Wednesday, December 31, 1969

The Weapons Makers Who Fund the Iran War Cheerleaders on Your TV

After the American public soured on the Iraq War, many groups that pushed for the invasion tried to downplay their role in the debacle. Here we go again.



Rebeccah Heinrichs, a fellow with the right-wing Hudson Institute, appearing on FOX News to discuss pending war in the Middle East.
(Photo: Screenshot/Fox News/Hudson Institute)
Julian Cooper
Mar 17, 2026
Responsible Statecraft


As the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran intensifies, Americans have shown little appetite for another war in the Middle East. Far fewer Americans support the war than in previous conflicts at this stage, including Iraq, Afghanistan, or Kosovo.

Washington think tanks, however, have been far more enthusiastic. They also happen to be funded by weapons contractors that stand to profit handsomely from the war.

For instance, many fellows employed by the Hudson Institute are supportive of strikes on Iran. As the Trump administration built up its military presence, Hudson Institute fellow Rebeccah Heinrichs went on Fox News and celebrated Trump’s initiative to “push the regime over” as a “major strategic opportunity for peace and stability in the Middle East.” After a week of strikes, Heinrichs celebrated the escalation of the military campaign. “We have a lot more of those kinds of munitions, and now I would suspect that we are just going to continue to destroy the production capabilities and any other storage facilities that they have deeply buried underground, so that’s good for the United States,” Heinrichs told Fox.

The Hudson Institute has received over $4 million from the defense industry since 2019, with Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and General Atomics CEO Neal Blue among their largest donors. Those companies’ weaponry has been used extensively in Iran. Northrop Grumman manufactures the $2 billion B-2 stealth bombers that are used to strike Iran. Lockheed Martin manufactures a variety of aircrafts used in the attacks, as well as the $300 million THAAD radar system that was recently destroyed by Iran. General Atomics, for its part, produces the MQ-9 Reaper drones used in the campaign. RTX, the manufacturer of the Tomahawk missile that killed 168 girls at their elementary school in Minab, Iran, is also a major donor.

General (Ret.) Jack Keane, Chairman of the Institute for the Study of War, took to the airwaves to claim the US should “take Iran off the map.” In a segment on Fox, Keane made the case against exiting the conflict prematurely over rising oil prices; “Are we saying we can’t accept several weeks of oil prices being higher than what they should be to take Iran off the map as a predator in the Middle East for decades to come?” asked Keane. “I think we’re much tougher than that frankly.”

ISW, Keane’s think tank, has received funding from major Pentagon contractors General Dynamics and CACI, but recently delisted the names of both donors from the website. In response to a request for comment, Alexander Mitchell, Director of External Relations at ISW, said, “ISW does not share information about our supporters or their giving histories outside standard 990 reporting.” ISW does list several other corporate sponsors on its website.

The Atlantic Council, which accepts more funding from the defense industry than any other think tank, hired an Israeli national security insider in the lead-up to the war, who used his new perch to make the case for US attacks. Michael Rozenblat, who the Atlantic Council describes as a “visiting research fellow from the Israeli security establishment,” published an article titled “Six reasons why Trump should choose the military option in Iran” less than two weeks before the strikes, framing an attack as a “moral imperative.” Rozenblat concluded that “a decisive US-led coalition effort aimed at regime change may offer a more sustainable strategic outcome” in Iran.

Last year, the Atlantic Council published a report recommending that the US procure more THAAD and SM-3 missiles to deal with threats abroad, including Iran. The manufacturers of those missiles, RTX and Lockheed Martin, have given the Atlantic Council $850,000 and $700,000 respectively since 2019. Both systems have been used extensively for missile defense against Iran.

War has been good for those donors’ pocketbooks. As stock exchanges opened the week after the US-Israeli attack on Iran, the share price of weapons manufacturers RTX, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin soared.

On March 12, the senior director of the Atlantic Council Scowcroft Center Matthew Kroenig defended the military campaign on Iran during a debate with Trita Parsi of the Quincy Institute, which publishes RS. “Removing the Islamic republic from the chessboard, or significantly weakening it for years or a decade I think stands to greatly improve regional and global security, and the lives of ordinary Iranians,” said Kroenig.

Many of the most outspoken voices pushing for regime change in Iran come from dark money think tanks, which reveal nothing at all about their donors. Around 40% of the US top think tanks fall into this category, according to the Quincy Institute’s newly updated Think Tank Funding Tracker.

The Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), a prominent dark money think tank, has been advising the US to topple the Iranian regime for years. Founded with a goal to “enhance Israel’s image in North America,” FDD played a critical role in pushing Trump to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal.

On the day of the US-Israeli strikes, FDD CEO Mark Dubowitz and senior analyst Ben Cohen wrote in an op-ed that “the survival of this regime – a nuclear-seeking, terror-sponsoring, protest–crushing dictatorship – is far more dangerous than the risks that come with its collapse.” Dubowitz has been cheering on the regime change effort since, recently retweeting an AI-generated video from Mossad encouraging Iranians to work with Israeli intelligence in overthrowing the Islamic Republic. FDD’s experts are invited to testify to the House Foreign Affairs Committee more than almost any other think tank, second only to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA) is another dark money think tank pushing for the military campaign on Iran. JINSA’s fellows include Benjamin Netanyahu’s former National Security Advisor, the former Commander of the Israeli Air Force, and Trump’s former Iran adviser, Elliott Abrams, as well as over a dozen retired US generals and admirals. In 2020, after the US assassinated Iranian military officer Qasem Soleimani, two JINSA scholars argued in the Washington Post that the United States “must keep up the attacks against Iranian assets in the region and join Israel in rolling back Iranian aggression,” with the goal of provoking a regime collapse.

When the military operation on Iran began, JINSA published an open letter signed by 75 retired generals and admirals in support of the war. Blaise Misztal, Vice President for Policy at JINSA, argued in an article titled “Iran is not Iraq” that fears of repeating the failures of Iraq are overblown.

In a recent appearance on Fox Business, JINSA strategic advisor Vice Admiral Robert Harward described the closure of the Strait of Hormuz as a “short-term problem” and argued that ending the war on Iran now would “only exacerbate” problems in the region.

Many other think tank experts have expressed support for the US pursuing a military campaign against Iran. Analysts from the Washington Institute, which was founded as a spin-off of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, have long pushed for Congress to pre-emptively authorize the use of military force against Iran.

The Middle East Forum, meanwhile, recently published an article pushing Congress to appropriate funds not just for missile stockpiles but also nation-building efforts in Iran. Gregg Roman, the Executive Director of the Middle East Forum, suggested the US should fund “transitional governance planning” including “constitution-drafting support, judicial reform expertise,” and “lustration frameworks that remove regime loyalists” in Iran.

The Atlantic Council, the Hudson Institute, FDD, JINSA, the Washington Institute, and the Middle East Forum did not respond to a request for comment.

After the American public soured on the Iraq War, many groups that pushed for the invasion, including FDD, tried to downplay their role in the debacle.If the US-Israel bombing campaign on Iran continues on its perilous trajectory, one can’t help but wonder whether these pro-war organizations will once again attempt to memoryhole their supporting role in America’s latest military misadventure.

 CBS Streaming News Workers Launch 24-Hour Walkout for Better Contract



Workers “are fighting to protect their livelihoods during a period of uncertainty in broadcast news,” the union said.

March 17, 2026

CBS Broadcast Center, building exterior and awning, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA.Plexi Images/GHI/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Workers within CBS News’s online streaming division began a 24-hour bicoastal walkout on Tuesday, one week after their contract with the company expired.

The workers, who provide content for CBS News 24/7, are represented by the Writers Guild of America East (WGAE). The union alleges that management’s offers to renegotiate the contract are unacceptable, featuring terms worse than those offered in the past.

Workers are seeking better wages as well as improved working conditions. When contract negotiations broke down and the contract expired on March 9, the union alerted management that a walkout would happen, delivering a strike pledge the following day.

With its parent company, Paramount Skydance, preparing to spend over $110 billion to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery (with Skydance having spent more than $8 billion to buy Paramount just last year), it is unacceptable for CBS News to treat its workers poorly, the union said.

“Paramount has billions to spend acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery, but still hasn’t guaranteed fair wages and basic job protections for the workers who make their streaming news operation run,” read a statement from WGAE Vice President of Broadcast/Cable/Streaming News Beth Godvik. “Our members are walking out today to show management they stand united in their demand for a fair contract — and the WGAE is with them every step of the way.”


Striking Spanish Workers Just Showed That Amazon Is Not Invincible
The workers used creative, disruptive tactics to win. Their victory holds lessons for the global labor movement. By Jonathan Rosenblum , Truthout  January 23, 2026


The newsroom has faced a recent round of layoffs since the acquisition by Skydance. More layoffs are expected, and another round could come following the proposed purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery.


“Members are fighting to protect their livelihoods during a period of uncertainty in broadcast news,” reads a press release from WGAE explaining the walkout. “Layoffs, editorial interference and political pressure have all become existential threats following the Paramount Skydance merger, and those same concerns have escalated with a possible merger of Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery. The bargaining unit is demanding fair pay, respect, and a sustainable work-life balance.”

The walkout is happening outside of the CBS News broadcast center in New York, as well as a CBS News affiliate station in San Francisco. The worker rights action is the first to occur since the Skydance buyout, and since conservative commentator Bari Weiss was named editor-in-chief of CBS News.

CBS News has faced widespread criticism since Weiss, a Trump-friendly journalist, took over. Her decision to pull a “60 Minutes” segment on the administration deporting immigrants to a super-prison in El Salvador was deemed a “political” choice by a correspondent on the program, for example.

Since Weiss’s takeover, the network has also gutted its climate team, which will likely result in a reduction of reporting on the climate crisis. And ratings have dropped dramatically since Weiss appointed right-wing journalist Tony Dokoupil to head its weeknight “CBS Evening News” program.



CBS News Streaming Workers Walk Out After Collapse of Contract Talks Under Bari Weiss

“Management refuses to agree to a new contract with essential work protections and fair wages,” said the workers’ negotiating team.


People walk by the CBS News Broadcast Center in New York City on December 23, 2025.
(Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Jessica Corbett
Mar 17, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

Unionized workers with CBS News’ streaming channel began a bicoastal one-day walkout Tuesday morning after unsuccessful negotiations for a “fair and just” contract under Bari Weiss, who has faced intense criticism on a range of topics since taking over as editor-in-chief.

CBS News is part of the media behemoth Paramount Skydance, which was formed in a controversial merger last August. Two months later, the company acquired Weiss’ The Free Press, and CEO David Ellison appointed her to also lead all of CBS News, despite her lack of television experience.

The latest contract for the streaming channel, CBS News 24/7, expired last week, after which the workers delivered a strike pledge. Tuesday’s 24-hour walkout—with rallies at CBS News Broadcast Center in New York City and at KPIX-TV CBS News Bay Area in San Francisco, California—kicked off at 6:00 am Eastern time.

“CBS News 24/7 journalists are walking off the job on both coasts today because management refuses to agree to a new contract with essential work protections and fair wages,” the bargaining committee and contract action team said in a statement from Writers Guild of America East (WGAE).

“Despite multiple days of good-faith negotiations and a strike pledge signed by 95% of our members to emphasize the seriousness of our demands, management continues to offer us worse terms than in our last contracts,” the team said. “We chose this field to cover the news, but we believe this work stoppage is necessary to achieve a fair contract. We eagerly await an acceptable contract offer from Paramount—which just shelled out tens of billions of dollars to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery.”

Deadline explained that “the newsroom has undergone rounds of layoffs and buyouts, and more are expected. There also are fears of further downsizing when Paramount completes its deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, given that will leave the company with two global news outlets, CBS News and CNN.”




Beth Godvik, WGAE vice president of broadcast/cable/streaming news, called out Paramount for striking a $110 billion deal with Warner Bros. Discovery while it “still hasn’t guaranteed fair wages and basic job protections for the workers who make their streaming news operation run.”

“Our members are walking out today to show management they stand united in their demand for a fair contract—and the WGAE is with them every step of the way,” said Godvik.

As The Wrap noted:
The battle puts Weiss, an opinion journalist who had no TV news experience before she became CBS News’ editor-in-chief last October, in the position of negotiating with a union under her purview for the first time. The union dispute comes as the network has already been rocked by star departures and scrutiny over its coverage.

The Free Press, the anti-woke outlet Weiss cofounded and still leads, is not unionized, while CBS News has four main bargaining units, including the Writers Guild of America-backed CBS News 24/7, which launched in 2014 and rebroadcasts CBS News shows like “60 Minutes” and “CBS Mornings” along with original shows like “The Takeout with Major Garrett.”

A CBS News spokesperson told The Guardian that “we continue to negotiate in good faith and hope to reach a fair resolution quickly.”

Meanwhile, multiple members of Congress expressed support for the work stoppage on social media.

“If Paramount can shell out billions of dollars to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, then they can pay their unionized CBS staff a fair wage,” said Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY). “I stand with the CBS staff who walked out today as they fight these corporate giants for essential protections and fair contracts.”

Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) declared that “American workers deserve fair pay and basic protections—full stop. I stand with the 60 CBS News 24/7 journalists walking off the job today in New York and San Francisco. Paramount is finalizing a $110 BILLION deal but can’t give its own workers a fair contract?”
'Cataclysm': United CEO's Iran war memo spooks travelers as oil prices skyrocket

Daniel Hampton
March 20, 2026 
RAW STORY


United Airlines says it has discovered loose bolts on Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes in its fleet, like one seen here taking off in September 2023 (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP)

United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby is warning employees that jet fuel prices have more than doubled in three weeks due to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, and that the crisis could cost the airline $11 billion annually if prices hold.

In a letter to employees on Friday, Kirby said United is planning for oil to hit $175 per barrel and stay above $100 through the end of 2027. For context, he noted, United's best year netted less than $5 billion in profit.

"[I]t may be a challenge to continue passing through much of the increased fuel price if oil stays higher for longer," he warned.

The airline is cutting roughly 5 percent of its planned capacity, axing red-eyes, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday flights during Q2 and Q3, and suspending service to Tel Aviv and Dubai.

Kirby insisted the cuts were temporary and that United would not furlough employees or defer aircraft orders.

"In the short term, that means tactically pruning flying that’s temporarily unprofitable in the face of high oil prices. So, we are canceling about 3 points of flying in off peak periods (think redeyes, Tues/Wed/Sat flying) during Q2 and Q3 and we’ll pull a point of capacity in ORD when the FAA process concludes. We’ve pulled TLV and DXB service, which represents about another 1 point of capacity. That’s about 5 points of this year’s planned capacity in the short term, and our current plan is to restore the full schedule this fall. To be clear, nothing changes about our longer-term plans for aircraft deliveries or total capacity for 2027 and beyond, but there's no point in burning cash in the near term on flying that just can't absorb these fuel costs," he wrote.

Travelers didn't share his optimism.

"Glad I visited 7 continents and 111 countries while I could afford to," wrote Monica Marks, professor of Middle East Politics at NYU Abu Dhabi, on X. "Life is so, so short."

Software engineer Luis Ball Jr. called the $175-per-barrel scenario "a cataclysm," and wrote, "scary stuff."

Writer Ben Panko was more pointed: "No worries, all the incels still fully backing Trump on this don't fly, much less leave their houses."

Mike Norton, former vice chair of the Minneapolis Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, noted the whiplash, pointing out the White House had touted falling gas prices just two months ago."To give you an idea of how quickly Trump
can f--- things up, the White House tweeted this two months ago," he said, sharing a White House boasting of cheap gas. Kirby closed the letter by comparing United's position to a March Madness bracket, saying the airline was "playing offense."
CBS Streaming News Workers Launch 24-Hour Walkout for Better Contract


Workers “are fighting to protect their livelihoods during a period of uncertainty in broadcast news,” the union said.

March 17, 2026

CBS Broadcast Center, building exterior and awning, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA.Plexi Images/GHI/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Workers within CBS News’s online streaming division began a 24-hour bicoastal walkout on Tuesday, one week after their contract with the company expired.

The workers, who provide content for CBS News 24/7, are represented by the Writers Guild of America East (WGAE). The union alleges that management’s offers to renegotiate the contract are unacceptable, featuring terms worse than those offered in the past.

Workers are seeking better wages as well as improved working conditions. When contract negotiations broke down and the contract expired on March 9, the union alerted management that a walkout would happen, delivering a strike pledge the following day.

With its parent company, Paramount Skydance, preparing to spend over $110 billion to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery (with Skydance having spent more than $8 billion to buy Paramount just last year), it is unacceptable for CBS News to treat its workers poorly, the union said.

“Paramount has billions to spend acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery, but still hasn’t guaranteed fair wages and basic job protections for the workers who make their streaming news operation run,” read a statement from WGAE Vice President of Broadcast/Cable/Streaming News Beth Godvik. “Our members are walking out today to show management they stand united in their demand for a fair contract — and the WGAE is with them every step of the way.”


Striking Spanish Workers Just Showed That Amazon Is Not Invincible
The workers used creative, disruptive tactics to win. Their victory holds lessons for the global labor movement. By Jonathan Rosenblum , Truthout  January 23, 2026


The newsroom has faced a recent round of layoffs since the acquisition by Skydance. More layoffs are expected, and another round could come following the proposed purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery.


“Members are fighting to protect their livelihoods during a period of uncertainty in broadcast news,” reads a press release from WGAE explaining the walkout. “Layoffs, editorial interference and political pressure have all become existential threats following the Paramount Skydance merger, and those same concerns have escalated with a possible merger of Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery. The bargaining unit is demanding fair pay, respect, and a sustainable work-life balance.”

The walkout is happening outside of the CBS News broadcast center in New York, as well as a CBS News affiliate station in San Francisco. The worker rights action is the first to occur since the Skydance buyout, and since conservative commentator Bari Weiss was named editor-in-chief of CBS News.

CBS News has faced widespread criticism since Weiss, a Trump-friendly journalist, took over. Her decision to pull a “60 Minutes” segment on the administration deporting immigrants to a super-prison in El Salvador was deemed a “political” choice by a correspondent on the program, for example.

Since Weiss’s takeover, the network has also gutted its climate team, which will likely result in a reduction of reporting on the climate crisis. And ratings have dropped dramatically since Weiss appointed right-wing journalist Tony Dokoupil to head its weeknight “CBS Evening News” program.



CBS News Streaming Workers Walk Out After Collapse of Contract Talks Under Bari Weiss

“Management refuses to agree to a new contract with essential work protections and fair wages,” said the workers’ negotiating team.


People walk by the CBS News Broadcast Center in New York City on December 23, 2025.
(Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Jessica Corbett
Mar 17, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

Unionized workers with CBS News’ streaming channel began a bicoastal one-day walkout Tuesday morning after unsuccessful negotiations for a “fair and just” contract under Bari Weiss, who has faced intense criticism on a range of topics since taking over as editor-in-chief.

CBS News is part of the media behemoth Paramount Skydance, which was formed in a controversial merger last August. Two months later, the company acquired Weiss’ The Free Press, and CEO David Ellison appointed her to also lead all of CBS News, despite her lack of television experience.

The latest contract for the streaming channel, CBS News 24/7, expired last week, after which the workers delivered a strike pledge. Tuesday’s 24-hour walkout—with rallies at CBS News Broadcast Center in New York City and at KPIX-TV CBS News Bay Area in San Francisco, California—kicked off at 6:00 am Eastern time.

“CBS News 24/7 journalists are walking off the job on both coasts today because management refuses to agree to a new contract with essential work protections and fair wages,” the bargaining committee and contract action team said in a statement from Writers Guild of America East (WGAE).

“Despite multiple days of good-faith negotiations and a strike pledge signed by 95% of our members to emphasize the seriousness of our demands, management continues to offer us worse terms than in our last contracts,” the team said. “We chose this field to cover the news, but we believe this work stoppage is necessary to achieve a fair contract. We eagerly await an acceptable contract offer from Paramount—which just shelled out tens of billions of dollars to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery.”

Deadline explained that “the newsroom has undergone rounds of layoffs and buyouts, and more are expected. There also are fears of further downsizing when Paramount completes its deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, given that will leave the company with two global news outlets, CBS News and CNN.”




Beth Godvik, WGAE vice president of broadcast/cable/streaming news, called out Paramount for striking a $110 billion deal with Warner Bros. Discovery while it “still hasn’t guaranteed fair wages and basic job protections for the workers who make their streaming news operation run.”

“Our members are walking out today to show management they stand united in their demand for a fair contract—and the WGAE is with them every step of the way,” said Godvik.

As The Wrap noted:
The battle puts Weiss, an opinion journalist who had no TV news experience before she became CBS News’ editor-in-chief last October, in the position of negotiating with a union under her purview for the first time. The union dispute comes as the network has already been rocked by star departures and scrutiny over its coverage.

The Free Press, the anti-woke outlet Weiss cofounded and still leads, is not unionized, while CBS News has four main bargaining units, including the Writers Guild of America-backed CBS News 24/7, which launched in 2014 and rebroadcasts CBS News shows like “60 Minutes” and “CBS Mornings” along with original shows like “The Takeout with Major Garrett.”

A CBS News spokesperson told The Guardian that “we continue to negotiate in good faith and hope to reach a fair resolution quickly.”

Meanwhile, multiple members of Congress expressed support for the work stoppage on social media.

“If Paramount can shell out billions of dollars to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, then they can pay their unionized CBS staff a fair wage,” said Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY). “I stand with the CBS staff who walked out today as they fight these corporate giants for essential protections and fair contracts.”

Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) declared that “American workers deserve fair pay and basic protections—full stop. I stand with the 60 CBS News 24/7 journalists walking off the job today in New York and San Francisco. Paramount is finalizing a $110 BILLION deal but can’t give its own workers a fair contract?”

  US Supreme Court gets history lesson as it threatens to blow up birthright citizenship


Travis Gettys
March 17, 2026 
RAW STORY



U.S. Supreme Court justices pose for their group portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., October 7, 2022. Seated (L-R): Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., Samuel A. Alito, Jr. and Elena Kagan. Standing (L-R): Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Ketanji Brown Jackson. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo


The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in two weeks on the birthright citizenship case, and legal experts chewed over the history of that issue.

The Reconstruction-era 14th Amendment grants citizenship to “all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof," which was specifically intended to apply to the children born to former enslaved people. But experts explained on Slate's "Amicus" podcast how the history of migration informed that constitutional right.

"The biggest myth about American immigration is that until the federal government started enforcing our borders in the late 19th century, it was just open borders," said Anna O. Law, the Herbert Kurz chair in constitutional rights at CUNY Brooklyn College.

"It feeds right into the American dream myth, right?" Law added. "'My ancestors came with nothing but the clothes on their back and a willingness to work hard.' But the period before the federal government took over immigration didn’t mean there were no laws and that there were no migration restrictions. There’s plenty of work and existing scholarship that says the states were enforcing migration laws in the 19th century."

However, she was shocked to learn how some elements of present-day immigration law, such as the assumption that poorer migrants would become wards of the state, originated during the colonial era.

"'People who can’t economically take care of themselves, we don’t want them' – well, that originated in the colonial period," Law said. "So stretching from the colonial period to 1888, first the colonies, and then the states had elaborate sets of laws recruiting certain groups of people to come and restricting other people so they could not come."

Co-host Dahlia Lithwick pointed out that the originalism espoused by the Supreme Court's conservative majority sometimes suffered from false narratives about American history, and Law agreed that mistaken assumptions about early immigration could creep into arguments in this case.

"What we know and what we don’t know about immigration and citizenship history has so many political effects and legal effects, because the myth goes: 'We were very generous for a very long time, and at some point that had to stop because of the ills of mass migration,'" Law said.

But that's not the case, she said, because only one state – New York – had benevolent migration laws, and all the rest were restrictionist, and Massachusetts, for example deported people to Ireland, Europe or other states because they didn’t want to be economically and socially responsible for them.

"A common argument I’ve heard is, 'Well, there were no illegal aliens back then,' Law said. "Well, actually there were unauthorized people, if you want to call them that, [under] just over a century of state laws. So there are plenty of people who had broken some of those laws, and then if you only want to restrict it to federal immigration law, the Congress passed a law in 1808 banning the international slave trade and still ships are smuggling enslaved people in, and so the Framers of the 14th Amendment knew about that. They knew about those ships coming in. They knew about the hundreds of African enslaved people smuggled in after the 1808 congressional ban. So there were unauthorized people in the U.S., and did the 14th Amendment include their children? Yes, it did and they knew that."

At the time the 14th Amendment was passed, Congress and most Americans despised the Chinese immigrants in the West, and there were extensive discussions about whether birthright citizenship applied to them, as well, and Law said they made clear it did.

"The Framers said, ''No, yeah, we mean them, because even though their parents cannot gain citizenship because there are laws banning them from naturalization, we do mean the children,'" Law said.

The framers chose to use the words "all persons," which Law said was crucially important for this case.

"They could have said that the rights of equal protection and due process are for all citizens," she said. "They chose not to use all citizens. It says 'all persons,' and I think they were very mindful of the fact that a bloody civil war had just concluded. They were mindful of the fact that states had been discriminating against Black people, and it’s the states who were going to do any sort of discrimination. So by saying 'all persons,' they are now making clear that U.S. citizenship stands above state citizenship and that the federal government will enforce the protections of state citizenship.
OPINION

Pete Hegseth’s Holy War

The US now finds itself in a long-term war waged by an angry, fanatical Fox journalist, not a competent secretary of defense.


US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth address a group of National Guard troops before conducting their re-enlistment ceremony at the base of the Washington Monument on February 6, 2026 in Washington, DC.
(Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Paul Josephson
Mar 20, 2026
Common Dreams


Pete Hegseth is carrying out a Holy War at the Pentagon and abroad. He has rightly come under fire for incompetent leadership and mediocre management of the Iran war. The war was a mistake in the first place, both because Iran did not pose an immediate threat to US interests, and because President Donald Trump assumed a rapid victory and regime change would secure oil for the US and its allies for decades to come. But motivated by Christian Nationalism, fueled by angry masculinity, and blinded by ideological certainty, Hegseth’s crusade was doomed to failure from the start. Within the Pentagon, the battle against “woke” ideas and diversity has shaken leadership and hurt morale.

On the international front, Hegseth’s religious conviction about the immorality of Iran’s Islamic leadership led him to the conclusion that his god would protect the US in any war. Yet devoid of real goals and plans, motivated by ignorance about Iranian society, and discarding the intelligence community’s dire warnings about the chances of failure, Hegseth pushed on. The US now finds itself in a long-term war waged by an angry Fox journalist, not a competent secretary of defense.

The Crusader




While Praying to ‘the Lord,’ Hegseth Threatens ‘Most Intense Day of Strikes’ in Iran


Hegseth’s worldview is steeped in mistaken views of the 11th century Crusades, infused with white male privilege, and seasoned with ideology rather than intelligence briefings. Hegseth developed his views at Princeton University where he studied politics. He became a frequent contributor to and publisher of the Princeton Tory, the school’s conservative newspaper. In his writings he “strived to defend the pillars of Western civilization against the distractions of diversity.” He attacked the university for encouraging and supporting “pre-marital sex, homosexuality, abortion, and a general hostility toward faith and religion.” He declared that “the homosexual lifestyle is abnormal and immoral.” He rankled at the buzzwords of diversity, tolerance, sexual liberation, and multiculturalism which he took to be anti-Western. He concluded that the university “has abandoned almost all its moral/truth-seeking guidance to undergraduates.”

Hegseth took advantage of Reserve Officers’ Training Corps funding for his education at Princeton, seeking to overcome the dangers of multiculturalism by becoming a soldier of god. After graduation he joined the Army National Guard, becoming a major, and was deployed three times abroad earning two Bronze Stars. Hegseth’s tattoos carry his Christian nationalism for all to see: a Jerusalem cross on his chest, a Christogram here, a “Deus Vult” (“God Wills It,” a Crusader battle cry) there, an American flag here, crossed muskets there, and other grotesque inkings common in violent far-right communities.

Hegseth failed to understand that technology alone does not win a war, nor does his insistence on the elimination of “wokeness” in the Pentagon.

Hegseth’s holier than thou attitude about the need to wage war on “wokeness,” Islam, and other evils was hardly tempered by a whistleblower report on his tenure as the president of Concerned Veterans for America (CVA), from 2013 until 2016, which describes him as being repeatedly intoxicated; sexually pursuing CVA female staffers; creating a hostile workplace; and drunkenly chanting in public, “Kill All Muslims! Kill All Muslims!” A history of alcohol and sexual abuse suggests an individual unfit to lead the Department of Defense (DOD), and in fact Hegseth was forced out as chief executive of CVA amid allegations of financial mismanagement, sexual impropriety, and personal misconduct.

Hegseth’s certainty that white males must control society seems confirmed by a string of abusive acts. His former sister-in-law claims that his second wife feared for her personal safety during their marriage, and often hid in a closet. She herself experienced an angry, intoxicated Hegseth screaming in her face. Claims of rape against Hegseth in 2017 did not result in charges against him, but did result in the future DOD secretary paying the woman in question a $50,000 settlement. His own mother, Penelope, sent him an email that said: “You are an abuser of women—that is the ugly truth and I have no respect for any man that belittles, lies, cheats, sleeps around, and uses women for his own power and ego.” Married three times and fathering a child out of wedlock, Hegseth said, “I have failed in things in my life, and thankfully, I’m redeemed by my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” Ultimately, Hegseth found salvation in the narcissism of Donald Trump. In 2017 Hegseth became co-host of “Fox & Friends Weekend.” He ingratiated himself to the president by incessantly promoting the lie that voter fraud had led to Trump’s loss in the 2020 election.


Purifying the Pentagon


Appointed secretary of defense by Trump, Hegseth announced, “We became ‘the woke department’… Not any more. We’re done with that shit.” He set out to purge the Pentagon of woke, gay, and transgender personnel that he believed weakened the US military. He said, “For too long, we’ve promoted too many uniform leaders for the wrong reasons—based on their race, based on gender quotas, based on historic so-called firsts.” Yet there were questions from the start about his own minimal “qualifications” as a Fox News host and Trump sycophant. In March 2025, only months into his Pentagon appointment, he risked the lives of US soldiers by proudly sharing classified war plans in unsecured communications with a journalist. Loyal to Trump, he kept his job.

Trump, who has no military experience, but four draft deferments and a FIFA soccer peace prize, began his second term by firing a distinguished F-16 fighter pilot, General Charles Q. Brown, Jr., as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Hegseth followed along, carrying the president’s racist water by ending diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs in the Pentagon, and by purging defense department libraries and websites that addressed anti-racism and sexism. His racism carried so far as an order to stop classifying nooses and swastikas as hate symbols (this effort to permit Nazi symbols among the Coast Guard was abandoned). But his white Christian chest-thumping intensifying, Hegseth ordered the renaming of Navy ships that honored African Americans; the purging by Pentagon archivists of the biography of Jackie Robinson; and the removal of a picture of the plane that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945, the Enola Gay, because “gay” is forbidden.

Hegseth’s goal, he said, was to eliminate the “social justice, politically correct, and toxic ideological garbage that had infected our department.” There would be “no more identity months, DEI offices, dudes in dresses. No more climate change worship, no more division, distraction or, gender delusions, no more debris.” There would be no more fat soldiers, but only fit ones. And there would be no beards, “no more beardos,” only the paramount clean-shaven look of individual expression. Calling for Aryan purity, he said, “We don’t have a military full of Nordic pagans, but unfortunately, we have had leaders who either refuse to call BS and enforce standards or leaders who felt like they were not allowed to enforce standards.” Women could serve only if they could kill as effectively as Hegseth’s warriors. To mold these warriors, Hegseth determined to permit bullying and hazing “to empower leaders to enforce standards without fear of retribution or second-guessing.”

Why his anger at “beardos”? Hegseth said that anyone who needs a shaving exemption for more than a year would be forced out of the service. This ended a policy created mainly for Black and brown troops with pseudofolliculitis barbae, a skin condition that makes daily shaving lead to cuts, sores, and scarring. For Hegseth, “grooming standards” were commensurate with the “warrior ethos.” In the name of the warrior mindset, Hegseth extended his purge to women, gays, and transgender individuals. Hegseth eliminated the Women, Peace, and Security program at the DOD as “woke” and “divisive” although it is codified in a 2017 law that Congress passed unanimously and was signed by Trump. Hegseth’s Pentagon is now forcing transgender service members to leave in the name of military preparedness. (Hitler, too, despised homosexuality. He had Ernst Röhm and other gay SA members murdered in 1934 because of their “degeneracy”; the Nazi regime made the persecution of homosexuals a priority. Perhaps Hegseth studied the Wehrmacht at Princeton?)

White Christian Officer Training

US Ivy League schools, MIT, CalTech, Chicago and other universities were crucial to the US to wage the Cold War, strategize the arms race, and build radars and other weapons. But the anti-intellectual Hegseth decided to end officer training, fellowships, and graduate-level education programs at Ivy League and other top-tier universities starting in the 2026-2027 academic year because of their allegedly “woke ideology” and anti-American sentiment. He claimed the need to refocus “the US military on maximum lethality, warfighting, and accountability; prioritizing combat effectiveness, merit-based standards, and a direct, combative culture over political correctness.” He insisted that the DOD needs “more troops, more munitions, more drones, more Patriots, more submarines, more B-21 bombers… more innovation, more AI… more space, more speed.” And he believes he can achieve these goals by shifting programs to conservative schools that stress Christian nationalist thinking.

Toward those ends, Hegseth announced the elimination of several senior service college fellowship programs for the 2026-2027 academic year and beyond. He desired “strategic thinkers through education grounded in the founding principles and documents of the republic, embracing peace through strength and American ideals, and focused on our national strategies and grounded in realism.”

The failure of the Trump-Hegseth Holy War against Iran underlines the need to divorce religious beliefs from declarations of war.

What he meant by this was doctrine steeped in the ideas of limited government, free enterprise, constitutional originalism, and Christian morality. The new partner institutions included such conservative beacons of white Christianity as Liberty University (whose past president resigned in the midst of a sex scandal); Baylor University (whose past president ignored a campus rape scandal, helped Jeff Epstein avoid prosecution, and who investigated Bill Clinton over real estate deals and Oval Office oral sex at a cost of $52 million); Regent University (that has long pushed the Christian orientation of its founder, Pat Robertson, who called for letting LGBTQ advocates and Muslims kill themselves); Hillsdale College (whose president at the time of the Clinton infidelity was allegedly having a long affair with his daughter-in-law who then committed suicide); and Pepperdine University (which was long embroiled in a lawsuit over sexual orientation of students). The trainees will be ready for religious wars, if morally ambivalent.

War Crimes and Holy War

The failure of the Trump-Hegseth Holy War against Iran underlines the need to divorce religious beliefs from declarations of war. While the medieval Crusades had largely political-military significance for control of the Holy Land, such Christian nationalists as Hegseth have recast that history as a holy war against Moslem infidels. In the ongoing war that the US launched on the Islamic Republic, Hegseth emphasizes that the Christian god is on his side. He said: “Our capabilities are better. Our will is better. Our troops are better. The providence of our almighty God is there protecting those troops, and we’re committed to this mission.” He asserted that the Trump administration was carrying out hold battle against “religious fanatics who seek a nuclear capability in order for some religious Armageddon.”

Hegseth’s reliance on religious justifications—and his certainty that Trump expected a quick victory to distract Americans from the Epstein scandal—hurried the US into its attack. But there was no justification: Iran was not within days of deploying ICBMs or nuclear weapons, and was hardly prepared to attack the US. Indeed, negotiators on both sides were close to a US-Iran agreement to forestall nuclear weapons development—and recreate the agreement that Trump abrogated in 2018 in the first place.

The great danger, now realized, was that Hegseth confused personal religious and ideological imperatives with military need. The Nazis conflated Bolshevism, Judaism, and Slavic racial inferiority, hurried into a war with the USSR that Hitler expected to win within days or weeks, yet plunged the world into war. So, too, Hegseth mixes hatred of Islam, Iran in particular, with religio-spiritual embrace of the Christian Bible, Western civilization, and a sacred mission for Israel, in the end transforming a war against the Islamic Republic of Iran into a religious crusade.

Hegseth: Waging War with No Plans

Hegseth ignored real time challenges that, after initial “victories,” have left the DOD in a bind as to how to move forward. In the first two days of the attack, the US spent $5.6 billion in munitions: More than 2,000 munitions were rained down on nearly 2,000 Iranian targets. But the armaments are hardly in an unlimited supply, must be replaced, and it will take months to do so, especially for precision, smart weapons. This will leave the US vulnerable elsewhere in the world. Hegseth failed to understand that technology alone does not win a war, nor does his insistence on the elimination of “wokeness” in the Pentagon. Hegseth assumed that initial firepower would bring Iran to its knees, but he has only strengthened the resolve of Iran’s leaders to stand up to the US, and has even brought its oppressed people into some agreement with the theocracy.

Hegseth has worried so much about beards, DEI, and Holy Wars that he attacked Iran without minesweepers that the DOD decommissioned in the autumn. These might have opened the Strait of Hormuz to the world’s oil traffic, one-third of which passes through the Strait. And without allies—Trump’s odious behavior and policies have turned away even England, France, and Canada—the US is isolated in this war. It has little recourse to their stockpiles, let alone their minesweepers. How long will Hegseth—and his witless president—wait to ask Congress to replenish the Pentagon budget and secure more munitions to continue “the most intense strikes”? And how can Hegseth justify the fact that, when planning for his Holy War, he ordered the Pentagon to buy up tens of millions of dollars of steak and crustaceans in order to spend its budget authorization before the end of the fiscal year?

For Hegseth, who embraces quick, empty responses and has forgotten any analytical tools he may have learned in college, any negative comment is “fake news.”

The troubling subservience to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war aims in Ukraine has handicapped the Hegeth and Trump Iran fiasco as well. Trump has both refused to condemn Putin’s support for Iran through intelligence sharing, military cooperation, and providing drone components and satellite imagery all of which are likely harming US soldiers. Russia is generally prolonging a war in the Middle East that benefits its closest Middle Eastern partner in the fight against the US and Israel. Trump has eased sanctions on Russian oil, which is permitting Putin to earn millions of dollars in oil revenues to fund his four-year-old invasion of Ukraine. Recall that in his first month as defense secretary, Hegseth endorsed Russia’s territorial occupation of Ukraine. At the very least, Hegseth is uninterested in Russian support for Iran.

Hegseth still promises in this war “intense strikes,” “the most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes; intelligence more refined and better than ever.” He ridicules the Iranians as “desperate and scrambling.” Likely to justify the US murder of 180 children, he announced, “Like the terrorist cowards they are, they fire missiles from schools and hospitals... deliberately targeting innocents.” The missile hit midmorning when children would certainly be present. Where is the Christian morality? Committed to a different Jesus than the one in the Bible, Hegseth told US soldiers to ignore legal advice about when they were permitted to kill enemy combatants under their rules of engagement. Hegseth smirked in couplets, “Maximum lethality, not tepid legality. Violent effect, not politically correct.”

What Has the War Department Wrought?

Hegseth, the former Fox News host, knows how to manipulate the messages to confuse the public. He uses press conferences to attack the media for their reporting on his and Trump’s war—from its initial justifications, to his overconfidence, to miscalculations regarding closure of the Strait of Hormuz, to faltering world oil supply, and to the massive unpopularity of the war as US deaths and costs accumulate. He might as well say to the American people, “Let them eat lobster.”

Into the third week, the Iran war has led to the deaths of at least 13 US service members and has burned through more than $11.3 billion worth of taxpayer dollars. The Persian Gulf has been plunged into chaos as Iran mounts retaliatory strikes against military bases and oil refineries in the region. But for Hegseth, who embraces quick, empty responses and has forgotten any analytical tools he may have learned in college, any negative comment is “fake news.”

The secretary of military propaganda admonished the press to learn the craft of Fox: “Allow me to make a few suggestions… I used to be in that business, and I know that everything is written intentionally, for example, a banner or a headline.” He called for right-wing takeover of CNN and other media. Pete needs one more tattoo: “What, me worry?”
Jeremy Corbyn’s Gaza Tribunal calls for UK ministers to be investigated by International Criminal Court
Yesterday
Left Foot Forward

The report says the government should be investigated for 'complicity and participation in genocide'



The former Labour Party leader, now Your Party MP Jeremy Corbyn has called for the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate UK government ministers over ‘complicity and participation in genocide’.

This is a central recommendation in the report from the Gaza Tribunal. The Gaza Tribunal was held by Corbyn in September 2025 to ‘uncover the full scale of British complicity in genocide’. he Tribunal heard from witnesses, journalists and survivors of Israel’s assault on Gaza, as well as a range of international law experts, lawyers and whistle-blowers.

The Gaza Tribunal Report concludes that the British government has failed in its fundamental obligation to prevent genocide, has been complicit in atrocity crimes, and in some instances has even been an active participant in these crimes. The report goes on to recommend a full ICC investigation into Britain’s complicity and participation in genocide.

The report also calls on the government to cooperate with a full, official, independent public inquiry into any cooperation between the UK and Israel since October 2023. This inquiry must have the power to question Ministers and officials involved in decision-making processes, the report argues.

Writing in a foreword to the report, Corbyn said: “Today, schoolchildren are taught about history’s worst crimes against humanity. They are asked to reflect on how these crimes possibly could have occurred. And they learn the names of political figures that endorsed or enabled such atrocities. In the near future, our history books will shame those in our government who could have stopped the genocide in Gaza but facilitated it instead.”

Speaking on the report, Corbyn added that he hopes “the Gaza Tribunal serves as a landmark contribution to the campaign for justice, and as a historical repository of evidence for generations to come” and said the report will “help cement the government’s legacy as a participant in one of the greatest crimes of our time.”

Speaking ahead of the Tribunal, co-author of the report, Dr. Shahd Hammori – lecturer in international law and legal theory at the University of Kent – said: “We hereby accuse top-UK officials of complicity in the genocide in Gaza. They lied, manipulated the law, denied the reality on the ground, and prosecuted those who spoke truth to power. Underlying their complicity is misconduct in public office, an active pursuit of deception aimed at protecting the interests of foreign governments and big businesses, not the British public.

“Today we pursue another step in the path of accountability. Meanwhile, our message to the British public is to remain alert, and to refuse state and corporate politics that relegate the lives of others and the environment as expendable waste. This message is even more urgent in light of the US/Israeli illegal aggression on Iran. We hope that this report serves as a warning of the dangers of participating in the US/Israeli illegal aggression against the state of Iran which poses a threat to international peace and security.”

According to the report, the UK government has played a ‘vital role in Israeli military operations in Gaza’. This, the reports authors argue, includes through the sale, supply of transfer of weapons to Israel which ‘have been used to extinguish human life and destroy vital infrastructure in Gaza, the West Bank and beyond’; the performance of Royal Air Force (RAF) surveillance flights over Gaza; and the provision of political and diplomatic support, which has ’empowered Israel to commit atrocities with impunity’.

Alongside calling for the ICC to investigate the UK government, the reports recommendations to the UK government include: Ending all military co-operation with Israel (including all arms exports, surveillance flights and intelligence exchange); imposing widespread economic sanctions on Israel; ending the UK’s trade agreement with Israel; and de-proscribing Palestine Action.

The full report can be read here.


Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward

 

Findings of the Gaza Tribunal


MARCH 16, 2026

Jeremy Corbyn-led report recommends UK ministers are investigated by the ICC in light of the government’s “complicity” and “participation in genocide”.

Jeremy Corbyn held The Gaza Tribunal in September to “uncover the full scale of British complicity in genocide.” Over two days, the Tribunal heard from 29 witnesses, journalists, medics, academics and survivors of the Gaza genocide, as well as a range of international law experts, lawyers and whistleblowers. 

The report concludes that the British government has failed in its fundamental obligation to prevent genocide, has been complicit in atrocity crimes, and in some instances has even been an active participant in these crimes. The Report recommends a full investigation by the International Criminal Court into Britain’s complicity and participation in genocide.

The report’s authors vow to work with the ICC to “draw their attention to evidence presented in this report, including violations of international law and evidence of criminal complicity implicating government ministers and officials.” That includes “those who have authorized the continuation of economic ties with Israel, as well as the commission of arms trades, arm transfers and intelligence exchange.”

The report also calls on the government to cooperate with a full, official, independent public inquiry into any cooperation between the UK and Israel since October 2023. This inquiry must have the power to question ministers and officials involved in decision-making processes. 

Jeremy Corbyn says he hopes “the Gaza Tribunal serves as a landmark contribution to the campaign for justice, and as a historical repository of evidence for generations to come.” He says the report will “help cement the government’s legacy as a participant in one of the greatest crimes of our time.”

In his foreword, Corbyn writes: “Today, schoolchildren are taught about history’s worst crimes against humanity. They are asked to reflect on how these crimes possibly could have occurred. And they learn the names of political figures that endorsed or enabled such atrocities. In the near future, our history books will shame those in our government who could have stopped the genocide in Gaza but facilitated it instead.” 

Jeremy Corbyn alongside Shahd Hammouri and Neve Gordon will present the full findings of the Gaza Tribunal today at 1.30pm Conway Hall, 25 Red Lion Square, WC1R 4RL.

Co-author of the report, Dr. Shahd Hammori said: “We hereby accuse top-UK officials of complicity in the genocide in Gaza. They lied, manipulated the law, denied the reality on the ground, and prosecuted those who spoke truth to power. Underlying their complicity is misconduct in public office, an active pursuit of deception aimed at protecting the interests of foreign governments and big businesses, not the British public. Today we pursue another step in the path of accountability. Meanwhile, our message to the British public is to remain alert, and to refuse state and corporate politics that relegate the lives of others and the environment as expendable waste. This message is even more urgent in light of the US-Israeli illegal aggression on Iran. We hope that this report serves as a warning of the dangers of participating in the US-Israeli illegal aggression against the state of Iran which poses a threat to international peace and security.”

Co-author of the report, Professor Neve Gordon said: “The government’s complicity in the genocide in Gaza has created a very dangerous precedent for our current moment. Indeed, we are already witnessing the fallout with Keir Stammer’s immoral response to the illegal war of aggression in Iran.  To ensure that ‘Never Again’ does not become entirely meaningless we must hold ministers and officials accountable for the government’s complicity in the destruction of Gaza. Accountability is the most effective guard against the repetition of such crimes in the future.”

Jeremy Corbyn had previously presented the Gaza (Independent Public Inquiry) Bill to Parliament earlier this year, but it was blocked by the government. The government’s official response states that “there is no need for an inquiry” and “such an inquiry would be unnecessary as there is no confusion about UK military operations in Gaza.” In Corbyn’s introduction to the Tribunal, he said that “we do not need permission to uncover the truth.” 

The evidence

When the Report was written, the official death toll in Gaza had exceeded 71,000, of whom at least 20,000 are children. These conservative figures do not include an untold number of people lost under the rubble. According to a study published in February 2026 by the Lancet Global Health medical journal, the death toll exceeded 75,000 more than a year ago—and the real figure could be closer to 186,000. At least 170,000 more have been injured. Gaza is now the home of the largest cohort of child amputees in the world.

More than 80 percent of the buildings in Gaza have been either damaged or destroyed, including more than 90 percent of housing, 97 percent of schools, thirty-three of thirty-six hospitals, and all the universities. More than 95 percent of Gaza’s agricultural land has been rendered unusable. At least 1.9 million people across the Gaza Strip have been displaced and over a million Palestinians are living in squalid tents without electricity, running water or a sewage system.

The Gaza Tribunal provided a platform for survivors, witnesses and experts to uncover the devastating scope of Israel’s genocide in Gaza and the true scale of British involvement. The Tribunal serves as a historical repository of evidence of British complicity in one of the greatest crimes of our time, with the aim of mobilising global support in the pursuit of justice, freedom and peace for the people of Palestine.

Cumulatively, the testimony gathered established beyond doubt that British governments – both Conservative and Labour – systematically failed to meet a range of legal obligations, most notably the obligation to prevent genocide. The evidence presented reveals that the British government has been complicit in war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide committed by Israel and even been an active participant in these crimes. The violation of international law could implicate individual ministers and officials, including those who have authorized the continuation of economic ties with Israel, as well as the commission of arms trades, arm transfers and intelligence exchange.

The Tribunal heard from a range of witnesses who described in devastating detail the human and social reality of displacement, ethnic cleansing, and genocide. This includes:

  • The deliberate and near total destruction of the healthcare system in Gaza, undertaken with the aim of decimating the conditions needed for saving and sustaining the lives of the sick and the wounded and destroying a key institution necessary for governing the population. This includes the targeting of Palestinian health workers and the destruction of healthcare infrastructure, which have had catastrophic knock-on impact on the health of Gaza’s population.
  • The destruction of the education systemincluding targeted attacks on infrastructure, students and teachers. These attacks have harmed the educational prospects of young Palestinians who are unable to continue their education. Hundreds of teachers and professors have been killed, effectively wiping out whole fields of study for the foreseeable future. At a time when the Palestinian population in Gaza needs them most, it will take years to rebuild university programmes in social work, physiotherapy and medicine, as well as in engineering, physics, chemistry, biology, literature, law and history.
  • The targeting of journalistshas transformed Gaza into journalism’s graveyard. Israel created target banks and assassination lists of Palestinian journalists in Gaza and killed over 250 journalists and subjected others to threats, professional marginalization and institutional abandonment. They were targeted due to their professional role of documenting the violence and providing evidence of atrocity crimes. The cumulative effect is not only the appalling loss of life, but the suppression of evidence and the erosion of press freedom.
  • The Israeli blockade of Gaza, the criminalisation of UNWRA and scores of other humanitarian organisations, and the expropriation of vast swathes of land, the destruction of agricultural fields, greenhouses, irrigation infrastructure and fishing vessels hasproduced famine.Israel has deprived the population of material indispensable for its survival, using the lack of drinkable water, severe restriction of aid volume, deliberate limitation of nutritional diversity, and prolonged suspension of food entry as weapons of war. The Israeli and US-led Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) was a militarized “humanitarian camouflage” that used the cover and bait of a food distribution system to continue the mass killing of Palestinians.

How Britain failed its legal obligations

As a permanent member of the UN Security Council, a High Contracting Party to the 1949 Geneva Conventions, a party to the Genocide Convention and the Rome Statute of the ICC, and a state with longstanding diplomatic, military and economic ties to Israel, the UK’s legal obligations require:

  1. The immediate suspension of arms transfers and related military exports where there is a serious risk of use in genocide, crimes against humanity or grave International Humanitarian Law (IHL) violations;
  2. The suspension of intelligence sharing, training and other security co‑operation that could materially assist unlawful acts
  3. Measures to ensure non‑recognition and non‑assistance in respect of Israel’s unlawful presence in the OPT, including review of its existing trade and investment relations with Israel and Israeli entities;
  4. Support for humanitarian relief and opposition to policies producing famine conditions;
  5. Full co‑operation with international accountability, including the ICC and the relevant UN Special Rapporteurs, among others.

Britain has played a vital role in Israeli military operations in Gaza, including but not limited to:

  1. The sale, supply and transfer of weapons that have been used to extinguish human life and destroy vital infrastructure in Gaza, the West Bank and beyond. This includes single individual export licences that have been supplied to Israel directly, and the indirect supply of components for F-35 fighter jets. Senior civil servants have exposed cultures of deception surrounding Britain’s assessment of Israel’s violations of International Humanitarian Law, which formed the basis of UK arms export licensing decisions. Similarly, the British government’s assessment of its legal duties regarding the prevention of genocide has relied on perverse methodologies that aim to shield the government from scrutiny. 
  2. The performance of RAF surveillance flights over Gaza, and the role of British air bases in facilitating the transport, refuelling and maintenance of military equipment.
  3. The provision of political and diplomatic support, which has empowered Israel to commit atrocities with impunity. This comprises the dehumanisation of Palestinians in political rhetoric, the justification of Israel’s criminal actions (in particular, by invoking Israel’s “right to self-defence”), the hosting of Israeli officials, the failure to support international attempts at accountability (in relation to the ICJ and ICC), and the demonisation and criminalisation of international solidarity with the Palestinians.
  4. The failure to impose sanctions on Israel and use other economic and diplomatic instruments in adherence with its legal duty to bring about an end to Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian territories. Britain’s continued political, diplomatic and economic support of Israel stands in stark contrast to its lack of support for humanitarian organisations and its failure to ensure the supply of humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza, including the failure to defend international institutions (as well as civilians on board a Gaza aid flotilla) from attacks.

The British government has failed in every single legal obligation outlined above.  Britain’s failure to meet its legal obligations has contributed to the mass killing of Palestinian civilians and the wholesale destruction of civilian objects, the desecration of international law and the further erosion of Britain’s status as a nation committed to the rule of law in the international arena. Taking all these obligations together, the report  concludes that the British government has failed in its fundamental obligation to prevent genocide and has been complicit in atrocity crimes. Evidence further suggests that in some instances the British government has even been an active participant in these crimes.

Recommendations

The report callson the UK government to end all military co-operation with Israel, including all arms exports, surveillance flights and intelligence exchange and training, joint operations and security cooperation; impose widespread economic sanctions, suspend its trade agreement with Israel, and impose a ban on all settlement products and services until it ends its illegal occupation; review all public contracts to prevent public institutions and funds from supporting Israel’s illegal occupation; issue widespread sanctions against senior members of the Israeli government and military; conduct investigations against British citizens who participated in Israel’s war crimes in Gaza and the OPT; support South Africa’s submission at the ICJ in the case against Israel;  support international efforts to enforce the ICJ ruling regarding Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian territories; support international accountability mechanisms by co-operating with the ICC and push for the execution of arrest warrants of officials wanted for war crimes and crimes against humanity; stop the criminalisation of anti-genocide protest and de-proscribe Palestine Action; support Palestinian-led initiatives to rebuild Gaza, particularly in the health, education and food production sectors; establish a Palestinian Family Visa Scheme, modelled after the Ukrainian visa programme; restore funding to UNRWA as part of efforts to significantly expand humanitarian support for people in Gaza; join the Hague Group and adhere to the obligations it places on all participating states: to take all possible actions and enforce policies to end Israeli occupation of the State of Palestine and remove obstacles to the realisation of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination.

In the interests of transparency, the UK government must also release full licensing and export data to clarify the nature of military shipments to Israel to date; publish all legal advice regarding the UK government’s assessment of genocide and its obligations to prevent it; cooperate with a full, official, independent public inquiry into any cooperation between the UK and Israel since October 2023. This inquiry must have the power to question ministers and officials involved in decision-making processes. Finally, it must provide the ICC with all surveillance footage it has collected during RAF overflights of Gaza.

Read a copy of the report here. Follow the press conference live here.  Rewatch The Tribunal here – Day 1 and Day 2.