Palestine Action US Takes on Elbit Systems
"Elbit Systems is guilty, the US-Israeli war machine is guilty," says Palestine Action US.
Photo: Kelly Hayes
On Monday, nine activists were arrested by the Cambridge Police Department during a rally organized by Palestine Action US at the Cambridge office of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest arms company. The protesters face a litany of charges, including assault and battery on a police officer, possession of an incendiary device, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. The arrestees have pleaded not guilty to all charges. Palestine Action US responded to the charges in a statement, saying, “Elbit Systems is guilty, the US-Israeli war machine is guilty, and the CPD is guilty. We affirm our right to take action against Elbit and all weapons companies, and we will not let police intimidation deter us.”
The group calls police claims of assault “fabricated lies” that were “reprinted by the mainstream media [in order to] criminalize us for protesting against genocide.” The group claims that videos that were taken at the protest establish that it was police who violently attacked the crowd. Activists say that when protesters attempted to remove metal barricades that blocked access to the sidewalk, alongside the building, dozens of the police charged the crowd, tackling and pepper spraying protesters. Members of Palestine Action US claim that during this onslaught, some officers “tripped over their own feet,” and subsequently blamed protesters for knocking them down. According to Palestine Action US organizer Fergie Chambers, the charges referring to a so-called “incendiary device” likely refer to a “smoke bomb” — a type of firework that produces smoke of a particular color — which was left lying on the ground. “These cannot harm a person,” he said. “We are not targeting human beings,” Chambers said. “We are not trying to hurt anyone. We will not hurt anyone … We make a huge distinction between human life and property.
Over 200 people had gathered to protest at Bishop Allen Drive and Prospect Street, which is a major thoroughfare in Cambridge. On the day of the protest, businesses located in the building where Elbit holds a lease advised employees not to come to work, leading activists to call the protest an effective, day-long shut down of the Elbit location.
Another protest was organized at the same location on October 12, when protesters locked themselves to the building’s entrance and splattered red paint on the ground. There were no arrests during that action.
Palestine Action US is a new formation, taking inspiration from the direct action-oriented group Palestine Action in the UK. Palestine Action US was organized in recent weeks, amid Israel’s ongoing, genocidal siege and bombardment of Gaza, which has killed 8,805 Palestinians. So far, the group has focused its efforts on the Elbit Systems office in Cambridge, but Chambers says that new chapters are being organized throughout the US, to target other Elbit hubs in the United States. “We would like to see people everywhere on earth escalate their opposition to this,” he said. Chambers emphasized that while mass marches are important, direct actions targeting “the Israeli war machine” are also essential. “We want to see people marching in the streets by the hundreds of thousands, that's really good, and we want to see more.”
In addition to Massachusetts, Elbit Systems has locations in New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Texas, Florida, Alabama, and South Carolina.
Local Connections
While Palestine Action US is targeting Elbit systems to protest the ongoing genocide in Palestine, Elbit’s tools of occupation are also being deployed in the US. As Antony Loewenstein documents in his book, The Palestine Laboratory, Israeli defense contractors test their wares on Palestinians and then export their tools of surveillance and warfare around the world. Loewenstein highlights the connection between so-called border security in the US and the oppression of Palestinians, writing, “Israeli technology was sold as the solution to unwanted populations at the US–Mexico border where the Israeli company Elbit was a major player in repelling migrants.”
In her book Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism, Harsha Walia describes how US Customs Enforcement officials impose the violence of bordering on Tohono O’odham lands, along the US Southern border. Walia wrote, “US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has contracted Israel’s largest private arms company, Elbit Systems, to construct ten surveillance towers, making Tohono O’odham one of the most militarized communities in the US.”
In 2017, members of the Tohono O’odham Hemajkam Rights Network (TOHRN), went to Palestine on a visit organized by the Palestinian group Stop the Wall. TOHRN member Amy Jaun told Antony Loewenstein that it was a relief to talk “with people who understand our fears … who are dealing with militarization and technology.”
In 2022, after years of resistance from Tohono O’odham organizers, the construction of the contested surveillance towers was completed. As Will Parrish reported in The Intercept in 2019, each tower is outfitted with thermal sensors, high-definition cameras with night vision, and ground-sweeping radar. As Parrish noted, “The system will store an archive with the ability to rewind and track individuals’ movements across time — an ability known as ‘wide-area persistent surveillance.’”
The Tohono O’odham’s struggle against the construction of Elbit’s towers is just one example of how the company is exporting Israel’s tools of bordering and occupation. In The Palestine Laboratory, Loewenstein describes an event at the Paris Air Show in 2009, where Elbit screened drone footage for “an elite audience of global buyers.” The footage showcased the assassination of a Palestinian. A subsequent investigation by Andrew Feinstein, a global expert on the arms industry, who observed the sales video pitch in Paris, revealed that innocent Palestinians, including women and children, were killed during the drone attack that Elbit showcased at the Paris Air Show. Feinstein told Loewenstein, “This was my introduction to the Israeli arms industry and the way it markets itself. No other arms-producing country would dare show actual footage like that.”
As evidenced by the construction of surveillance towers in Tohono O’odham lands, Elbit’s work extends beyond the bounds of war, but the lines between war-making, surveillance and what governments call “security” are murky, at best. When tools of war and subjugation are tested on a captive population, and marketed on the basis of how effectively those people are killed, how do we expect those tools to be deployed globally?
According to Loewenstein, “In May 2020, Israel admitted that it aimed to expand its defense exports specifically tracking civilians. Aside from Iran, Syria, and Lebanon, every country on the planet was deemed fair game for sales.”
Effective Resistance
Since 2020, Palestine Action has been targeting Elbit systems facilities in the UK with a relentless campaign of direct action. The disruptions have led Elbit to abandon its London office in Kingsway and to sell its factory in Oldham, Manchester. On October 18, members of Palestine Action drove through barricades at Elbit’s Leicester factory. The activists positioned a modified van in a manner that prevented the factory’s gates from closing, effectively shutting down the facility. On October 26, Palestine Action targeted several weapons factories in three simultaneous actions across Britain with actions that included lockdowns at the entrances of facilities, and, in one case, a rooftop lockdown. In a statement, Palestine Action said, “These actions represent the strength in numbers of those willing and ready to take direct action to shut down the Israeli war machine – while our politicians and media rally behind Israel’s criminality, the grassroots movement against Israel’s war machine sees people power as the only way to stand against genocide.”
As activists escalate under the banner of Palestine Action in the US and Australia, the work of UK activists serves as a source of inspiration. “We were targeting Elbit specifically because we wanted to continue the momentum of the campaign in the UK and not just haphazardly make a show of shutting any old weapons company down,” Fergie Chambers told me. Chambers noted that there are many viable targets for direct action in the US, with regard to Israel’s violence against Palestinians. “But there has been so much success against Elbit,” he said. “Elbit is the largest Israeli producer of weapons. They are providing 85% of the drones there. They're involved on the Mexican border. They're involved in basically anywhere that, again, the US Empire has its fingers in things, Elbit is providing some kind of material support.”