THIS LUCID AND PASSIONATE DOCUMENTARY ABOUT PALESTINE ACTION IS WELL WORTH
VIEWING BEFORE STARMER’S “SOCIAL DEMOCRATS” CENSOR IT
~ Rob Ray ~
I can certainly see why the makers of To Kill A War Machine are worried that
proscription of the subject of their documentary, Palestine Action (PA), will
turn into a ban for them too.
The Rainbow Collective have produced one of the most explicitly pro-direct
action features I’ve seen in years. Unapologetic in tone, the programme includes
interviews with members and supporters, who talk about their motivations,
strategies and the ways in which State repression has ramped up since the start
of Israel’s campaign of ethnic cleansing in Gaza and the West Bank.
PA hardly needs much of an introduction after a week of intense media focus. But
in brief, over the last half-decade the non-violent group has carried out a
campaign of sabotage against Israeli arms firm Elbit, which operates numerous
sites across the UK and is well meshed with Britain’s corporate and political
Establishments.
Its tactics have been to target not just the property of Elbit itself – making
it as expensive as possible to operate in Britain specifically – but to also go
down the supply and financing chain, hitting the likes of Barclays for investing
in the firm and Arconic for selling it monitor screens.
Produced in a kinetic, glitchy manner which will be familiar to anyone who has
watched many activist film productions, To Kill A War Machine flicks between
footage of PA activists smashing through windows and rooftops, interviews,
slickly dystopian Elbit advertising bragging about its lethality and accuracy,
and blurred but nevertheless horrifying footage of the child victims of such
“precision.”
Included in the interviewees are several recognisable figures, in particular
eloquent takes from Sukaina Rajwani, mother of Filton 18 prisoner Fatema,
Shezana Hafiz of Cage International, and Palestine Action founder members Huda
Ammori and Richard Barnard.
The analysis and insights provided are well-presented, lucid and passionate,
with Rajwani’s deeply admirable fortitude speaking out in what must be
extraordinarily stressful circumstances watching her daughter going through the
hell of Kafkaesque persecution being particularly worthy of note.
A minor quibble I might have with interviewee Lowkey’s otherwise solid analysis
is his focus on how they draw primarily from the Raytheon Nine and suggestion
that their iteration is unique, whereas throughout, I was seeing influences from
the animal rights movement of the 1990s and 2000s, which might be useful to draw
out a bit. The campaign against Huntingdon Life Sciences has strong parallels to
Palestine Action’s strategy, particularly “go down the chain, find the weak
points”.
They’re also being dealt with in similar ways (with some crucial differences).
In the case of HLS, government repression was more subtle, but used the same
playbook – identify, vilify, isolate and shock. Rather than use the wild
overkill of anti-terror legislation, in the 2000s Establishment reaction took
the form, initially, of information gathering and infiltration by the State,
while the media portrayed animal rights activists in the most ghoulish of ways,
with the aim of dividing a perceived “extreme” wing of the movement from the
cover of broader support.
Legislation was then beefed up, with injunctions being used to physically push
legal campaigning away from the gates of the research establishments.
Punishments were increased to allow for exemplary sentencing – frighten people
off by making it clear political crime in particular was unacceptable, in a way
that non-political crime was not.
Back in 2015 I interviewed an AR activist from the time about this for Black
Flag (p.16-17), who explained:
“People had been sent down before, but it became multiple forms of harassment.
We’d do a local stall about animal rights and local cops would show up trying to
shut us down. They’d stand in front of the stall, intimidating people away.
They’d follow activists around, stalk them at demos, anything to isolate us. At
government level they changed laws to facilitate crackdowns. Harassment
legislation was extended to companies after we challenged the idea in court. In
SOCA (section 146-7) they specifically included anti-animal rights rules by
banning home demos. That was specifically to stop us from getting shareholders’
addresses and targeting the communities where they lived, which was extremely
effective. All the cops who used these laws have moved on now, so they’ve fallen
out of use, but these laws are still on the books.”
It might seem odd that Starmer, who would be well acquainted with such
strategies from his time as a pro-bono movement lawyer in the 2000s, doesn’t
simply re-employ them before leaping to terror legislation. Until, of course,
you remember that his priority is not to stop a movement, but to outflank his
political critics while shoring up his international position. The disastrous
effects of proscription on free speech and individual liberty are simple
collateral damage in the cause of silencing far-right “two-tier” accusations and
brown-nosing the US.
The documentary highlights this procession around 3/4 of the way in, noting the
path from an early 2022 meeting between Priti Patel and Elbit (shading into a
dodgy inclusion of a rep from the supposedly independent Crown Prosecution
Service), through to Labour’s use of arrests for non-violent action under terror
legislation and a ghosting of activists within the prison system so thorough
that even their lawyers couldn’t reach them. A clear path of private complaint,
Establishment mobilisation, and politically-charged escalation towards the
moment of outright repression we find ourselves in.
The hope in the face of proscription is it might finally break through to the
general public that it’s all our rights that are at risk when a political party
decides to arbitrarily apply the label of “terrorist” to strictly non-violent
forms of dissent. Unlike the bleating of far-right types about university
students telling them to get lost, proscription is full-on, indisputable State
censorship in the raw.
To Kill A War Machine is a solidly made, inspiring film to watch, but even if it
were absolute rubbish, it has already done the job it set out to do. I ended up
watching it in a meeting room, on a borrowed projector, via a hastily-organised
showing by people intent on getting it out before the proscription vote. Up and
down the country this weekend, and again tonight, others are doing the same.
It’s already out there, and a State ban would come too late to shut the barn
door.
Now it’s not just the story of Palestine Action, it’s the story of Palestine
Action they don’t want you to see.
To Kill A War Machine is available now and can be streamed or downloaded from
their website.
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