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The Mapping Project: “We see the struggle to free political prisoners as an important part of every struggle against oppression”

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the important work of The Mapping Project, a newly announced initiative that makes clear the links between repressive institutions in the Boston area. The Mapping Project’s work presents a clear view of the connections between imperialism, Zionism and associated reactionary forces and how this global analysis is manifested practically on a local level. 

The Mapping Project, an anonymous and multi-generational collective of activists and organizers, participated in this interview with Samidoun specifically to highlight the connections between the work they are doing in Boston and prisons, policing, surveillance and repression, in Palestine and globally.

We encourage all supporters to visit the Mapping Project and use its interactive tools and resources:

                    An Interview with The Mapping Project Collective

Screenshot from Mapping Project (geographic view), showing the locations of police stations (blue dots), state prisons (orange dots), and police departments whose activities have been documented by the Mapping Project (purple circles).

1. The Mapping Project highlights a wide array of links, illustrating the systemic relationships of imperialism, Zionism and reaction as they exist on a local level directly in the Massachusetts area. How do you view the interrelationship between Zionism, imperialism and complicit forces has a practical effect on local politics, justice and injustice, in addition to their global relationship?

US Empire, Zionism, and other complicit forces receive support from Boston’s elite institutions of knowledge production (universities), its weapons developers, and its pharma, tech, and biotech corporations, all of which maintain expansive presences in our communities. These entities occupy considerable local real estate, while attracting workers into the Boston area who are, on average, wealthier and whiter than the pre-existing residents of the neighborhoods they move into, driving up housing, rental, and living costs, and making it increasingly difficult for long-time residents to afford to remain in the communities they have called home for years if not decades.

This high concentration of powerful institutions—elite universities, tech companies, weapons producers—carries with it a need for increased policing and surveillance to protect the interests of these institutions and the wealthy professional classes connected to them. There is a connection between police surveillance and repression against anti-Imperialist and anti-Zionist dissidents, and the hyper-policing of working class, Black, Brown and Indigenous residents who experience direct material harm as these entities transform their community spaces into professional laboratories and think tanks of war and empire.

The sheer number of Massachusetts state, local, federal, university, and other policing agencies on our map, as well as the number of “Law Enforcement Councils” and other police coordination bodies linking them with one another, is notable. Both the Northeast Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council (NEMLEC) and the Greater Boston Police Council (GBPC) have explicitly linked the origin of LECs and their “mutual aid agreements” to the policing of anti-war protests in the 60s and 70s. We see this local concentration of repressive forces directed against Eastern Massachusetts working class, Black and Brown community members as inseparable from the local concentration of universities, weapons developers, and multinationals which support US Empire, Zionism, and other complicit forces.

Screenshot from Mapping Project (graph view), showing the links between police forces/policing agencies. Organizations such as NEMLEC, SEMLEC, and ICE stand out as “hubs” that interconnect several policing organizations.

2. One manifestation of these relationships is seen in the use of “counter-terrorism” policies for policing. In addition to the mutual exchange of repressive techniques between settler colonial powers, counter-terrorism policies are also used to criminalize and repress local activism. How do you see the use of the “terror” framework illustrated through your research?

Nationally, the “war on terror” has increasingly replaced and expanded the “war on drugs” and the earlier fight against “communist subversion” as a catch-all for programs of mass surveillance and political repression (more on the “war on drugs” below). Under cover of “counterterrorism,” the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has played a central role in integrating local, state, and federal police forces, militarizing these forces for the suppression of popular uprisings and preparing them for urban warfare, all while coordinating intelligence gathering and sharing of information on political groups and oppressed communities inside the United States. This centralization and coordination of surveillance and information sharing took place in parallel with other developments of the US police state, including the passage of the Patriot Act (which further legalized secret surveillance and the use of secret evidence in political trials), the public normalization of torture, the expansion of the “extraordinary rendition” program, indefinite detention without trial, and mass imprisonment of groups because of their nationality or religion. The “terror” framework has done essential ideological work to justify these and other escalations in state violence and repression.

In 2004, the Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security (EOPSS) established five “homeland security planning regions” to receive funding from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The Metropolitan Area Planning Council manages DHS grants for Homeland Security Advisory Councils set up for four of these regions: Northeast Homeland Security Region Advisory Council (NERAC); Central Region Homeland Security Council (CRHSAC); Western Region Homeland Security Advisory Council (WRHSAC); and Southeast Regional Homeland Security Advisory Council (SRAC). Like other “Homeland Security” initiatives, under cover of “counterterrorism,” these regional councils work to further integrate local, state, and federal police forces and to militarize these forces for the suppression of popular uprisings and for urban warfare. Meeting minutes of the regional councils show consistent spending on equipment and training for “Law Enforcement Councils,” private professional organizations that link local police forces to share equipment, train together in military style exercises, and form SWAT teams.

Alongside the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has capitalized upon the “terror” framework to expand its collaborations with local, state, federal, and university police forces, helping train these forces to more effectively criminalize and repress activists and community members. In the midst of the climate of heightened racism and open repression which followed September 11th, 2001, the ADL stepped up its facilitation of trainings for US police department leadership in methods of so-called “counterterrorism,” coordinating expenses-paid trips to the “National Counterterrorism Seminar in Israel” for leadership from a wide array of US police forces, while providing “counterterrorism” trainings to an even wider array of police forces here in the US. Whereas the ADL nationally leveraged the “terror” framework following the attacks September 11th, 2001, its local affiliate, the ADL of New England, similarly leveraged this framework following the 2013 Boston Marathon Bombings. Following the 2013 bombings, the ADL of New England stepped up its collaborations with Massachusetts police, ICE, FBI, and other agencies around so-called “counterterrorism,” coordinating expenses-paid training trips to Israel for leadership from a wide array of Massachusetts police departments, and regularly hosting trainings for Massachusetts police on methods of “counterterrorism” here in Massachusetts. As one example, in 2019 the ADL of New England coordinated a “Law Enforcement Seminar” in Foxboro MA which featured presentations from an “Israeli counterterrorism expert” on “The Ten Commandments of Counterterrorism,” and “Actionable Strategies for Securing Events and Open Spaces in Communities.” The ADL of New England has also produced multiple dossiers on “extremism,” which the ADL sent out to a mailing list of New England police department leaders it maintains. And, the ADL is listed as an “official partner” of the Boston and Massachusetts so-called “Countering Violent Extremism” (CVE) programs, which, as noted by Muslim Justice League, “falsely legitimize discrimination against Muslims and dissidents.”

Local elite universities, such as the Harvard Kennedy School, Boston University and Northeastern also play a role in providing both ideological and technical support for this use of “counterterrorism” as a broad framework for political repression. HKS has a long history of promoting leading reactionary scholars like Samuel Huntington, with his orientalist “clash of civilizations” framework for justifying the imperialist “war on terror,” and also hosts working seminars for FBI and Homeland Security officials on the nuts and bolts of leading the domestic institutions of repression, such as their “Program on Crisis Leadership.” Boston University hosts yearly meetings of the Police Executive Research Forum, which brings together police executives from across the country to develop and coordinate counterinsurgency policy, and also brings US police to Israel—where they have been involved in setting up “security coordination” between Israeli, Palestinian Authority and Jordanian police and intelligence officials. (This latter initiative—the Middle East Policing Project—is reminiscent of the worst policies of the “Public Safety Programs” funded by USAID during the Cold War, where US police set up programs of torture and assassination in places like South Vietnam, Brazil, and Greece). Northeastern hosts a Homeland Security “Designated Center of Excellence,” which works to produce surveillance technology, the latest iteration of which, called SENTRY, promises to turn public spaces into a panopticon that will “integrate elements such as crowd-scanning sensors mounted atop light poles, video feeds, cell phone traffic, aerial drone footage, and social media posts.”

3.  Surveillance is another mechanism of repression that is used by the state and by private parties. This includes both the public display of surveillance—via Canary Mission et al as a form of terror—and concealed intelligence gathering. The use of surveillance technologies like the notorious “Pegasus” software by NSO group, an Israeli corporation, has been used against Palestinian activists and strugglers for justice internationally. How do the relationships between tech firms, universities, police agencies and other forces intensify surveillance power or expand surveillance networks by the state and aligned forces?

Microsoft and IBM along with other multinational companies, occupy expensive physical space in the Boston Area (driving displacement), attracted to Boston by their desire to establish partnerships with the city’s elite universities (Harvard and MIT in particular). Both Microsoft and IBM have acquired numerous Israeli tech start-ups, many of which focused on surveillance and repression, and some of which originated from within the Israeli military. Microsoft and IBM have done this while celebrating and even using their resources to promote and expand upon the Israeli-state backed effort to inculcate more Israeli tech start-ups. IBM, for its part, runs an initiative called “IBM Alpha Zone,” through which IBM works to cultivate Israeli startup companies. IBM claims that as of December 23, 2021, IBM Alpha Zone had trained or supported 103 Israeli startups. One of the Israeli startups trained by IBM, DigitalOwl, collaborates with Israel’s secret police, the Shabak, through a Tel-Aviv University program called Xcelerator that aims to foster collaborations between the Shabak and computing startup companies.

IBM has brought these and other technologies of surveillance and repression to bear upon working class, Black and Brown communities in Massachusetts. In collaboration with the software company i2, IBM developed COPLINK, an expansive police database which has been called “google for police officers.” According to IBM, COPLINK enables “law enforcement agencies of any size to access one of the world’s largest networks of law enforcement data comprising more than a billion shareable documents from the Cloud.” In practice, US police forces use COPLINK to organize and share data across different wings of the carceral state, organizing and integrating information on the broad scale necessary to carry out their regimes of criminalization and punishment of Black, Brown, Muslim, Indigenous, and/or working class peoples. In addition to facilitating information sharing between dozens of MA police agencies, Massachusetts-based agents from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) regularly search entries submitted into COPLINK by MA police departments for information to aid ICE’s regime of surveillance, detentions, and deportations of Black and Brown migrants.

IBM also operates the central database of Israel’s Population, Immigration, and Borders Authority, providing data organization capacities to the Israeli state which are similar to those COPLINK provides to US police forces, and which the Israeli state uses for comparable purposes. The Israeli Population, Immigration, and Borders Authority’s central database includes Israel’s Biometric Population Registry, which the Israeli government uses to document the ethnic and religious identities as well as the geographical residencies of the different peoples who live under its control, enabling the Israeli state to organize population information on the broad scale necessary to systematically subject Palestinians to a tiered system of limited rights and freedoms relative to Jewish Israelis. In addition to curtailing the rights and freedoms of Palestinians, Israel’s Biometric Population Registry facilities the Israeli state’s intentional fragmentation of the Palestinian people from one another—between ’48 Palestinians (Palestinians with Israeli citizenship), Palestinians with “residency” in East Jerusalem, Palestinians in the West Bank, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, and Palestinian refugees living outside of historic Palestine. Israel’s fragmentation of the Palestinian people into these separate groups with tiered rights and freedoms relative to one another is part of an intentional Israeli state effort to prevent and disrupt unity across the Palestinian people, unity which has the proven potential to upend Israel’s system of colonization, land theft, and apartheid rule. *

4.  On the other hand, the Mapping Project uses publicly available research to “counter-surveil” or hold accountable government institutions, large NGOs and universities, and repressive structures, by making their connections visible. What do you think is the potential, necessity and possibility of expanding this kind of popular counter-surveillance to expose ties and connections that those in power would prefer to remain covert?

Our research for this project has convinced us of the utter necessity of expanding popular counter-surveillance in order to understand the actions of and connections between government institutions, large NGOs and universities, and repressive structures. Prior to this project, each member of our collective possessed knowledge about certain aspects of how power and oppression operated locally. By collectivizing this knowledge through our work together, and expanding it through targeted research and conversations with allies from other struggles, we have been able to build an analysis which sees and grapples with the whole of how power is operating locally, rather than just seeing its parts in isolation.

We now see the networks that sustain our opponents as also containing a potential vulnerability: there are so many areas of overlap and shared struggle among the groups who experience the harmful impact of their activities. We see promising paths of action growing out of that—actions that aim to dismantle the entities and the networks that harm our communities in Boston, Palestinians, and colonized peoples worldwide.

In addition to popular “counter-surveillance,” this project has been a practice of political education–for us as well as for organizers from other struggles with whom we have engaged. We are confident that this project will aid other organizers in the Boston area to better understand and to more effectively resist the forces of devastation and repression they are working to combat, and to unify their efforts across struggles.

5. Political imprisonment is one major tool used by the occupation regime to control or suppress Palestinian resistance and leadership. Within the US, criminalization and imprisonment are both mechanisms of repressing resistance and political organizing and retaining settler colonial domination and the capitalist system. How is imprisonment in the U.S. (and specifically in Massachusetts) implicated in these maps, and how do you relate this to the struggle and situation of Palestinian prisoners in Zionist and imperialist jails?

We recognize imprisonment as an essentially colonial institution, both here and in Palestine. This is true across the board, whether we are speaking directly of “political prisoners” or whether we are speaking of policies of mass incarceration that have been constructed and repackaged over the years as instruments of domination against colonized people.

Sundiata Acoli’s “Updated History of the New Afrikan Prison Struggle” powerfully illuminates the political and colonial nature of US prisons throughout their history as instruments for repressing the freedom struggle of the New Afrikan nation, tracing the development of the prison from the “pens that held captives for ships bound west into slavery,” to the early Quaker penitentiaries, to the convict lease system during the Civil War period, to the massive increase in imprisonment immediately following the Civil War and the even more explosive growth in the post-Civil Rights era. Slavery, criminalization through “vagrancy laws,” the “drug war” and the use of so-called “anti-gang” policies to criminalize whole neighborhoods and communities, are all part of this system of colonial domination.

As we’ve discussed above on surveillance, both in the US and in Palestine, police and the military have constructed biometric databases aimed at tracking entire populations of oppressed and colonized groups. In Boston it’s called the “gang database.” We discuss these developments and parallels in our entries on the Boston Police Department and the Boston Regional Intelligence Center, and observe also that Boston’s policing of gangs has its precursor in the system set up in Los Angeles in the 1980s–which became a model for the country–and was itself influenced by the biometric tracking system set up by US police forces (including Frank Walton, former Los Angeles Deputy Chief of Police) in Vietnam, and which used the US and Israeli occupation of Lebanon in the 1980s as a consistent point of reference. (The ordinance that expanded the use of the first gang-database in LA into a statewide system of surveillance was called the “Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention Act,” and was accompanied at the time by extensive media discussion comparing Black neighborhoods in Los Angeles to Beirut, making explicit the connection between the politics of policing “gangs” and the politics of policing “terrorism.”)

We also recognize the importance of specific work around people who have been imprisoned for their political beliefs and activities–the work of groups like the Jericho Movement. We see this as necessary movement self-defense, and an essential feature of anti-colonial liberation struggles here as everywhere, even while we recognize the colonial nature of imprisonment itself and support the complete abolition of prisons. In this connection, it’s worth pointing out that in Palestine, political imprisonment–the imprisonment of people for their political beliefs and activities–is also a system of mass incarceration. In Palestine, hundreds of thousands of people have been held in captivity for anti-colonial resistance.

In 2021, the Spirit of Mandela Coalition organized an international tribunal that found the United States guilty on five charges of colonial crimes, including the crime of genocide. The first three charges relate to policing and imprisonment: “1) Racist police killings of Black, Brown, and Indigenous people; 2) Hyper incarceration of Black, Brown, and Indigenous people.; 3) Political incarceration of Civil Rights/National Liberation era revolutionaries and activists, as well as present day activists.” Although the movement has recently celebrated the release of Sundiata Acoli (mentioned above), Jalil Muntaqim, and Russell Maroon Shoatz (who passed shortly after his release), each spent close to half a century in prison, and other revolutionary leaders continue to be locked up–Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu Jamal, Mutulu Shakur, Jamil Al-Amin, Kamau Sadiki, Oso Blanco, and many others. The cumulative length of their sentences is staggering, amounting to many centuries of imprisonment between them. Just as the US has the largest number of prisoners in the world, it also takes the record for the longest held political prisoners in the world. This should be a source of critical reflection for the movement outside the walls, since we have a responsibility to free them.

We see the struggle to free political prisoners as an important part of every struggle against oppression. Our map includes some local history of targeted political repression against Palestinian organizers and activists in Boston–a set of experiences that touched our own groups more closely.

Most of the entries in our database that trace this system of colonial repression and domination are concentrated on policing. We plan to include more entries about prisons, jails, and detention centers as we develop the map further. Right now, it’s possible to see the grid of prisons across the state as one layer on the map, and also to see how that interacts with other layers–such as police and evictions.

6. The Mapping Project provides a powerful illustration of the practical relationships between imperialism and Zionism and their allies and how they are implicated in our local areas. The boycott movement has been one significant way that people internationally have been mobilizing to show solidarity with the Palestinian people and their resistance. How does this kind of research point the way to a deeper analysis and more impactful action for groups in the boycott movement? What are some lessons that we can learn and implement in other areas?

The Mapping Project arose through conversations amongst members of our collective over recent years about the limitations of many mainstream Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) efforts which focus upon one corporation or institution at a time. In particular, we sought to provide alternative conceptions of BDS tactics that moved beyond demands upon one complicit entity to act “more ethically” by ending one or a few contracts or partnerships with Israel, without accounting for the breadth of that entity’s support for zionism and other interlocking systems of oppression. As one recent example, we felt disappointed by appeals from some activists for Amazon to end its participation in Project Nimbus, appeals which lacked framing or analysis to account for  the breadth of Amazon’s support for racism and repression in Palestine, the US, and around the world, and which did not address Amazon’s expansive role in the broader system of racial capitalism. We felt that such approaches to BDS missed the full picture of how corporations, institutions, and other entities sustaining zionism and other interlocking oppressions operate: not in isolation from one another, but through webs of connections they establish with one another which enable them to carry out their oppressive agendas.

As we built this project, we were constantly asking ourselves: What actions can BDS activists take to meaningfully narrow, if not cut off, supply lines of material and ideological sustenance flowing from the Boston area to the zionist state? How can we impose a real material cost on the zionist project, from where we are located, in order to make it more possible for Palestinians on the ground to liberate themselves? Moreover, we have asked ourselves: How we can move beyond abstract appeals to one another for recognition of the interconnections between our different struggles, by providing a material analysis of the concrete ways in which each of our struggles is more effective when we fight for and with one another? These are hard questions which we will continue to grapple with as we build this project out over time. We believe projects like the mapping project make it possible to address such questions, and we hope similar projects will emerge in other cities.

We see that boycotts and divestment, while useful, often emphasize the building of campaigns meant to pressure fundamentally repressive institutions into taking action. We are interested in other possibilities for intervening more directly in the flow of weapons, money, technology and expertise. The “Block the Boat” protests in Oakland gave a good example of effective organizing against the flow of capital; past movements against imperialism and war have focused on physically blockading weapons shipments. We hope that more organizers will begin to explore similar possibilities here.

Tell the ADL: your lies will never silence the movement for Palestinian liberation

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is an endorser of the following petition, launched by Jews for Palestinian Right of Return. 

SIGN THE PETITION: https://www.change.org/p/tell-the-adl-your-lies-will-never-silence-the-movement-for-palestinian-liberation

To add an organizational endorsement, please send a message to jfpror@gmail.com

We, the undersigned, unequivocally condemn the Anti-Defamation League’s recent slanderous attack on the movement for Palestinian liberation.

At the organization’s Virtual National Leadership Summit on May 1, 2022, National Director Jonathan Greenblatt not only explicitly peddled the lie that “anti-Zionism is antisemitism,” but left no doubt as to how the ADL intends to muzzle and/or punish those who oppose the apartheid Israeli regime. “We will use our litigation skills to hold [anti-Zionists] accountable for their harm,” he declared, “[and] use our advocacy muscles to push policymakers to take action.”

Greenblatt specifically targeted Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), and the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) — who issued a joint statement in response (a group of prominent Jewish Palestine supporters also published an open letter answering ADL’s attack) — but his warning was clearly directed at all who stand up for Palestinian rights.

The ADL’s threats should not be taken lightly. In 2020, it reported net assets of $152m. The organization has close ties with police and the FBI (and a sordid history of surveilling anti-racist activists). It supports unconstitutional “anti-BDS” laws designed to silence Palestine advocacy. As Mondoweiss recently noted, “the ADL would be laughable if it weren’t dangerous.”

Greenblatt’s chest thumping, however, cannot save the Israeli regime’s crumbling public image. Three high profile reports in the past year — from Human Rights WatchAmnesty International, and B’Tselem — exposed the regime as an apartheid state, affirming what Palestinians themselves have been telling the world since the Nakba of 1948. The current ethnic cleansing in Masafer Yatta, approved by the Israeli High Court, is a stark reminder that the Nakba is not a distant memory but a permanently operating feature of the settler-colonial Zionist state.

Meanwhile, the Zionist establishment, desperate to distract from this exposure, and spreading its own version of white supremacist “replacement theory,” frames the mere presence of Palestinians in their homeland as a demographic and existential threat to Jewish people.

Ten days after Greenblatt’s address, and two days before Nakba Day, Israeli forces attacking the Jenin Palestinian refugee camp murdered Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, a longtime reporter for Al Jazeera. Two days later, with the whole world watching, Israeli police violently assaulted mourners at her funeral procession, “a response,” wrote fellow journalist Belen Fernandez, “that can only be classified as acute and multitiered state savagery, in keeping with Israel’s modus operandi of refusing to let Palestinians live, die, or be buried in peace.”

In honor of Shireen, and in the spirit of anti-racist resistance from the Warsaw Ghetto to apartheid South Africa to the Jim Crow South to Standing Rock to Black Lives Matter and Stop Asian Hate, we serve the ADL notice: your slanders and your threats will never silence the growing movement for a free Palestine from the river to the sea with equal rights for all.

Signed (in alphabetical order),

Adalah Justice Project

Al-Awda NY: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition

Al Quds Day Committee of New York

American Muslims for Palestine – NJ

Arab Resource and Organizing Center

Black Lives Matter Paterson

Council on American-Islamic Relations – NJ

CUNY for Palestine

Decolonize This Place

Democratic Socialists of America BDS and Palestine Solidarity Working Group

Democratic Socialists of America North New Jersey

Democratic Socialists of America Metro DC

Football Against Apartheid

Friends of Sabeel North America

International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network

Jewish Voice for Peace – Central NJ

Jewish Voice for Peace – Los Angeles

Jewish Voice for Peace – Northern NJ

Jews for Palestinian Right of Return

Jews Say No!

Just Peace Advocates/Mouvement Pour Une Paix Juste

Labor for Palestine

Oakville Palestinian Rights Association (Canada)

Palestine Legal

Palestinian American Community Center`

People’s Organization for Progress

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

Students for Justice in Palestine at Rutgers – New Brunswick

U.S. Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel

U.S. Palestinian Community Network

Young Democratic Socialists of America, San Francisco State University chapter

SIGN THE PETITION: https://www.change.org/p/tell-the-adl-your-lies-will-never-silence-the-movement-for-palestinian-liberation

No to the 2022 Champions Trophy in Tel Aviv

 

This year, once again, the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP, Professional french Football League) has decided to hold the next edition of the Champions Trophy (French Super cup) in Israel.  This official match between Paris Saint-Germain, the 2022 champion of France, and FC Nantes, winner of the 2022 French Cup, is to be held on Sunday 31 July at the Bloomfield Stadium in Tel Aviv. 1

Like the previous edition, the LFP is organising this event together with the Israeli-Canadian businessman Sylvan Adams, “self-proclaimed ambassador of the State of Israel” 2 and Comtec Group, the Israeli firm specialising in events organisation, which has among its clients the Israeli government and companies based in illegal colonies in the occupied West Bank.3  For several years, Sylvan Adams has become involved in high-level sports in order to change and improve Israel’s image.4

We are strongly opposed to the holding of this match in Israel. This is a sportwashing event, aiming to whitewash the military occupation, the colonisation, the apartheid system of the Israeli State and its crimes.

Since the start of 2022, the Israeli occupation forces have killed almost 60 Palestinians.5 Among those victims were two journalists — Shireen Abu Akleh, the star reporter of Aljazeera, and Ghufran Warasneh – as well as 16 teenagers, including two young footballers: Mohammad Ghneim and Thaer Yazouri.

At the same time, the Israeli colonisation goes on apace.  The imprisonments, the threats of imminent expulsion, and the attacks carried out by the settlers, have all intensified.

The Supreme Court of Israel has ruled that almost 1,000 Palestinians can be forced out of their villages in Masafer Yatta, south of Hebron in the occupied West Bank, so that their lands be transformed into a new military training zone, whereas the government approves a plan to build 4,500 homes in the illegal colonies.6

Israel continues to detain 4,450 Palestinian prisoners, including 160 children.  600 are in ‘administrative detention’, with neither charges nor judgement, like the Franco-Palestinian lawyer Salah Hamouri, held arbitrarily since March 2022.  Since the start of this year, the occupation forces have arrested over 2,140 Palestinians, mainly in occupied Jerusalem and in Jenin.7

Israeli settlers, protected by the soldiers, have carried out 133 attacks on Palestinians and their properties in the occupied West Bank.5

One year after the last murderous attack by the Israeli army on the Gaza strip, nothing has actually changed.  The territory is still under an illegal blockade.  Few buildings have been reconstructed.  Gaza remains an open-air prison, and still comes under regular Israeli bombardment. Thousands of children in Gaza suffer from mental trauma.8

The right of return of millions of refugees, adopted by the UN, is still not respected by the State of Israel, which keeps in conditions of misery the inhabitants of the refugee camps, be they in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Jordan, etc., and which represses their resistance in the occupied territories, as seen recently in Jenin and in Hebron.

These dramas take place in line with several decades of colonial and apartheid policies against the Palestinian people.9  To play this match in Tel Aviv would help to mask these realities.

We refuse to see French football and these two teams become complicit in the Israeli violations of international law and of Palestinians’ human rights.

The LFP recently took a strong position by withdrawing from Russia  the rights to broadcast the Ligue 1, in order to punish its invasion and war of aggression in Ukraine. 10

We urge Mr Vincent Labrune, LFP President, Mr Waldemar Kita, owner and President of Nantes FC and Mr Nasser  Al-Khelaïfi, President-Director General of Paris Saint-Germain, to relocate this event to France or to move it to another country.

We call upon the players and staff members to join us by supporting our request.

Signatories

Football clubs and sports associations

Football du Peuple. Montpellier

Les Débuteuses

Ménilmontant Football Club 1871

Spartak Lillois

Football Populaire de Caen

 

Supporters’ groups

Paris Saint-Germain Fan Club – Malaysia

 

Associations and organisations

Football 4 Palestine

Collectif Boycott Apartheid Israël – Paris Banlieue

Jeunes pour la Palestine – Nantes

Collectif Boycott Désinvestissement Sanctions 45

Collectif Boycott Désinvestissement Sanctions 57

Orléans Loiret Palestine

Association France Palestine Solidarité

Association France Palestine Solidarité – Albertville

Association France Palestine Solidarité – Paris Sud

Association France Palestine Solidarité – Nîmes

Association France Palestine Solidarité 63

Association France Palestine Solidarité – Gentilly

Association France Palestine Solidarité 44

Association France Palestine Solidarité – Chambéry

Association France Palestine Solidarité – Paris 14-6

Association France Palestine Solidarité 59/62

Comité France Palestine de Rueil et Suresnes

Collectif Ivryens Pour la Palestine

Association des Palestiniens en France-Aljaliya – Union des associations palestiniennes en France

Forum Palestine Citoyenneté

Collectif Palestine Vaincra

Samidoun Région Parisienne

Mouvement pour une Alternative Non-violente

Mouvement pour une Alternative Non-violente Orléans

Parti communiste des ouvriers de France

Campagne Unitaire pour la Libération de Georges Abdallah

Union Juive Française pour la Paix

Nantes Révoltée

Organisation de Femmes Egalité

Collectif Marseille Gaza Palestine

Collectif Solidarité Palestine Ouest Étang de Berre

Islam & Info

Perspectives Musulmanes

Association des Universitaires pour le Respect du Droit International en Palestine

Les Amis du Théâtre de la Liberté de Jénine

Association Médicale Franco-Palestinienne d’Aubagne

Union syndicale Solidaires

Nouveau Parti Anticapitaliste

Rete dei Comunisti

Front Uni des Immigrations et des Quartiers Populaires – Paris Banlieue

Action Antifasciste Paris-Banlieue

Section du Parti Communiste Français de Rueil-Malmaison et de Garches

Union Nationale des Étudiants de France – Auvergne

Football clubs, sports associations, supporters groups, human rights organizations etc can sign this text by sending an e-mail to signature@nonautropheedeschampionsatelaviv.fr

References

LFP – 17 Mars 2022
https://www.lfp.fr/Articles/Communiqu%C3%A9s/2022/03/17/le-trophee-des-champions-de-retour-a-tel-aviv

2 https://www.challenges.fr/economie/sylvan-adams-l-ambassadeur-milliardaire-d-israel_719175

3 https://www.comtecint.com/clients/

4 Sylvan Adams is one of the owners and financial backer of the Israel Cycling Academy cycling team, which became Israel Start-Up Nation and then Israel-Premier Tech. This is the first professional Israeli cycling team to get a UCI World Tour license, allowing it to participate in major competitions including the Tour de France.

https://www.radiofrance.fr/franceculture/le-sport-de-haut-niveau-pour-changer-l-image-d-israel-4464466

https://www.francetvinfo.fr/replay-radio/planete-sport/planete-sport-le-milliardaire-qui-voulait-faire-rayonner-israel-par-le-cyclisme_4045671.html

5 https://pchrgaza.org/en/israeli-human-rights-violations-in-the-occupied-palestinian-territory-weekly-update-26-may-01-june-2022/

https://www.insideworldfootball.com/2022/04/11/palestine-mourns-death-another-footballer-shot-dead-israeli-forces/

6 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/05/israeli-court-evict-1000-palestinians-west-bank-area

https://www.francetvinfo.fr/monde/proche-orient/israel-palestine/cisjordanie-israel-approuve-pres-de-4-500-logements-dans-des-colonies_5135032.html

7 https://addameer.org/ https://www.addameer.org/media/4759

Israeli authorities have renewed Salah Hamouri’s administrative detention for three months, until September 5th.

https://www.humanite.fr/monde/salah-hamouri-les-autorites-israeliennes-prolongent-sa-detention-administrative-752916

8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANuSxZzKUqE

https://www.franceinter.fr/emissions/le-zoom-de-la-redaction/le-zoom-de-la-redaction-du-vendredi-20-mai-2022

9 see reports from NGOs Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch et Betselem
https://www.amnesty.org/fr/latest/news/2022/02/israels-apartheid-against-palestinians-a-cruel-system-of-domination-and-a-crime-against-humanity/

https://www.hrw.org/fr/news/2021/04/27/des-politiques-israeliennes-abusives-constituent-des-crimes-dapartheid-et-de

https://www.btselem.org/publications/fulltext/202101_this_is_apartheid

10 https://www.leparisien.fr/sports/football/guerre-en-ukraine-la-lfp-stoppe-la-diffusion-de-la-l1-en-russie-04-03-2022-R4BFF3E7OJDEZKMJEO5IGZJJQA.php

 

Take Action: Join the March for Return and Liberation in Brussels, October 2022

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network joins in this call from the Masar Badil and encourages all to participate widely in the march for return and liberation in Brussels! 

Call and Statement: Join the international Palestinian popular march in the heart of Europe

Together on the road to return and liberation, towards victory for Palestine!

European Parliament, Brussels, Belgium

End of October 2022

The Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement calls upon the masses of our Palestinian people inside Palestine and everywhere in diaspora and exile, upon the masses of our Arab nation and all the progressive and democratic forces in the world, especially our communities in Europe, North America and elsewhere, to join us in organizing the international Palestinian popular march in Brussels, Belgium on Saturday, 29 October 2022. This march will take to the streets of the capital of the European Union with a historic rally at the European Parliament to emphasize the following points:

First: We affirm the insistence of the Palestinian Arab people to continue their historical struggle, their national liberation movement, and their valiant and legitimate resistance by all means possible, including their natural right to armed resistance in order to defend themselves and achieve their full national rights and aspirations. First and foremost, this means the right of the Palestinian refugees to return to their homes, lands and properties from which they were displaced, and the right and duty to liberate the land of Palestine from the river to the sea, to recover our stolen land, to restore our historic capital Jerusalem, Al-Quds Al-Sharif, and to exercise our right to self-determination on our national soil.

Second: We hold the European colonial powers, the United States and their allies from the Zionist and reactionary forces historically, politically, legally and morally responsible for the crime of establishing the racist Zionist entity in Palestine, and for the wars and barbaric crimes that have been committed against the peoples of our region over the decades of oppression since the fateful “Balfour Declaration” of 2 November 1917. We also emphasize these parties’ responsibility for Israeli crimes inside and outside occupied Palestine since 1948. The hands of Britain, America, France, Canada, Germany, Australia and other countries and empires that founded and nurtured the Zionist movement are stained with the blood of Palestinians, Arabs and all peoples of the region, and it is time to dismantle the regime of settler colonialism and apartheid in Palestine from the river to the sea.

Third: We affirm our clear support for the struggle of imprisoned Palestinians inside the Zionist colonial prisons, and our full support for the Palestinian prisoners’ movement. We pledge to work to liberate the prisoners from colonial detention. We in the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement consider the struggling prisoners’ movement the solid core of the Palestinian resistance, the leadership of our people’s struggle inside Palestine, and the front lines of defense for Palestinian rights. We also demand the immediate and unconditional release of the internationalist Lebanese fighter, Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, from French prisons, and the unconditional release of Palestinian and Arab detainees in the prisons of the United States of America and the prisons of Arab regimes.

Fourth: We declare our clear and unequivocal position against the corrupt so-called “Palestinian Authority” that serves as an agent of Zionist colonialism in Palestine, and we stand against the policies of repression and exclusion practiced by the PA security forces against our people and the Palestinian resistance forces in the occupied West Bank of Palestine through the treacherous policy of “security coordination.” We also affirm our commitment to struggle for the immediate release of all political prisoners in the prisons of the Palestinian Authority. Our popular march will announce in a press conference a national and international campaign to confront the unjust siege imposed on our people in the valiant Gaza Strip, which aims to transform this precious part of Palestine into the largest open-air prison in the world.

Fifth: We announce from the heart of the European Parliament the Palestinian, Arab and international campaign to expel Israel from the United Nations, and work to boycott and isolate Zionist colonialism and the companies, institutions and organizations supporting it in Europe and the world. The Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement calls upon all the organizations and movements working to build the boycott campaign and solidarity with Palestine, everywhere in the world, to adopt this goal and work to achieve its implementation, the expulsion of the Israeli regime from the United Nations and the restoration of international resolution 3379 issued by the United Nations General Assembly, which declares that Zionism is a form of racism and racial discrimination.

Sixth: We declare our rejection of the repressive and racist policies pursued by some countries in the European Union against Palestinian political, civil and human rights in Europe, the latest of which is the order by the police in Berlin, the German capital, to ban the marches and events commemorating al-Nakba and calling for the Right to Return. We condemn all attempts to target the struggle of our people and the Palestine solidarity movement through the policy of seeking to criminalize supporters of the Palestinian resistance. We call for challenging and bringing an end to the so-called “terror lists” that seek to distort the image of the just and legitimate struggle of the Palestinian people for the liberation of their homeland and the restoration of their rights, and we will declare from the heart of the European Parliament our support and support for the resistance camp in Palestine, Lebanon and the region.

Seventh: We affirm our loyalty to the martyrs, the leaders assassinated by forces of the occupation in Europe and the Diaspora. These crimes do not have a statute of limitations; we will not forget and we will not forgive. The names and photos of the martyrs will lead the March of Return and Liberation in Brussels, including the leaders and symbols of the martyrs Naim Khader, Abu Youssef Al-Najjar, Ghassan Kanafani, Majed Abu Sharar, Basil Al-Kubaisi, Kamal Adwan, Naji Al-Ali, Muhammad Boudia, Kamal Nasser, Mahmoud Al-Hamshari, Izz Al-Din Qalaq, Khaled Nazzal, Alex Odeh, Wael Zuaiter, and others from the constellation of martyrs who rose to eternity on the path of struggle for the liberation of Palestine.

Eighth: We reaffirm that the just cause of Palestine is not the cause of the Palestinians alone, nor is it the cause of the Arabs alone, but it is also the cause of all the free people of the world. This march of return and liberation aims to deepen and strengthen the international dimension of the Palestinian cause and our alternative revolutionary path, and to bring Palestine to the forefront of the agenda of liberation movements and revolutionary forces for change in Europe and the world, as well as the women’s, student and trade union movements that support and stand with our struggle to achieve justice in Palestine.

Our popular movement was launched in late October 2021 in Madrid, Beirut and Sao Paulo as a Palestinian Arab and international movement to confront the path of liquidation and surrender, in order to straighten the Palestinian national compass and mobilize the energies and resources of the Palestinian people in the diaspora. This international Palestinian popular march will reaffirm the launch of our revolutionary path in order to achieve all these goals and to mark a milestone of struggle in the history of our Palestinian people, on the path of return, liberation and victory.

Towards the widest possible Palestinian, Arab and international participation in the March of Return and Liberation!

Long live the struggle of our Palestinian people!

Long live international solidarity with Palestine and its people!

We shall return and be victorious!

 

Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement (Masar Badil)

June 14, 2022

Hearing for Dr. Issam Hijjawi Bassalat continued: Solidarity against anti-Palestinian repression!

On Friday, 10 June, Palestinian-Scottish doctor Issam Hijjawi Bassalat appeared before the Supreme Court of Scotland in a case seeking to reclaim his medical license after it was suspended by the medical board due to his political arrest in 2020. Dr. Bassalat was released on bail in December 2021 after spending 16 months — and suffering a heart attack — behind bars in British prisons in the occupied North of Ireland.

Dr. Bassalat was detained in “Operation Arbacia,” a series of political arrests carried out by British authorities, along with 9 Irish republicans from a political party, Saoradh, which was targeted for infiltration by an MI5 agent, Dennis McFadden. After he was detained at Heathrow Airport on 22 August 2020, he was held in pretrial detention until his heart attack and his December 2021 bail hearing weeks later, despite the severe negative effects of incarceration upon his health.

During his detention, Issam’s licence to practise medicine was suspended by the General Medical Council (GMC) on 26 October 2020 after the charges were filed against him, despite the fact that he has been convicted of nothing and that the charges in no way relate to his fitness to practise medicine or his treatment of his patients.

At the 10 June hearing, Dr. Bassalat urged the court to consider the 250 pages of written submissions that have already been made in the case challenging the suspension of his licence to practise medicine. While many people attempted to virtually attend the hearing to show support for Dr. Bassalat, the court changed the link at the last minute, leaving only those who were there very early or who phoned and emailed the court to obtain the new link able to join.

The hearing was continued for a month, so a new session in the case is expected in July. Nevertheless, Dr. Bassalat compelled the lawyer representing the General Medical Council to step back from his earlier claim that he was a “link between Irish terrorists and Palestinian terrorists,” attributing this remark instead to British police and stating that he was not declaring his agreement with the allegation.

Dr. Bassalat, 64, came to the UK in 1995 to work as a doctor, and he is a well-known, respected member of the Palestinian community in Scotland and the father of four. He previously served as chair of the Association of Palestinian Communities in Scotland (today, the Scottish Palestinian Society) and has been active throughout Europe in advocating for Palestinian rights to return, freedom and justice, speaking frequently at meetings, conferences and events.

On Saturday, 11 June, the conference of the Union of Palestinian Associations in Europe affirmed its solidarity with Dr. Bassalat from Berlin, joining a growing number of organizations calling for the prosecution against him to be dropped and the reinstatement of his medical license.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reaffirms our solidarity with Dr. Issam Hijjawi Bassalat. The prosecution against him is a political attempt by the British state to attack international solidarity, specifically Palestinian-Irish anti-colonial solidarity which has spanned decades of joint struggle. Not only is Britain currently colonizing the north of Ireland, the British colonial mandate is directly responsible for the Zionist colonization of Palestine. One of the campaigns Dr. Bassalat was most deeply involved in organizing was for accountability for the Balfour Declaration.

Dr. Bassalat is being targeted as a Palestinian in an attempt to justify the MI5 infiltration of public political parties and to smear both the Palestinian and Irish struggles through entrapment, misrepresentation and criminalization. We urge that all charges against Dr. Bassalat be immediately dropped, his medical license be reinstated and that all political prisoners in British jails be released.

We will provide more information on the new court date for Dr. Bassalat and encourage all to attend and support him!

 

Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike: Severe health deterioration for Khalil Awawdeh and Raed Rayan

Khalil Awawdeh and Raed Rayan, Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention in Israeli occupation prisons, are continuing their hunger strikes for the 102nd and 67th days, respectively. They have been joined by four more Palestinian prisoners — Hani Bisharat, also jailed without charge or trial; Freedom Tunnel heroes Zakaria Zubaidi and Yaqoub Qadri; and resistance leader Abdullah Barghouthi. Their health situation is increasingly dire, and action and mobilization is needed to win their liberation! 

Free Khalil Awawdeh and Raed Rayan!

Awawdeh, 40, from Ithna near al-Khalil, has been repeatedly transferred back and forth between civilian hospitals and the Ramle prison clinic. In an attempt to pressure him to end his strike, Israeli occupation forces have put his body under further stress with frequent transfers in an attempt to force him to accept medical treatment, including nutrition, in exchange for keeping him in the hospital. He is experiencing severe joint pain, headache, dizziness, blurred vision, and must move using a wheelchair.

Awawdeh originally intended to pursue medical school abroad but enrolled in an engineering course in al-Khalil at Palestine Polytechnic University before his studies were interrupted in 2002. Jailed for five years by the Israeli occupation, he was released in 2007. Later that year, he was once again seized and held without charge or trial under administrative detention for nearly three years. He has since been repeatedly detained. He launched studies at economics at Al-Quds Open University, which were again interrupted on 27 December 2021, when he was thrown in administrative detention without charge or trial once again.

Awawdeh is the father of four daughters. On Sunday, 10 June, the people of Ithna announced a comprehensive strike in all business activities to show solidarity with him and call for his liberation, a strike joined officially by the Ithna municipality.

Rayan, 27, from Beit Duqqu near Jerusalem, has continually been held in solitary confinement in Ofer prison in another effort to pressure him to end his hunger strike by denying a proper medical environment. He is severely fatigued and vomits water after drinking it, and must move in a wheelchair.

Palestinian Prisoners Join the Hunger Strike

Hani Bisharat, also jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention, launched his own hunger strike 20 days ago to demand his liberation.

Zakaria Zubaidi, one of the six Freedom Tunnel heroes who liberated themelves from Gilboa prison in September 2021, has been on hunger strike for 13 days in solidarity with Awawdeh and Rayan.

Two more Palestinian prisoners have joined open-ended hunger strikes against ongoing mistreatment and repression inside occupation prisons. Yaqoub Qadri, another of the six heroes of the Freedom Tunnel, is on hunger strike for the 11th day against repressive actions against him by the Ohli Kedar prison administration, reported the Muhjat al-Quds organization. The repressive measures include a ban on family visits, the closing of his “canteen” (prison store) account and the removal of electricity from his isolation cell. His room is invaded every three days and ransacked by repressive special units in addition to daily inspections, and the room is infested with cockroaches, mosquitoes and bedbugs, Qadri said, calling for action.

Abdullah Barghouthi, 50, one of the most prominent prisoners and a leader in the Palestinian resistance, is on his fourth day of hunger strike after he was barred from family visits and moved into isolation.

The Collective Struggle Against Administrative Detention

Awawdeh, Rayan and Bisharat are all jailed without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention. Administrative detention orders are issued on the basis of secret evidence denied to both the Palestinian detainee and their lawyer and are indefinitely renewable. As a result, Palestinians are jailed for years at a time without ever being charged or tried – even in the illegitimate military courts – or even knowing when or if they will be released.

Administrative detention was first used in Palestine by the British colonial mandate and then adopted by the Zionist regime; it is now used routinely to target Palestinians, especially community leaders, activists, and influential people in their towns, camps and villages.

All 600 administrative detainees — out of approximately 4,500 Palestinian political prisoners in total — are engaged in a collective boycott of the occupation military courts in rejection of the illegitimate policy of administrative detention. The complete boycott was launched by Bashir al-Khairy, 80, Palestinian lawyer, leftist and longtime leader, who announced his own boycott of the military courts upon his detention without charge or trial, leading to the collective protest that has been ongoing since January 1, 2022, for 163 days.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to support these Palestinian hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. They are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

TAKE ACTION: 

Join the Social Media Campaign!

There is a growing social media campaign to #FreeRaed and #FreeKhalil. Use these hashtags and to post on Twitter and Instagram. Post in all languages!  Take action and join the social media outrage and break the isolation imposed upon Raed and Khalil by the Israeli occupation! Follow the Instagram accounts of their campaigns to Free Khalil and Free Raed

Protest in your city or country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Or take to the streets in your neighborhood, on your campus or at a government building in your area. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net. Demonstrations have already been organized in Montreal, London, Manchester, Paris, Toulouse, Berlin and elsewhere.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Use these Posters and Signs:

Spread awareness by posting these signs and posters in your community or carrying them during your demonstrations:

https://samidoun.net/site/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Free-Palestine-From-the-River-to-the-Sea.pdf

https://samidoun.net/site/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/FREE-ALL-PALESTINIAN-PRISONERS.pdf

 

Solidarity against anti-Palestinian smear campaign targeting CUNY movement, Nerdeen Kiswani and Within Our Lifetime

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands in solidarity with Palestinian activist and law graduate Nerdeen Kiswani, Within Our Lifetime, and the movement for Palestinian liberation at the City University of New York (CUNY).

Kiswani was elected by her graduating class as the student commencement speaker at her law school graduation, where she delivered a powerful message about Palestine, social justice and liberation. Despite a media smear campaign, Zionist organizations and right-wing forces failed to stop Kiswani from presenting her speech, which was shared widely on social media.

The speech followed ongoing strong organizing for Palestine at CUNY and particularly its law school, where the student body adopted resolutions endorsing the boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign against Israel in support of Palestinian liberation. At the same time, the chancellor of CUNY went on a junket to occupied Palestine sponsored by Zionist organizations and then cancelled the Palestine Lives conference, organized by WOL and Existence is Resistance, only days after his return. However, the same week, CUNY Law’s faculty adopted the BDS resolution, calling for justice in Palestine and an end to CUNY complicity.

Zionist organizations, right-wing media and City Councillor Inna Vernikov then unleashed an escalated racist smear campaign targeting Kiswani and the student movement, calling for hearings on the adoption of resolutions supporting Palestine and pulling $50,000 in funding to support legal services for New York residents living in poverty, an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment. Kiswani has been subjected to racist attacks online, death threats and harassment due to this smear campaign.

It is clear that this campaign is targeting the successful organizing for Palestine taking place at CUNY. We urge all supporters of Palestinian liberation to stand with Nerdeen Kiswani, WOL and the entire movement at CUNY that is substantially challenging complicity and expressing a clear position for Palestinian liberation from the river to the sea.

Take the actions below, recommended by CUNY organizers, against this campaign:

CALL COUNCILWOMAN INNA VERNIKOV

Councilwoman Inna Vernikov
Phone Number: 718-368-9176
Office Hours: Wednesday 9am – 7pm
Email: IVernikov@council.nyc.gov

Call Script:

Hello, my name is [INSERT NAME] and I am calling as a concerned NYC Resident [OR CONCERNED INDIVIDUAL FOR OUT-OF-STATERS]. I am appalled at Councilwoman Inna Vernikov’s behavior. Her racist, Islamaphobic smear campaign against Nerdeen Kiswani and CUNY Law is nothing but an attempt to chill and silence CUNY students and workers organizing in solidarity with Palestine under the guise of antisemitism. This manufactured backlash with zero evidence is not only a clear threat to First Amendment rights to free speech and academic freedom but a failed attempt to punish organizers for the extraordinary victories for Palestinian liberation on CUNY Law’s campus. You do not represent us. We stand firmly with Nerdeen Kiswani, Within Our Lifetime, CUNY Law, and all organizers fighting for Palestinian liberation and we demand that you stop your smear campaign immediately.

CALL CUNY CHANCELLOR RODRIGUEZ:

Chancellor Rodriguez
Phone Number: 646-664-9100
Office Hours: 9am – 5pm
Email: Chancellor@cuny.edu

Call Script:

Hello, my name is [INSERT NAME] and I am calling as a disturbed CUNY community member of the CUNY community. It is of grave concern to myself and other CUNY community members that you continue to contribute through your inactions to the defamation; harassment and violent repression of Palestinian, Arab, Muslim, and other CUNY students and workers organizing in solidarity with Palestine. As you continue to deny CUNY’s complicity, even while you take funded trips to the settler-colonial entity, CUNY plans to partake in a meeting masquerading as a “hearing” on antisemitism. This hearing is nothing but an attempt to probe on how to censor and chill organizing efforts for Palestine. It is ironic that no such hearing has been organized for the rampant anti-Black or anti-Palestinian racism on campus. Your participation in such hearing would demonstrate your continued complicity in anti-Palestinian racism and your complicity in actively perpetuating violence against CUNY students and alumni like Nerdeen Kiswani. For that reason, we demand that you refuse to participate and that you condemn the hearing for the sham that it is. We stand firmly with Nerdeen Kiswani, CUNY Law, and all CUNY organizers fighting for Palestinian liberation and we demand that you take action immediately.

Tweet Samples

  1. @ChancellorCUNY refuses to listen to Palestinian voices yet takes trips to israel and entertains the zionist lobby seeking to threaten and silence his own students. @CUNY voices are proudly pro-Palestine. You do not represent us! #ZionismOutOfCUNY  #WestandwithNerdeen
  1. The failed hearing on antisemitism is a ruse in which @ChancellorRodriguez & @InnaVernikov seek to silence Palestinian students who rightfully criticize Israel for its state-sanctioned genocide. @CUNY When will you stand up for your students? #ZionismOutOfCUNY  #WeStandWithNerdeen
  2. Zionism has no place in CUNY. Attempts to silence us only make us stronger. #ZionismOutOfCUNY #WeStandWithNerdeen
  1. @ChancellorCUNY ignores Palestinian students & workers but chooses to platform @InnaVernikov an anti-Palestinian racist. This planned hearing was just an example of trying to silence @CUNY anti-Zionist voices but we grow stronger every day! #ZionismOutOfCUNY #WeChargeDefamation

 

 

Mapping Project highlights US imperialism, Zionism and complicit institutions from Boston to Palestine

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the incisive work of The Mapping Project, a newly announced initiative that makes clear the links between repressive institutions in the Boston area. As the Mapping Project notes, it is “a project created by activists and organizers in eastern Massachusetts, investigating local links between entities responsible for the colonization of Palestine, for colonialism and dispossession here where we live, and for the economy of imperialism and war.” The Mapping Project’s work presents a clear view of the connections between imperialism, Zionism and associated reactionary forces and how this global analysis is manifested practically on a local level — providing necessary information for challenging and dismantling these structures.

Below, we are republishing content from The Mapping Project, including one of the Project’s articles, “Mapping US Imperialism.” We encourage all supporters to visit the Mapping Project and use its interactive tools and resources:

As the Project’s organizers noted in an interview in Mondoweiss marking the project’s launch:

“The Mapping Project arose through conversations we’ve been having over the years about the limitations of Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) efforts which focus upon one corporation or institution at a time, often demanding that an entity act “more ethically” by ending one contract or partnership with Israel without accounting for the breadth of its support for zionism and other interlocking systems of oppression – e.g., appealing to Amazon to end its participation in Project Nimbus, without addressing the the breadth of Amazon’s support for racism and violence in Palestine, the US and elsewhere in the world, and its role in the broader system of racial capitalism.​ Moreover, we felt that BDS efforts often missed the full picture of how the corporations, institutions, and other entities sustaining zionism and other oppressions operate: not in isolation from one another, but through the web of connections they establish with one another to more effectively carry out their oppressive agendas – e.g., Raytheon establishing research centers at MIT (while Boeing leases space from MIT); or the Brookline Police coordinating with the Consulate General of Israel to New England to repress a Palestinian-led protest.”

The Mapping Project is a multi-generational collective of activists and organizers; we are unpaid and don’t report to any donors. Email us at mapliberation@protonmail.com

The Mapping Project Collective is a multi-generational collective of activists and organizers in the Boston area who are deeply engaged in Palestine solidarity/BDS work. For over a year, The Mapping Project has been tracing Greater Boston’s networks of support for the colonization of Palestine – and how these networks participate in other oppressions, from policing to US imperialism to medical apartheid and privatization.

The goal in pursuing this collective mapping was to reveal the local entities and networks that enact devastation, so they can be dismantled.

**
This article is a snapshot from the Mapping Project: a project created by activists and organizers in eastern Massachusetts, investigating local links between entities responsible for the colonization of Palestine, for colonialism and dispossession here where we live, and for the economy of imperialism and war.

Mapping US Imperialism

Date published: June 3, 2022

“The greatest threat looming over our planet, the hegemonistic pretentions of the American Empire are placing at risk the very survival of the human species. We continue to warn you about this danger, and we appeal to the people of the United States and the world to halt this threat, which is like a sword hanging over our heads.”
-Hugo Chavez

“The United States Military is arguably the largest force of ecological devastation the world has ever known.”
-–Xoài Pham

“Each generation must, out of relative obscurity, discover its mission, and fulfill it or betray it.”
–Frantz Fanon

US imperialism is the greatest threat to life on the planet, a force of ecological devastation and disaster impacting not only human beings, but also our non-human relatives. How can we organize to dismantle the vast and complicated network of US imperialism which includes US war and militarism, CIA intervention, US weapons/technology/surveillance corporations, political and economic support for dictatorships, military juntas, death squads and US trained global police forces favorable to US geopolitical interests, US imposed sanctions, so-called “humanitarian interventions,” genetically modified grassroots organizationscorporate media’s manipulation of spontaneous protest, and US corporate sponsorship of political repression and regime change favorable to US corporate interests?

This article deals with US imperialism since World War 2. It is critical to acknowledge that US imperialism emanates both ideologically and materially from the crime of colonialism on this continent which has killed over 100 million indigenous people and approximately 150 million African people over the past 500 years

The exact death toll of US imperialism is both staggering and impossible to know. What we do know is that since World War 2, US imperialism has killed at least 36 million people globally in Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, the Congo, Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala, Colombia, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Chad, Libya, East Timor, Grenada, Honduras, Iran, Pakistan, Panama, the Philippines, Sudan, Greece, Yugoslavia, Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo, Somalia, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Palestine (see Appendix).

This list does not include other aspects of US imperialist aggression which have had a devastating and lasting impact on communities worldwide, including torture, imprisonment, rape, and the ecological devastation wrought by the US military through atomic bombs, toxic waste and untreated sewage dumping by over 750 military bases in over 80 countriesThe US Department of Defense consumes more petroleum than any institution in the world. In the year of 2017 alone, the US military emitted 59 million metric tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, a carbon footprint greater than that of most nations worldwide. This list also does not include the impact of US fossil fuel consumption and US corporate fossil fuel extraction, fracking, agribusiness, mining, and mono-cropping, all of which are part and parcel of the extractive economy of US imperialism.

US military bases around the world (figure from Al Jazeera).

One central mechanism of US imperialism is “dollar hegemony” which forces countries around the world to conduct international trade in US dollars. US dollars are backed by US bonds (instead of gold or industrial stocks) which means a country can only cash in one American IOU for another. When the US offers military aid to friendly nations, this aid is circulated back to US weapons corporations and returns to US banks. In addition, US dollars are also backed by US bombs: any nation that threatens to nationalize resources or go off the dollar (i.e. Iraq or Libya) is threatened with a military invasion and/or a US backed coup.

US imperialism has also been built through “soft power” organizations like USAID, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), World Bank, the World Trade Organization (WTO), and the Organization of American States (OAS). These nominally international bodies are practically unilateral in their subservience to the interests of the US state and US corporations. In the 1950s and ‘60s, USAID (and its precursor organizations) made “development aid” to Asian, African, and South American countries conditional on those countries’ legal formalization of capitalist property relations, and reorganization of their economies around homeownership debt. The goal was to enclose Indigenous land, and land shared through alternate economic systems, as a method of “combatting Communism with homeownership” and creating dependency and buy-in to US capitalist hegemony (Nancy Kwak, A World of Homeowners). In order to retain access to desperately needed streams of resources (e.g. IMF “loans”), Global South governments are forced to accept resource-extraction by the US, while at the same time denying their own people popularly supported policies such as land reform, economic diversification, and food sovereignty. It is also important to note that Global South nations have never received reparations or compensation for the resources that have been stolen from them – this makes the idea of “loans” by global monetary institutions even more outrageous.

The US also uses USAID and other similarly functioning international bodies to suppress and to undermine anti-imperialist struggle inside “friendly” countries. Starting in the 1960s, USAID funded police training programs across the globe under a counterinsurgency model, training foreign police as a “first line of defense against subversion and insurgency.” These USAID-funded police training programs involved surveillance and the creation of biometric databases to map entire populations, as well as programs of mass imprisonment, torture, and assassination. After experimenting with these methods in other countries, US police departments integrated many of them into US policing, especially the policing of BIPOC communities here (see our entry on the Boston Police Department). At the same time, the US uses USAID and other soft power funding bodies to undermine revolutionary, anti-colonial, anti-imperialist, and anti-capitalist movements, by funding “safe” reformist alternatives, including a global network of AFL-CIO managed “training centers” aimed at fostering a bureaucratic union culture similar to the one in the US, which keeps labor organizing loyal to capitalism and to US global dominance. (See our entries on the AFL-CIO and the Harvard Trade Union Program.)

US imperialism intentionally fosters divisions between different peoples and nations, offering (relative) rewards to those who choose to cooperate with US dictates (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Israel, and Colombia), while brutally punishing those who do not (e.g. Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela). In this way, US imperialism creates material conditions in which peoples and governments face a choice: 1. accommodate the interests of US Empire and allow the US to develop your nation’s land and sovereign resources in ways which enrich the West; or, 2. attempt to use your land and your sovereign resources to meet the needs of your own people and suffer the brutality of US economic and military violence.

The Harvard Kennedy School: Training Ground for US Empire and the Security State

The Mapping Project set out to map local US imperialist actors (involved in both material and ideological support for US imperialism) on the land of Massachusett, Pawtucket, Naumkeag, and other tribal nations (Boston, Cambridge, and surrounding areas) and to analyze how these institutions interacted with other oppressive local and global institutions that are driving colonization of indigenous lands here and worldwide, local displacement/ethnic cleansing (“gentrification”), policing, and zionist imperialism.

A look at just one local institution on our map, the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, demonstrates the level of ideological and material cooperation required for the machinery of US imperialism to function. (All information outlined below is taken from The Mapping Project entries and links regarding the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Please see this link for hyperlinked source material.)

The Harvard Kennedy School of Government and its historical precursors have hosted some of the most infamous war criminals and architects of empire: Henry Kissinger, Samuel Huntington, Susan Rice (an HKS fellow), Madeleine Albright, James Baker, Hillary Clinton, Colin Powell, Condoleeza Rice, and Larry Summers. HKS also currently hosts Ricardo Hausmann, founder and director of Harvard’s Growth Lab, the academic laboratory of the US backed Venezuelan coup.

In How Harvard Rules, John Trumpbour documents the central role Harvard played in the establishment of the Cold War academic-military-industrial complex and US imperialism post-WWII (How Harvard Rules, 51). Trumpbour highlights the role of the Harvard Kennedy School under Dean Graham Allison (1977-1989), in particular, recounting that Dean Allison ran an executive education program for Pentagon officials at Harvard Kennedy (HHR 68). Harvard Kennedy School’s support for the US military and US empire continues to this day. HKS states on its website:

Harvard Kennedy School, because of its mission to train public leaders and its depth of expertise in the study of defense and international security, has always had a particularly strong relationship with the U.S. Armed Forces. This relationship is mutually beneficial. The School has provided its expertise to branches of the US military, and it has given military personnel (active and veteran) access to Harvard’s education and training.

The same webpage further notes that after the removal of ROTC (Reserve Officers Training Corps) from Harvard Kennedy School in 1969, “under the leadership of Harvard President Drew Faust, the ROTC program was reinstated in 2011, and the Kennedy School’s relationship with the military continues to grow more robust each year.”

In particular, Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs provides broad support to the US military and the objectives of US empire. The Belfer Center is co-directed by former US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter (a war hawk who has advocated for a US invasion of North Korea and US military build ups against Russia and Iran) and former Pentagon Chief of Staff Eric Rosenbach. Programs within HKS Belfer Center include the Center’s “Intelligence Program,” which boasts that it “acquaints students and Fellows with the intelligence community and its strengths and weaknesses for policy making,” further noting, “Discussions with active and retired intelligence practitioners, scholars of intelligence history, law, and other disciplines, help students and Fellows prepare to best use the information available through intelligence agencies.” Alongside HKS Belfer’s Intelligence Program, is the Belfer Center’s “Recanati-Kaplan Foundation Fellowship.” The Belfer Center claims that, under the direction of Belfer Center co-directors Ashton Carter and Eric Rosenbach, the Recanati-Kaplan Foundation Fellowship “educates the next generation of thought leaders in national and international intelligence.”

As noted above, the Harvard Kennedy School serves as an institutional training ground for future servants of US empire and the US national security state. HKS also maintains a close relationship with the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). As reported by Inside Higher Ed in their 2017 review of Spy Schools by Daniel Golden:

[Harvard Kennedy School] currently allows the agency [the CIA] to send officers to the midcareer program at the Kennedy School of Government while continuing to act undercover, with the school’s knowledge. When the officers apply – often with fudged credentials that are part of their CIA cover – the university doesn’t know they’re CIA agents, but once they’re in, Golden writes, Harvard allows them to tell the university that they’re undercover. Their fellow students, however – often high-profile or soon-to-be-high-profile actors in the world of international diplomacy — are kept in the dark.

Kenneth Moskow is one of a long line of CIA officers who have enrolled undercover at the Kennedy School, generally with Harvard’s knowledge and approval, gaining access to up-and-comers worldwide,” Golden writes. “For four decades the CIA and Harvard have concealed this practice, which raises larger questions about academic boundaries, the integrity of class discussions and student interactions, and whether an American university has a responsibility to accommodate U.S. intelligence.”

In addition to the CIA, HKS has direct relationships with the FBI, the US Pentagon, US Department of Homeland Security, NERAC, and numerous branches of the US Armed Forces:

  • Chris Combs, a Senior Fellow with HKS’s Program on Crisis Leadership has held numerous positions within the FBI;
  • Jeffrey A. Tricoli, who serves as Section Chief of the FBI’s Cyber Division since December 2016 (prior to which he held several other positions within the FBI) was a keynote speaker at “multiple sessions” of the HKS’s Cybersecurity Executive Education program;
  • Jeff Fields, who is Fellow at both the Cyber Project and the Intelligence Project of HKS’s Belfer Center currently serves as a Supervisory Special Agent within the National Security Division of the FBI;
  • HKS hosted former FBI director James Comey for a conversation with HKS Belfer Center’s Co-Director (and former Pentagon Chief of Staff) Eric Rosenbach in 2020;
  • Government spending records show yearly tuition payments from the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for Homeland Security personnel attending special HKS seminars on Homeland Security under HKS’s Program on Crisis Leadership;
  • Northeast Homeland Security Regional Advisory Council meeting minutes from February 2022 list “Edward Chao: Analyst, Harvard Kennedy School,” as a NERAC “Council Member”; and
  • Harvard Kennedy School and the US Air force have created multiple fellowships aimed at recruiting US Air Force service members to pursue degrees at HKS. The Air Force’s CSAF Scholars Master Fellowship, for example, aims to “prepare mid-career, experienced professionals to return to the Air Force ready to assume significant leadership positions in an increasingly complex environment.” In 2016, Harvard Kennedy School Dean Doug Elmendorf welcomed Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James to Harvard Kennedy School, in a speech in which Elmendorf highlighted his satisfaction that the ROTC program, including Air Force ROTC, had been reinstated at Harvard (ROTC had been removed from campus following mass faculty protests in 1969).

 

Harvard Kennedy School’s web.

The Harvard Kennedy School and the War Economy

HKS’s direct support of US imperialism does not limit itself to ideological and educational support. It is deeply enmeshed in the war economy driven by the interests of the US weapons industry.

Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Boeing, L3 Harris, General Dynamics, and Northrup Grumman are global corporations who supply the United States government with broad scale military weaponry and war and surveillance technologies. All these companies have corporate leadership who are either alumni of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government (HKS), who are currently contributing to HKS as lecturers/professors, and/or who have held leadership positions in US federal government.

Lockheed Martin Vice President for Corporate Business Development Leo Mackay is a Harvard Kennedy School alumnus (MPP ’91), was a Fellow in the HKS Belfer Center International Security Program (1991-92) and served as the “military assistant” to then US Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy Ashton Carter, who would soon go on to become co-director of the Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center. Following this stint at the US Pentagon, Mackay landed in the US weapons industry at Lockheed Martin.  Lockheed Martin Vice President Marcel Lettre is an HKS alumni and prior to joining Lockheed Martin, Lettre spent eight years in the US Department of Defense (DoD). The US DoD has dished out a whopping $540.82 billion to date in contracts with Lockheed Martin for the provision of products and services to the US Army, Navy, Air Force, and other branches of the US military. Lockheed Martin Board of Directors member Jeh Johnson has lectured at Harvard Kennedy School and is the former Secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security, the agency responsible for carrying out the US federal government’s regime of tracking, detentions, and deportations of Black and Brown migrants. (Retired) General Joseph F. Dunford is currently a member of two Lockheed Martin Board of Director Committees and a Senior Fellow with HKS’s Belfer Center. Dunford was a US military leader, serving as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Commander of all US and NATO Forces in Afghanistan. Dunford also serves on the board of the Atlantic Council, itself a cutout organization of NATO and the US security state which crassly promotes the interests of US empire. Mackay, Lettre, Johnson, and Dunford’s respective career trajectories provide an emblematic illustration of the grotesque revolving door which exists between elite institutions of knowledge production like the Harvard Kennedy School, the US security state (which feeds its people into those elite institutions and vice versa), and the US weapons industry (which seeks business from the US security state).

Similar revolving door phenomena are notable among the Harvard Kennedy School and Raytheon, Boeing, and Northrup Grumman. HKS Professor Meghan O’Sullivan currently serves on the board of Massachusetts-based weapons manufacturer Raytheon. O’Sullivan is also deeply enmeshed within America’s security state, currently sitting on the Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations and has served as “special assistant” to President George W. Bush (2004-07) where she was “Deputy National Security Advisor for Iraq and Afghanistan,” helping oversee the US invasions and occupations of these nations during the so-called “War on Terror.” O’Sullivan has openly attempted to leverage her position as Harvard Kennedy School to funnel US state dollars into Raytheon: In April 2021, O’Sullivan penned an article in the Washington Post entitled “It’s Wrong to Pull Troops Out of Afghanistan. But We Can Minimize the Damage.” As reported in the Harvard Crimson, O’Sullivan’s author bio in this article highlighted her position as a faculty member of Harvard Kennedy (with the perceived “expertise” affiliation with HKS grants) but failed to acknowledge her position on the Board of Raytheon, a company which had “a $145 million contract to train Afghan Air Force pilots and is a major supplier of weapons to the U.S. military.” Donn Yates who works in Domestic and International Business Development at Boeing’s T-7A Redhawk Program was a National Security Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School in 2015-16. Don Yates also spent 23 years in the U.S. Air Force. Former Northrop Grumman Director for Strategy and Global Relations John Johns is a graduate of Harvard Kennedy’s National and International Security Program. Johns also spent “seven years as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Maintenance establishing policy for, and leading oversight of the Department’s annual $80B weapon system maintenance program and deployed twice in support of security operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

The largest US oil firms are also closely interlocked with these top weapons companies, which have also diversified their technological production for the security industry – providing services for pipeline and energy facility security, as well as border security. This means that the same companies are profiting at every stage in the cycle of climate devastation: they profit from wars for extraction; from extraction; and from the militarized policing of people forced to migrate by climate disaster. Exxon Mobil (the 4th largest fossil fuel firm) contracts with General Dynamics, L3 Harris, and Lockheed Martin. Lockheed Martin, the top weapons company in the world, shares board members with Chevron, and other global fossil fuel companies. (See Global Climate Wall: How the world’s wealthiest nations prioritise borders over climate action.)

The Harvard Kennedy School and US Support for Israel

US imperialist interests in West Asia are directly tied to US support of Israel. This support is not only expressed through tax dollars but through ideological and diplomatic support for Israel and advocacy for regional normalization with Israel.

Harvard Kennedy School is home to the Wexner Foundation. Through its “Israel Fellowship,” The Wexner Foundation awards ten scholarships annually to “outstanding public sector directors and leaders from Israel,” helping these individuals to pursue a Master’s in Public Administration at the Kennedy School. Past Wexner fellows include more than 25 Israeli generals and other high-ranking military and police officials. Among them is the Israeli Defense Force’s current chief of general staff, Aviv Kochavi, who is directly responsible for the bombardment of Gaza in May 2021. Kochavi also is believed to be one of the 200 to 300 Israeli officials identified by Tel Aviv as likely to be indicted by the International Criminal Court’s probe into alleged Israeli war crimes committed in Gaza in 2014. The Wexner Foundation also paid former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak — himself accused of war crimes in connection with Israel’s 2009 Operation Cast Lead that killed over 1,400 Palestinians in Gaza — $2.3 million for two studies, one of which he did not complete.

HKS’s Belfer Center has hosted Israeli generals, politicians, and other officials to give talks at Harvard Kennedy School. Ehud Barak, mentioned above, was himself a “Belfer fellow” at HKS in 2016. The Belfer Center also hosts crassly pro-Israel events for HKS students, such as: The Abraham Accords – A conversation on the historic normalization of relations between the UAE, Bahrain and Israel,” “A Discussion with Former Mossad Director Tamir Pardo,” “The Future of Modern Warfare” (which Belfer describes as “a lunch seminar with Yair Golan, former Deputy Chief of the General Staff for the Israel Defense Forces”), and “The Future of Israel’s National Security.”

As of 2022, Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center is hosting former Israel military general and war criminal Amos Yadlin as a Senior Fellow at the Belfer’s Middle East Initiative. Furthermore, HKS is allowing Yadlin to lead a weekly study group of HKS students entitled “Israeli National Security in a Shifting Middle East: Historical and Strategic Perspectives for an Uncertain Future.” Harvard University students wrote an open letter demanding HKS “sever all association with Amos Yadlin and immediately suspend his study group.” Yadlin had defended Israel’s assassination policy through which the Israeli state has extrajudicially killed hundreds of Palestinians since 2000, writing that the “the laws and ethics of conventional war did not apply” vis-á-vis Palestinians under zionist occupation.

Harvard Kennedy School also plays host to the Harvard Kennedy School Israel Caucus. The HKS Israel Caucus coordinates “heavily subsidized” trips to Israel for 50 HKS students annually. According to HKS Israel Caucus’s website, students who attend these trips “meet the leading decision makers and influencers in Israeli politics, regional security and intelligence, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, [and] the next big Tech companies.” The HKS Israel Caucus also regularly hosts events which celebrate “Israel’s culture and history.” Like the trips to Israel they coordinate, HKS Israel Caucus events consistently whitewash over the reality of Israel’s colonial war against the Palestinian people through normalizing land theft, forced displacement, and resource theft.

Harvard Kennedy School also has numerous ties to local pro-Israel organizations: the ADL, the JCRC, and CJP.

The Harvard Kennedy School’s Support for Saudi Arabia

In 2017, Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center announced the launch of “The Project on Saudi and Gulf Cooperation Council Security,” which Belfer stated was “made possible through a gift from HRH Prince Turki bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia.” Through this project, Harvard Kennedy School and the HKS Belfer Center have hosted numerous events at HKS which have promoted Saudi Arabia as a liberalizing and positive force for security and stability in the region, whitewashing over the realities of the Saudi-led and US-backed campaign of airstrikes and blockade against Yemen which has precipitated conditions of mass starvation and an epidemic of cholera amongst the Yemeni people.

The Belfer Center’s Project on Saudi and Gulf Cooperation Council Security further normalizes and whitewashes Saudi Arabia’s crimes through its “HKS Student Delegation to Saudi Arabia.” This delegation brings 11 Harvard Kennedy School students annually on two-week trips to Saudi Arabia, where students “exchange research, engage in cultural dialogue, and witness the changes going on in the Kingdom firsthand.” Not unlike the student trips to Israel Harvard Kennedy School’s Israel Caucus coordinates, these trips to Saudi Arabia present HKS students with a crassly propagandized impression of Saudi Arabia, shoring up support for the “Kingdom” amongst the future leaders of the U.S. security state which HKS seeks to nurture.

Finding Our Mission

The vast network outlined above between the Harvard Kennedy School, the US federal government, the US Armed Forces, and the US weapons industry constitutes only a small portion of what is known about HKS and its role in US imperialism, but it is enough.

The Mapping Project demonstrates that the Harvard Kennedy School of Government is a nexus of US imperialist planning and cooperation, with an addressThe Mapping Project also links HKS to harms locally, including, but not limited to colonialism, violence against migrants, ethnic cleansing/displacement of Black and Brown Boston area residents from their communities (“gentrification”), health harm, policing, the prison-industrial complex, zionism, and surveillance. The Harvard Kennedy School’s super-oppressor status – the sheer number of separate communities feeling its global impact in their daily lives through these multiple and various mechanisms of oppression and harm – as it turns out, is its greatest weakness.

A movement that can identify super-oppressors like the Harvard Kennedy School of Government can use this information to identify strategic vulnerabilities of key hubs of power and effectively organize different communities towards common purpose. This is what the Mapping Project aims to do – to move away from traditionally siloed work towards coordination across communities and struggles in order to build strategic oppositional community power.


Appendix: The Death Toll of US Imperialism Since World War 2

A critical disclaimer: Figures relating to the death toll of US Imperialism are often grossly underestimated due to the US government’s lack of transparency and often purposeful coverup and miscounts of death tolls. In some cases, this can lead to ranges of figures that include millions of human lives – as in the figure for Indonesia below with estimates of 500,000 to 3 million people. We have tried to provide the upward ranges in these cases since we suspect the upward ranges to be more accurate if not still significantly underestimated. These figures were obtained from multiple sources including but not limited to indigenous scholar Ward Churchill’s Pacifism as Pathology as well as Countercurrents’ article Deaths in Other Nations Since WWII Due to US Interventions (please note that my use of Countercurrents’ statistics isn’t an endorsement of the site’s politics).

  • Afghanistan: at least 176,000 people
  • Bosnia: 20,000 to 30,000 people
  • Bosnia and Krajina: 250,000 people
  • Cambodia: 2-3 million people
  • Chad: 40,000 people and as many as 200,000 tortured
  • Chile: 10,000 people (the US sponsored Pinochet coup in Chile)
  • Colombia: 60,000 people
  • Congo: 10 million people (Belgian imperialism supported by US corporations and the US sponsored assassination of Patrice Lumumba)
  • Croatia: 15,000 people
  • Cuba: 1,800 people
  • Dominican Republic: at least 3,000 people
  • East Timor: 200,000 people
  • El Salvador: More than 75,000 people (U.S. support of the Salvadoran oligarchy and death squads)
  • Greece: More than 50,000 people
  • Grenada: 277 people
  • Guatemala: 140,000 to 200,000 people killed or forcefully disappeared (U.S. support of the Guatemalan junta)
  • Haiti: 100,000 people
  • Honduras: hundreds of people (CIA supported Battalion kidnapped, tortured and killed at least 316 people)
  • Indonesia: Estimates of 500,000 to 3 million people
  • Iran: 262,000 people
  • Iraq: 2.4 million people in Iraq war, 576, 000 Iraqi children by US sanctions, and over 100,000 people in Gulf War
  • Japan: 2.6-3.1 million people
  • Korea: 5 million people
  • Kosovo: 500 to 5,000
  • Laos: 50,000 people
  • Libya: at least 2500 people
  • Nicaragua: at least 30,000 people (US backed Contras’ destabilization of the Sandinista government in Nicaragua)
  • Operation Condor: at least 10,000 people (By governments of Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, and Peru. US govt/CIA coordinated training on torture, technical support, and supplied military aid to the Juntas)
  • Pakistan: at least 1.5 million people
  • Palestine: estimated more than 200,000 people killed by military but this does not include death from blockade/siege/settler violence
  • Panama: between 500 and 4000 people
  • Philippines: over 100,000 people executed or disappeared
  • Puerto Rico: 4,645-8,000 people
  • Somalia: at least 2,000 people
  • Sudan: 2 million people
  • Syria: at least 350,000 people
  • Vietnam: 3 million people
  • Yemen: over 377,000 people
  • Yugoslavia: 107,000 people

The Mapping Project is a multi-generational collective of activists and organizers; we are unpaid and don’t report to any donors. Email us at mapliberation@protonmail.com

 

Fusako Shignenobu, in her own words

Japanese Red Army founder Fusako Shigenobu, shown here in the documentary “Children of the Revolution”| © TRANSMISSION FILMS 2011

The following translation of Fusako Shigenobu‘s last newsletter from prison was published by translator Lisa Hofmann-Kuroda at Medium. We are honored to republish this important translation and once again salute Fusako Shigenobu upon her liberation, her daughter Mai and all of her comrades in struggle.

Fusako Shigenobu is the former leader of the Japanese Red Army, a communist guerrilla organization which carried out attacks against the embassies of various Western states, the US military, and multinational corporations from the 1970’s until the late 1980s. Fusako was born to a lower-middle class family in Tokyo in 1945, and began her activism in the late 60’s protesting student fee hikes at Meiji University, where she was taking night classes. From there, she became involved in the Japanese student movement, which was protesting both the Vietnam War and Japan’s collusion with the American empire in the form of the US-Japan Security Treaty.

During the early 1970s, she and several comrades traveled to Lebanon to take up armed struggle in solidarity with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), eventually leading to the creation of the Japanese Red Army. In 1972, three Japanese volunteers for the PFLP executed an attack on Israel’s Lod Airport (later known as the Lydda Struggle) in an attempt to assassinate an Israeli scientist who was responsible for developing biochemical weapons for use against the Palestinian people. Although Fusako was not present at the attack, she was forced to go into hiding after the JRA was designated a “terrorist” organization and PFLP and JRA members became targeted for assassination by Israeli death squads.

As Fusako’s daughter, Mei Shigenobu, notes in a recent piece for The Funambulist:

The Japanese Red Army (JRA) is mostly known in Japan and elsewhere for its armed struggle and military operations against capitalist and imperialist interests around the world, which often took the form of hijacks and hostage-taking. However, it is much lesser known that the JRA undertook consistent and effective solidarity with the Palestinian people through humanitarian, artistic, and grassroots efforts. For example, some Japanese medics went to Lebanon to open clinics in refugee camps, or to train people in acupuncture; artists contributed artwork or co-produced plays, while writers wrote about or translated the writings of prominent Palestinians such as Ghassan Kanafani.

Fusako also fulfilled a crucial role as an editor at Al Hadaf magazine, the public relations office of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Her role there strengthened Japanese support for the Palestinian cause by keeping Japanese leftist activists informed of what was happening on the ground in the Palestinian struggle and the Middle East. She also provided logistical support to Japanese volunteers who arrived, connecting them to Palestinian partners.

In 1973, Fusako gave birth to her daughter, Mei Shigenobu. They lived underground for decades before Fusako was arrested in Japan on November 8, 2000, and sentenced to twenty years in prison on charges of passport forgery. While in prison, Fusako disbanded the Red Army, reconsidering their former tactics towards a liberation movement.

During her time in prison, Fusako was supported by a small but steadfast group of Japanese comrades who called themselves “The Olive Tree.” For over twenty years, this group published a monthly newsletter that allowed Fusako to communicate her thoughts to the outside world, including her reflections on current affairs, particularly the geopolitical situation in the Middle East; daily diary entries detailing her observations from prison; original tanka poems; as well as letter exchanges she had with those who wrote to her from the outside.

After twenty years incarcerated Fusako was released last month. The letter below is from the last newsletter she wrote from prison, in December of 2021. In it, she reflects on all that has changed in the world over the past twenty years, and what she hopes to accomplish after her release.

— Lisa Hofmann-Kuroda, translator

From the cover of The Olive Tree Newsletter, №156. The Japanese text beneath reads: “Release her now! Let’s support Shigenobu-san, and reject this unfair sentence!”

Toward the New Year

The Olive Tree Newsletters, No.156

by Fusako Shigenobu

2021: At long last, I’ve made it to my final December in prison.

When I was young, I took my life for granted, treating it as something to be thrown away carelessly at will. Then, in prison, I developed cancer and had to undergo multiple surgeries. Needless to say, I never imagined I would live this long.

I’ve walked this life with a sense of purpose, passion, curiosity, and a tenacious desire to live as myself — even as I made countless mistakes. Nevertheless, I’m deeply grateful that I’ve been able to live my life according to my own intentions.

Next year, 2022, is also the year I’ll finally be released from prison — on May 28th, to be exact. I remember the poem that poured out of me when I first heard the court’s decision all those years ago: “This sentence isn’t the end / It’s only the beginning / My disobedient will bubbles up, boils over.” Thinking back on it, it feels as though my time in prison since then has gone by in the blink of an eye. To those of you who have sustained and encouraged me — my friends, comrades, family, lawyer, doctor, and finally, you, readers of “The Olive Tree,” who have silently and steadfastly supported me over the years, I express my profoundest gratitude. Thank you, all of you — truly!

When I think back to the period of my arrest, it seems clear in hindsight that it marked the beginning of a period of immense inequality that continues today. On September 28, 2000, Palestinians began protesting Israel’s atrocities in what would come to be known as the Second Intifada (The People’s Revolt) — an intense and violent battle. Then, in 2001, the Sharon regime took power, and the Palestinian Authority under President Arafat began to crumble. Shortly after, the chairman of the PFLP was killed by a missile attack, and then 9/11 happened. The rapid changes brought about by the technological revolution, as well as the thorough marketization of human society and the natural world by neoliberal forces, increased inequality and disparity everywhere under the guise of “democracy,” “human rights” and even “environmentalism.”

9/11 ushered in a new era characterized by the normalization of wars of aggression. Under the twin banners of “anti-terrorism” and “democracy,” the Middle East — from Iraq to Afghanistan — was utterly destroyed. Of course, it was innocent people who suffered most, and continue to suffer, from the effects of those wars. The 21st century has thus become “the century of war and refugees.” And now, on top of all of that, it has had to face the many challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet we still live in a world where the richest 1% of people are protected, rather than the 99% that comprise the majority of human society; and this disparity between rich and poor only continues to grow, while everywhere authoritarian political regimes are on the rise.

Meanwhile, the constitution of Japan has been continually under assault: the “right to collective defense” is, for many reasons, functioning in exactly the way one would expect, and increases to defense spending, as well as “the right to attack enemy bases” are now being discussed as a matter of course.

By the same token, plans for the “Henoko base relocation,” which were already unreasonable, are now being pushed through with an iron fist — a reality which shows us a clear picture of Japan’s future. With rhetoric so flowery as to mock the Japanese language itself, the power of the state is ever so carefully invading and infiltrating the heart of society. From my perspective here in prison, Japanese society continues to have an outdated, insensitive attitude toward civil rights. As is evident from its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, it has no capacity to adapt to new circumstances. It shows political favoritism to the world’s most powerful monopoly corporations, and it is clear that Japan’s social structures — in everything from social security to agriculture — have been made to sacrifice for the sake of these corporations. And yet, despite it all, ordinary people continue to seek peace and happiness, doing their best to live honest lives.

What will the coming year of 2022 bring for the Japan I have just described? Next year is the 50th anniversary of Okinawa’s reversion to Japan. Fifty years ago, on May 15th, Okinawa sought to eliminate all military bases on its territory by demanding that it be returned to Japanese jurisdiction; but, ironically, far from being eliminated, these military bases have only proliferated since that reversion, and the Okinawan people have been made to suffer continuously under an ever-more blatant carrot-and-stick policy. Of course, 2022 also marks the 50th anniversary of the United Red Army Incident. Lately, I have been thinking back to this time, when countless young people and citizens tirelessly advocated for peace and an end to war. Even the opposition party took the government to task, and residents in major regions and districts of Japan elected a progressive governor. I, too, was seeking revolution then. But the United Red Army incident exposed the contradictions of factional politics: it was a setback that displaced the hope and meaning that could have been gained from a social revolution. I was living in the Arab world at the time, and was one of many who reacted to the events with a deep sense of shock, regret, and self-reproach, since I was inevitably connected to them.

Next year is also the 50th anniversary of the Lydda incident, which was fought under the leadership of the PFLP. Even now, from the vantage point of 50 years, I am struck anew by how admirably they fought.

As I look out over the expanse of this new year, many different feelings arise in me. I can sense that a new order is coming into being as the world demands greater civil liberties and fights for climate justice. Since 9/11, conditions in societies everywhere — from Palestine to the Arab world to Japan — have been worsening, and it seems that the coronavirus pandemic is stirring up discontent. For my part, I’m sure that 2022 will be a year of reflecting on the significance of the political movement that began 50 years ago.

Then too, when I reflect on my own imprisonment, I cannot help but think about how many of my former comrades are still imprisoned and internationally wanted, including Comrade Okamoto. Even as I look forward to the beginning of a new movement, I know that I am severely limited in both my abilities as well as the short time I have left to live. But as long as there is still life left in me, I vow in my heart to continue living the way I always have, with the will to make the world a better place. In a world that is rapidly changing due to constant developments in technology, smartphones, and the internet, I must first of all search for a way to live that has value for me as a human being. By rehabilitating my mind and body, by studying, by taking things one step at a time and enjoying my own sense of curiosity, I plan to continue living again. From there, perhaps, a certain hope for the world and an everyday sense of solidarity will emerge.

With a heart brimming with gratitude for your friendship, steadfast support, and heartfelt sentiments, I am dreaming of the reunions and encounters I will have in the coming year. May next year be a good one — for all of us, together!

December 15, 2021

An original drawing and tanka poem by Fusako Shigenobu, on the cover of The Olive Tree Newsletter, №156. In October of 2021, an underwater volcano erupted off the coast of Okinawa near Henoko base, causing a mass of pumice stones to clog offshore waters. Fusako composed this poem after learning of the event (she kept close tabs on current events from prison), interpreting the volcano’s eruption as nature’s own revolt against the American militarization of Okinawa. The poem in Japanese reads: “Pumice stones buried in the waters off of Okinawa’s Henoko base — nature, too, revolts against the power of the state”

Lisa Hofmann-Kuroda is a writer and translator. Born in Tokyo, raised in Texas, she holds degrees from Wesleyan University and the University of California, Berkeley. She is currently translating Fusako Shigenobu’s memoir, Season of Revolution: From the Battlefield of Palestine, among other works. She can be contacted at www.lhkuroda.com

Two Berlin events rally for Palestine, highlight women’s role in liberation movement

Palestinian and solidarity organizers in Berlin, Germany, are organizing two events in the coming days for the liberation of Palestine. After the Berlin police banned all demonstrations commemorating the Palestinian Nakba on the weekend of 15 May and then repressed the spontaneous mobilizations in the streets for Palestine, a coalition of organizations resisting repression, including Samidoun Deutschland, has come together to stand united for liberation.

The coalition is calling for a demonstration on Friday, 10 June to commemorate the 1967 Naksa, the occupation of the remaining 22% of Palestine, including the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the eastern part of Jerusalem, as well as the Syrian Golan Heights and the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula. The demonstration will launch at 5 pm from Rathaus Neukölln and proceed to Kottbusser Tor.

As the organizers note, “We do not just want to recall the Zionist crimes and the role of imperialist powers in the oppression of the Palestinian people and the peoples of the world. Rather, we also want to emphasize that for more than 100 years, despite every aggression and setback, the Palestinian people have continued to resist colonialism and imperialism, until the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.”

The demonstration will be followed on Sunday, 12 June with an Arabic-language panel discussion about Palestinian and Arab women in the liberation struggle. Jaldia Abubakra of the Alkarama Palestinian Women’s Mobilization, based in Madrid, Spain, will speak along with Leila of the Collectif Palestine Vaincra, based in Toulouse, France. They will lead a discussion about the leadership and organizing of women in the struggle, the campaign to free imprisoned women, and the movement for the liberation of Palestine.

These events highlight that despite the repression meted out against the Palestinian community, the solidarity movement and anti-imperialist organizers in Berlin, the movement continues to grow on a principled, clear basis for the liberation of Palestine.