-upon-Hull Combined Court yesterday morning, in response to the Supreme Court ruling on the legal definition of a woman. The 15 activists, aged between 16 and 51, unfurled a banner inside the lobby of the court at 10:30 this morning which read ‘your laws will kill us’, […]

Read More
13th June 2025
NAMNAM Space | Interview

Take from the pages of Organise 101, here is a short QnA with Nadina from Tokyo's NAMNAM space. Heya Nadina thanks for taking the time to talk to us about NamNam Space, you mentioned you were a scouser while we were setting this up, how did you end up being an organiser in a social […]

Read More
1st May 2025
Mayday 2025. Some Thoughts. | Editorial

“It is not murder, however, of which you have convicted me. The judge has stated that much only this morning in his resume of the case, and Grinnell has repeatedly asserted that we were being tried not for murder, but for anarchy, so the condemnation is—that I am an anarchist!” - Louis Lingg addressing the […]

Read More
17th April 2025
Two Pieces from the Trans Front | Current Events

On Sunday the 13th April Kellie Jay Keen (aka Posie Parker) held an anti-trans rally in Bristol, but met with strong resistance. on the 16th, the Sureme Court made a horrific ruling which will have dire consequences. Here we have a report back from Bristol and a short editorial on the ruling. NEWS FROM BRISTOLSo […]

Read More
16th January 2025
Opposing War: What Shall Be Done? | Reportback

I wasn't going to write anything, I went to listen and learn. “Opposing War. What should be done?” was an online public meeting organised by the Anarchist Communist Group [ACG], with talks by members of the Old Moles Collective, and a variety of fellow anti-war organisers and anti-militarist activists, and compas in the class war. […]

Read More