The document, issued by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Center (JTAC) on March 7, acknowledges that the majority of Palestine Action’s operations involve minor property damage such as graffiti, lock-ons, and occupations. These acts, often targeting weapons manufacturers like Elbit Systems, are explicitly characterized by the intelligence agency as activities that would not typically meet the terrorism threshold. Despite this admission, JTAC maintains the group participates in terrorism by causing serious property damage to advance a political agenda.
This revelation arrives as domestic opposition to the government's stance intensifies. Former Labour leader Neil Kinnock recently broke with Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s administration, arguing that demonstrating for those concerned about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza should not be equated with terrorism. Meanwhile, UN human rights chief Volker Türk has criticized the UK’s approach, warning that the country is misusing counterterrorism legislation to criminalize conduct that falls outside the clear, established boundaries of international law.

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