Intercepted: Judith Butler Will Not Co-Sign Israel’s Alibi for Genocide 
(theintercept.com)

JUDITH BUTLER WILL NOT CO-SIGN ISRAEL’S ALIBI FOR GENOCIDE
The famed scholar on why reducing Hamas to a terrorist label sanctions Israel’s 
war on Palestinians.
LAST MONTH, the famed American philosopher and gender studies scholar Judith 
Butler was thrust into the center of a controversy after remarks Butler made 
about the October 7 attacks in Israel. A longtime critic of Zionism and 
Israel’s war against the Palestinians, Butler had condemned the attacks in the 
immediate aftermath. But at a March roundtable in France, Butler offered a 
historical context for the Hamas-led operations and stated that the attacks 
constituted armed resistance. The blowback was swift, and Butler was criticized 
in media outlets across Europe and in Israel. This week on Intercepted, Butler 
discusses the controversy and their position on Hamas, Israel, and crackdowns 
on student protests.
Butler is currently a Distinguished Professor at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School. 
They are the author of several books, including “The Force of Nonviolence: An 
Ethico-Political Bind,” “Parting Ways: Jewishness and the Critique of Zionism,” 
and most recently, “Who’s Afraid of Gender?”
Jeremy Scahill: Welcome to Intercepted. I’m Jeremy Scahill.
Murtaza Hussain: And I’m Murtaza Hussain.
JS: Well, Maz, there’s a lot to talk about this week. In a few minutes, we’re 
going to be talking with the great Judith Butler. But before we get to that 
interview, I want to ask you your sense of where things are right now with the 
Netanyahu government appearing to be ready for a full-scale invasion of Rafah.
Of course, Rafah has been attacked repeatedly, but this presumably would be a 
much more intense, full-scale ground operation, even as there’s reports that 
the Biden administration is trying to push for some form of a deal where Hamas 
would release 33 of the Israelis that they’re holding in return for some, as of 
now, undefined pause in the Israeli attacks.
But your thoughts on this moment, the political situation, and the threats 
coming out of Tel Aviv.
MH: Well, it’s been a very eventful few days. We had the reports suggesting 
that a peace deal could be imminent, in fact, that would end the conflict for a 
predetermined period of time. But on Tuesday, Netanyahu indicated that whether 
there is a deal for hostages or not, the war will continue and the attack on 
Rafah will continue.
And he said explicitly that we’re going to enter Rafah “with or without a 
deal.” So what it indicates to me, and most observers, I would say too, is that 
this war was not really about the hostages. It’s not currently about the 
hostages either, because Netanyahu’s had many opportunities to free the 
hostages in a peace agreement for a ceasefire or a permanent peace agreement.
And reportedly, even from the first days of the war, it came out recently that 
Hamas apparently had offered full release of hostages in exchange for the IDF 
not coming into Gaza on the ground. So it seems that Netanyahu is very, very 
committed to continuing the war as long as possible; the hostages are not a 
priority.
It seems like his statement on Tuesday was specifically geared to sabotage the 
current ongoing negotiations, which by all accounts, we’re almost reaching 
success. So it seems very, very obvious that Netanyahu is invested in 
continuing the war. And it could not just be for political reasons, in terms of 
Israel’s position, but his own political future inside Israel, because the 
second the war ends, he’s going to be in serious political and legal trouble 
with Israelis and continuing [the war] longer prevents that.
JS: There’s also this strange micro-mystery that’s been playing out. Some days 
ago, there were reports that started emerging in the Israeli press, indicating 
that Netanyahu and some of his senior officials in his government were very 
concerned that the International Criminal Court was going to be handing down 
indictments, including indictments of Netanyahu himself and Yoav Gallant, the 
defense minister.
And the initial reporting in the Israeli media was citing sources in The Hague, 
but it seems pretty clear from other reporting that has now taken place in 
Israel and elsewhere, that this was kind of rumor intelligence and that it was 
being floated to the Israeli press. For what reason would Netanyahu and his 
government want to float the notion that the International Criminal Court was 
potentially going to be issuing indictments?
It could be that that is true — that there is a contemplation at play at the 
Hague where the prosecutor, Karim Khan, is actually considering or has sealed 
indictments of Netanyahu or others. Though it would be a really swift course of 
action, if you look at the history of how the ICC proceeds, but it does seem as 
though there’s a political agenda at play that isn’t exactly clear right now.
Netanyahu reportedly also spoke directly to Joe Biden saying that he wants the 
United States to block any effort by the International Criminal Court to issue 
indictments against Netanyahu or other officials. But it’s something to sort of 
keep an eye on and flag. And just one thing I want to mention for people — 
we’ve talked about this on the show before, whether it’s true or not, the 
reports about potential International Criminal Court indictments of the 
Israelis — it’s important to remember this, that there is a law on the books in 
the United States that’s been in place since 2002, and it was a bipartisan bill 
that was signed into law by George Bush. And it’s known in the human rights 
community as the Hague Invasion Act.
And basically what it says is that if any American personnel — military elected 
officials, appointed officials — are ever indicted or brought to The Hague on 
war crimes charges or as part of a war crimes investigation, that the president 
of the United States can use military force to liberate them from the 
Netherlands.
But also buried within the language that the framers of that law employed was 
that it’s not just American officials that could be liberated, but also those 
working for governments of a NATO member country or major non-NATO allies — and 
among them is the state of Israel.
So, I just want to put that out there for people. Imagine if China or Russia 
had a law on the books that said if any of their personnel were ever taken to 
The Hague, that China or Russia could invade the Netherlands. But the final 
thing I want to say on this is that just the mere rumors that there may be an 
attempt by the International Criminal Court to indict the Israelis has caused a 
panic in Washington, particularly among Republican lawmakers and Speaker Mike 
Johnson, where they are now drafting legislation to directly retaliate against 
the International Criminal Court if they indict any Israeli officials on war 
crimes charges. The White House, Maz, is saying for now, we don’t support an 
investigation. The position is the ICC has no jurisdiction over Israel. And 
then Speaker Mike Johnson saying that if the Biden administration doesn’t stop 
this, if it is in fact even true, that it would create a precedent that would 
allow American diplomats, political leaders, and American military personnel to 
be indicted on war crimes charges at The Hague as well.
MH: Well, the whole thing is making such a spectacle out of the supposed 
rules-based liberal order, because these are institutions that the United 
States has patronized or supported in various ways in the past and used, 
specifically, endorsed their use against their own enemies. Vladimir Putin is 
indicted by the ICC. He has a warrant for him.
No one claimed they didn’t have jurisdiction over that. So, to so brazenly view 
it as valid in one circumstance and ignore it and even attack the institution 
in others, I think this is not going to be sustainable in the long term, 
because the whole world sees this hypocrisy, sees the lack of substance behind 
these very lofty words and institutions.
So I think that if they attack the ICC in various ways, attack its personnel, 
threaten even to attack it physically, if it puts warrants for Israelis, I 
think it only further along the process of a decay and dissolution of these 
very, very flawed ideas, institutions that the U.S. built at the end of the 
Cold War.
JS: Yeah. And just a final note on this: I still think that there are political 
reasons why Netanyahu’s government wanted to push this story, whether it’s true 
or not. And let’s also remember that there have been credible reports that 
Israel has spied on lawyers working for the state of Palestine in proceedings 
at the International Criminal Court. These have been going on for many years, 
so it’s possible that the Israelis heard something and they wanted to front-run 
it and make a big racket about it. It’s also possible that it’s part of a 
broader distraction operation or an attempt to get the United States to come 
out on record and attack the International Criminal Court — knowing that Israel 
is committing war crime after war crime.
Well, we’re going to speak to somebody who also has been really outspoken about 
Israel’s war crimes in Gaza, as well as the events of October 7, and also the 
events taking place on American college campuses and universities, [and] around 
the world increasingly. I’m referring to Judith Butler, the U.S. philosopher, 
currently a distinguished professor at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School.
Judith Butler is the author of several books, including “The Force of 
Nonviolence: An Ethico-Political Bind,” “Parting Ways: Jewishness and the 
Critique of Zionism,” and most recently, “Who’s Afraid of Gender?”
Professor Judith Butler joins us now from Paris. Thank you so much for being 
with us here on Intercepted.
Judith Butler: I’m glad to be here.
JS: Judith, I want to start by asking you about the protests, the encampments 
that we’re seeing pop up, not just across the United States at universities and 
colleges, but now increasingly we’re seeing this happening at universities 
internationally.
And at some of the campuses, particularly in the United States, there’s been a 
violent crackdown — not only targeting students, but also targeting professors 
at universities like Emory and others. And I’m curious to get your analysis of 
the situation as we understand it right now on these campuses, the way that the 
university administrations have responded, and the role of law enforcement 
agencies in coming onto the campuses to arrest students and faculty.
JB: Well, certainly I have been following the student encampments and protests, 
and the way that some university presidents have called in police to break 
apart the encampments, but also physically to confront and hurt students and 
faculty protesting and to suppress, in general, their rights of assembly and 
their rights of free speech. I would say as well their academic freedom — 
although those three are not the same. 
I think we all saw the footage from Emory University, and the calm and 
principled head of the philosophy department [Noëlle McAfee] who had the 
perspicacity to persist and to communicate about her situation. I have to say 
that I have seen police incursions on campuses for many years.
It is important to see that some university presidents are not calling in the 
police. So we need to remember that some of them do still hold to principles of 
freedom of expression and are not enacting violence against students. That 
said, it is a quite phenomenal movement. 
I’m in France right now, where the students at Sciences Po have been erecting 
an encampment. I saw an astonishing number of police surrounding the Sorbonne 
the other morning. Paddy wagons waiting for student protesters and other 
protesters are seen every weekend in the streets of Paris. Whenever there is a 
demonstration, there are huge numbers of police who bear their automatics in 
public as ways of intimidating people and keeping them from expressing their 
solidarity with Palestine, and of course, their principled opposition to a 
continuing genocidal attack on Gaza, now focusing, as we know, on and near the 
Rafah gate.
I think that there are spurious and completely objectionable grounds that 
universities have given for unleashing police on students. One of them has to 
do with security. One has to ask security for whom or for what — certainly not 
security for protesters. They’re not interested in protesters being secure, 
secure enough, to exercise their rights of expression, their rights of protest. 
It seems like that would be good if we wanted to guarantee rights of protest on 
campus, since that would be a defense of freedom of expression and what we call 
“extramural speech” in the academy. 
But also it becomes clear that the security at issue is twofold. One: security 
for the campus, its own property — security of the entrance, allowing students 
to come and leave as they wish, imagining that those protests, those 
encampments, are somehow keeping people from moving on and off campus. 
But also, as we know, there is a security concern raised by some Jewish 
students — and here, it’s really important to say some Jewish students, because 
not all Jewish students agree — those Jewish students who claim that they are 
unsafe on campus or feel that they need security, telling us that certain 
utterances make them feel unsafe.

RelatedPro-Israel Advocates Are Weaponizing “Safety” on College CampusesNow, 
utterances that truly jeopardize another person’s safety are those that 
threaten them with harm. And what we’re seeing in some of the justifications 
that are used by college and university presidents to bring police onto campus 
is an equivocation between utterances that may be objectionable and hurtful or 
disturbing, and utterances that are threats, literally threats to the physical 
safety of a student.
So I think that the blurring of that distinction has quite frankly become 
nefarious because any student who says “I feel unsafe by what I hear another 
student say” is saying that “My security and safety is more important than that 
person’s freedom of expression.” And if we countenance that, if we give too 
much leeway to that claim that a student feels unsafe because, say, an 
anti-Zionist — or a statement in support of Palestine, or a statement opposing 
genocide makes that Jewish student feel unsafe, we are saying that that student 
is perceiving a personal threat or is threatened by the discourse itself — even 
when the discourse is expressive rather than portending physical harm. 
Now, if somebody does say, listen, if somebody uses a deeply antisemitic slur, 
any kind of antisemitic slur, or addresses a Jewish student in an antisemitic 
way, and then says, “And because you’re Jewish,” or “Because I feel the 
following way about Jews, I’m also going to do physical damage to you. I’m 
going to harm you.” — that is not acceptable speech. That is not protected 
speech. There’s nothing about that speech that is protected. 
But if calling for an end of genocide against Palestine is understood as making 
a Jewish student feel unsafe, then we see that the safety of the situation has 
been oddly co-opted by that particular Jewish student. It’s as if they are 
being threatened with harm when, in fact, the opposition to the genocide in 
Gaza is quite explicitly an opposition to doing harm and killing numerous 
people who are huddled in Rafah looking for safety.
So I call it nefarious because it’s so clear that Palestinians — who are under 
bombardment and will now, or have undergone, unfathomable loss, who are living 
through a spree of killing and genocide that stretches the human imagination 
and appalls anybody whose heart is open to the reality before them — that they 
are the ones in need of safety. And the international community has failed to 
provide that safety. They are in need of safety from harm, like real physical 
harm. They need to be safe from killing, from being killed. They need to be 
protected against being killed. They need to protect their families, what’s 
left of their families.
So for an utterance that opposes the genocide in Gaza to suddenly make a Jewish 
student feel unsafe — because that Jewish student identifies with Zionism or 
with the state of Israel — is a grotesque claim in the sense that that student 
is safe. 
That student is having to hear something that might be deeply disturbing and 
sometimes antisemitic — and I think we must all agree that antisemitic speech, 
narrowly, clearly, lucidly defined, is radically unobjectionable under all 
circumstances. But we can talk about that as well, since what counts as 
antisemitic has so expanded beyond the limits of its established definitions 
that, unfortunately, the call for justice in Palestine is registered by some as 
nothing more than antisemitism.
“If calling for an end of genocide against Palestine is understood as making a 
Jewish student feel unsafe, then we see that the safety of the situation has 
been oddly co-opted by that particular Jewish student.”
MH: Judith, I wanted to get your perspective also on what these protests are 
indicative of — in the sense that, obviously, you’ve seen previous generations 
of protests by students and others about Palestine before, but it seems the 
scale and scope today is quite unlike what we’ve seen in the past. What do you 
think that this reflects in terms of public opinion and particularly 
generational change of how younger people view this subject, as opposed to how 
it appears to older generations? 
JB: I think that it’s obviously not everyone in the younger generation. So we 
have to be careful in our generational generalizations. And, you know, we see 
people like Ros Petchesky in New York, a Jewish Voice for Peace advocate, 
getting arrested, I think, several times now. She’s older than I am, I believe. 
So there’s a cross-generational solidarity, as well as a specific form of 
mobilization that is now focusing on college campuses. 
But let’s remember that the mobilization on college campuses was preceded by a 
number of very public actions jointly waged by Students for Justice in 
Palestine, Jewish Voice for Peace, disrupting bridges in New York or the 
federal building in Oakland, the ports of Oakland, the Statue of Liberty, we 
could go on and on. Some very high-profile protests. And of course, Biden 
himself has discovered that there are — that there’s no event he can go to 
right now without major protest outside. Now, a lot of times that is young 
people. I guess I want to point out that a lot depends on whether you’re 
able-bodied, like able-bodied young people are able to encamp and protest in 
ways that other folks maybe can’t.

RelatedAmid Gaza War, College Campuses Become Free Speech “Testing Ground”But 
the current mobilization on college campuses is being watched nationwide and 
globally. So a number of Palestinians have commented to me from different parts 
of the world that it is enormously heartening, that it lifts them to see this 
great solidarity and this great clarity. Very often when it comes to 
Israel–Palestine, we hear people say, “Well, it’s so complex.” I think for many 
of the young people, it’s not that complex. This is a genocidal violence being 
enacted against the Palestinian people in Gaza. And it is obvious and it is 
clear, and they have the footage and they circulate the footage and they know 
it.
They’re also reading: They’re getting the history of Zionism. They’re getting 
the history of occupation. They’re getting the history of Gaza. They’re 
learning online and in seminars and in their own colleges. And the mobilization 
is born of an unequivocal conviction — not just that the bombardments and 
killings, the loss now of over 34,000 Palestinian lives is horrific. Not just 
that, but the history of Zionism, the history of occupation, the structure of 
apartheid within the state of Israel, the fact that Palestinians remain 
stateless or living within administrative authorities that do not have full 
state powers and do not represent full political self-determination. And that 
even now, Palestinians who live within the state of Israel, within its current 
boundaries, they also are suffering harassment, violence, and second-class 
citizenship in many different ways. 
I think that there is a broad educational effort happening here. And I like the 
fact that education is being mixed with activism because activism should be 
informed. And sometimes we see ill-informed instances, like somebody yelling, 
“Jews go back to Poland.” No, that’s not acceptable. 
What does the liberation of Palestine mean? What does it look like? Well, in my 
view, it means that Palestinians and Jews and other inhabitants of that land 
will find a way to live together. Either next to each other or with one 
another, under conditions of radical equality, where occupation is dismantled 
and all the colonial structures associated with occupation is dismantled.
It doesn’t mean pushing Jews off the land. It does mean, in my mind and in many 
people’s minds, the taking down of settlements and the redistribution of that 
land to Palestinians who lived there. And it does mean, in my mind and in the 
mind of many others, a just way of thinking about the right of return for 
Palestinians who have suffered forcible exile and who wish to return to the 
lands or at least to the region, or to have compensation or acknowledgment for 
what they have suffered. 
I wish I saw more on campus. Like, what’s behind the slogan? Like, yes, I want 
to free Palestine from colonization, from bombardment violence, from 
settlements, from military and police detention. I want to see freedom from all 
of those things. But then we also have to ask: Freedom to do what? What will 
freedom look like? How will it be organized? How will people live together in a 
free Palestine, or in a free Palestine–Israel, whatever it may be called, or in 
two states who will have to have a negotiated agreement or a federated model? 
A lot of people have been thinking about this for a long time, so I think I 
would like to see more seminars in the street, seminars on college campuses 
that try to take apart the slogans — distinguish the hateful slogans, the 
ignorant ones, the antisemitic ones from those that are actually helping to 
realize justice and freedom and equality in that land.
So if we were to have another public seminar on these campuses where everybody 
is assembled, it should surely be on academic freedom as well. Academic freedom 
means that educators have a right to teach what they want, to build their own 
curriculum, to express their ideas without the interference of state and 
without the interference of donors.
But I think that’s also collapsing right now as donors, we see at Columbia 
University, are making threats to withdraw funds, that also happened at Harvard 
and elsewhere. Also state powers, governments pressuring universities to 
suppress the rights of speech and assembly that their students have. These are 
forms of interference in university and college environments that ought 
properly to be protected from that interference. That is what academic freedom 
is.
JS: Judith, I wanted to ask you about the events of the last few months and how 
they’ve impacted you and your public profile. On March 3, you made remarks at a 
gathering in France. And for people that have really followed the history of 
Hamas as an organization, of the armed struggle of the Palestinian people, of 
the actions of the Israeli state over the decades — the remarks that you made 
were, in my assessment, a quite factual rendering of the events, and embedded 
within them was historical context. You used a phrase, though, that was then 
cherry-picked, and much ado was made about it in the international press, and 
certainly in the Israeli press, but also in Le Monde, in American newspapers, 
and other papers in Europe, et cetera.
You described the attacks of October 7 as “an act of armed resistance.” And 
again, I emphasize, if people listen to the full context of your remarks, it 
was quite clear, I think, to intellectually honest people, what you were 
saying. But then you had just this avalanche of attacks against you publicly. 
And, from what I understand, also privately, you received hostile 
communications or hateful communications from people.
But I wanted you to walk us through how you experienced that. What was the 
point that you were making that then became the subject of controversy? Because 
I think it’s important to hear it in your own words.
JB: Well, thank you. I appreciate the opportunity. I should preface my answer 
with this comment. Because the violence is so acute and people are taking up 
sides in very emotionally invested ways, they’re not hearing very well. They 
don’t always have the time or patience to read or listen to a complex point. 
And I am somebody who does speak in complex sentences, and I make a claim, and 
then I qualify it, and then I contextualize it. There’s several steps. And as a 
teacher, I have the time to do that. As a public figure, I’m learning, one 
doesn’t always have the time to do that. 
The question that was posed to me in Pantin was, first of all, whether Hamas 
was a terrorist organization, and then whether I thought as well that it was 
possible to distinguish the actions of Hamas from an antisemitic attack. 
I made clear in that context that I, as a Jewish person, quite frankly, was 
anguished on October 7, and I wrote about that, and a lot of my friends on the 
left were very angry with me for writing about that. I was supposed to keep 
that to myself. We can see that the grief over Jewish lives lost is very often 
humanized and memorialized in ways that Palestinian deaths are not.
And we have only to look at the U.S. press and Le Monde as well to see that 
enormous inequality. 
“We can see that the grief over Jewish lives lost is very often humanized and 
memorialized in ways that Palestinian deaths are not.”
But I did feel that way. And I wrote against Hamas, in fact, hoping that it 
would disappear as a movement on October 7. And then as I thought about it, and 
I saw the genocidal actions of the Israeli state against the Palestinian people 
of Gaza, and I think we have to say Palestinian people, because it’s not just 
those who voted for Hamas, or those who are actively part of Hamas. They 
[Israel] weren’t like asking people, “How did you vote?” or “How do you feel 
about Hamas?” before they killed them. They did not do that. And indeed, 
children, older people, as we know, aid workers — I mean, the killing has been 
monstrous and largely indiscriminate.
And I did think that it was then more important to come out against genocide 
and to call it that. I did some work, some reading, as I think we probably all 
did, to figure out, well, how is genocide defined, and who are the jurists who 
agree. And now, as we know, there are several hundred, if not thousands, who do 
agree that what is happening is genocide, and the International Court of 
Justice has also said, plausibly, yes, it is. Wish they would say something 
stronger. 
By the time I got to Pantin, and people asked me about Hamas — I still don’t 
like Hamas. I don’t endorse Hamas. I have never applauded or rejoiced in the 
military tactics of Hamas. I have written extensively on nonviolence, and I 
often presume people know that I am actually committed to nonviolent means of 
overthrowing unjust regimes. This is what I teach, and it’s what I believe, and 
it is what I also have written about at length. 
So I wasn’t romanticizing Hamas, but I was saying they come from somewhere. 
Hamas emerged as a significant political organization in the wake of the Oslo 
Accords. The Oslo Accords turned out to be an enormous betrayal of the 
Palestinian people. The transfer of political authority that was going to take 
place, that was promised, never took place. And in fact, it was undercut: More 
land was taken, fewer rights were given, and it was considered by most 
Palestinians to be a massive betrayal.
Hamas emerged then, as we know, within Palestinian politics. There are several 
political parties. There’s Fatah, there’s the Palestinian Liberation 
Organization, there’s the Palestinian Administration and its complex 
relationship to that, and also the Palestinian National Unity Party, which is 
extremely interesting to me. I’m probably following that more closely than 
anything else. 
In short, I thought it was important not to just see the atrocities committed 
by Hamas — and they were atrocities — on October 7 as random acts of violence. 
They were horrific. I’ve condemned them many times, and I continue to condemn 
them. But they come from somewhere.
“Can we take the time to understand what drives people to that? Where does that 
come from? What conditions are they living under?”
Can we take the time to understand what drives people to that? Where does that 
come from? What conditions are they living under? What conditions are they 
objecting to? Can we discuss those who object to those conditions through 
military means and those who object to those conditions through other means 
available to them? Just as a matter of understanding. 
But in certain contexts, to try to understand something like this means that 
you endorse it. Or if you fail immediately to call it “terrorist,” that means 
you think it is acceptable. Well, no, there are various unacceptable crimes 
against humanity, many of which are inflicted by states. We don’t call all 
crimes against humanity “terrorist” crimes. 
I was trying to contextualize. I was trying to understand why people would be 
moved to take up arms and be part of a combat struggle. Now, the problem in 
France is, if you say “resistance movement,” you’re saying résistance. And if 
you say résistance, you are recalling the liberation from the Nazis, you are 
recalling the triumphant win of the resistance movement against fascism in 
France. 
So résistance is always an idealization. Résistance is always what you want. 
You want to be part of it. You want to be in the wake of it. You want to tell 
that story. You want to applaud it. So to say something is résistance is to 
applaud it. And I was foolish because I know enough French and French culture 
to know that you can’t use the word résistance without invoking that particular 
legacy.
So, people immediately thought that meant, if I call this violent resistance — 
and then even say, “And I object to its tactics,” which I did say — by using 
the word résistance, I am applauding, I am endorsing. 
I never was. I never will. I never have. But I am interested in why people pick 
up arms, and I’m interested in when they lay them down. So why can’t we be 
thinking about the Irish Republican Army, or why can’t we be thinking about 
other places where there’s been violent conflict — where different groups have 
agreed to lay their arms down when a legitimate political negotiation seems 
plausible? I’m interested in that, because I am interested in nonviolent modes 
of resolution. But we have to understand why people take up arms.
“I am interested in why people pick up arms, and I’m interested in when they 
lay them down … because I am interested in nonviolent modes of resolution.”
And I suppose also, I want to distinguish between being against occupation or 
against the Israeli siege of Gaza, and antisemitism. Now, yes, some Hamas 
members said hideous antisemitic remarks. And, of course, we must object to 
every and all antisemitic remarks. And those were hideous, clear, and explicit. 
There’s no equivocation. 
But to say that their struggle for justice, freedom, or equality is, at core, 
just antisemitism, or mainly antisemitism, is to assume that they would be 
happier if they were colonized by some other group of people. They’re only 
objecting to being colonized by the Jews because they’re the Jews.Well, no, 
that’s not right. 
They’re objecting to colonization. And if and when antisemitism gets confused 
with an anti-colonial rhetoric or an anti-occupation rhetoric, then we need to 
disentangle it. We need to do that on college campuses, we need to do it with 
our Palestinian allies if that ever happens — in my experience, it happens 
very, very rarely. 
In any case, I guess I was taken to endorse Hamas, which I do not do, that I 
refused to call it “terrorist,” but I feel like once you call it “terrorist” 
and you just put it in that box, then it’s random violence that justifies any 
and all efforts to wipe it out.
If Hamas is only terrorist and not a military group that is trying to achieve 
some kind of political aim that other people are also trying to achieve through 
nonmilitary means, if it’s only terrorist, then the alibi for genocide is right 
there. Because if all of these people are terrorists or terrorist sympathizers 
who are living in Gaza, then the entire population is painted as terrorist, at 
which point, there’s only one thing that the Israelis and many of its U.S. 
supporters think is possible: which is the obliteration of those people. 
So I think we have to think critically about how and when we call people 
terrorists. There’s a jurist here who’s defending people’s free speech on 
Palestine, and she’s called a terrorist sympathizer, and she’s now under 
scrutiny by a legal investigation. So before we bandy about this term 
“terrorist” — and I’m sure there are legitimate uses of it, and we can even 
describe some actions of Hamas as terroristic, terrorizing, terroristic — we 
can certainly also talk about whether Israel is an example of state terrorism. 
When do we talk about that?
I think it’s not the case that terrorism only belongs to nonstate actors. We 
also have states that act through terrorization and terroristic tactics and who 
would comply with such a definition. But yes, for many people, at least in the 
media, it seemed that I had either contradicted myself, that I had criticized 
Hamas and now I was elevating it and even identifying with it — but that’s not 
the case. I continue to deplore their tactics. 
I am interested in why they took up arms after Oslo. I wonder what it would 
take to get them to put down arms. What am I for? I’m for significant, 
substantial political negotiations that would produce a nonviolent future for 
Palestine. But, I don’t know if anybody can really hear that, because at this 
point, the smallest word reduces the person.
Like, “Oh, you said that word,” or “You failed to say that word, so this is who 
you are, and this is where you belong, and you’re on that side.” “You’re 
pro-Hamas.” Or even in my early one, “You’re pro-Israel.” It’s like, no. No. 
People are jumping, and they see words and they grab them, and they try to 
capture people and reduce them without listening, reading, contextualizing. I 
hope, really, that we get slower, more careful educational efforts happening on 
campuses and elsewhere, so that our reporting and our speaking can be as 
precise and thoughtful as possible.
DEIR AL-BALAH, GAZA - NOVEMBER 7: Civil defense teams and citizens continue 
search and rescue operations after an airstrike hits the building belonging to 
the Maslah family during the 32nd day of Israeli attacks in Deir Al-Balah, Gaza 
on November 7, 2023. (Photo by Ashraf Amra/Anadolu via Getty Images)Read Our 
Complete Coverage
Israel’s War on GazaMH: Judith, one thing you alluded to — and we’ve discussed 
on the show in the past as well too — is the difficulty of discussing the 
subject not just among peers, but also due to state pressure. In the United 
States certainly we’re seeing now with the campus protests, but also in Europe, 
perhaps even more strenuously.
You’re based in Paris, and you’ve had some incidents in the last few months 
where events you’re speaking at or taking part in came under some sort of 
pressure or participation had to be withdrawn. And things like this are 
happening across Europe and quite extensively. Can you talk a bit about the 
climate there for discussing Israel–Palestine and the challenge in raising 
these perspectives that you’re discussing with us today?
JB: I mean, I think what’s going on in Germany is quite distinct, and people 
here in France I know keep asking themselves, “Are we becoming Germany?” And I 
don’t know whether France is becoming Germany. I think there is in fact an 
internal debate about that. The police were brought in to confront the students 
at Sciences Po, and many people who may have very different views on Palestine 
and Israel objected to the suppression of the freedom of protest and the 
freedom of speech at Sciences Po. But it’s true that, I mean, obviously in 
places like Germany, anybody who’s invited there will first be investigated by 
their hosts to see whether they support the boycott, divestment, and sanctions, 
which I have since 2009. I wouldn’t go to Germany because I know what the 
attacks would be like against me.
I’m glad [Yanis] Varoufakis did. I think that was brave and important and drew 
attention to it. I’m glad Masha Gessen survived that trial. I’m glad that Nancy 
Fraser is speaking out strongly against her cancellation. It was, and remains, 
a complete scandal that someone as smart and important as she is, is denied the 
freedom to speak because she signed a perfectly legitimate philosophers’ letter 
objecting to the genocidal attacks on Gaza.
So I’ve been rescheduled. One of that was canceled in a convoluted way, but 
then I’ve been twice rescheduled. So we will see whether that rescheduling is 
fulfilled. I think it probably will be, but it is not comfortable to speak 
freely in public about matters such as these
JS: Just to follow up on that: I’ve been in touch with lawyers in Germany who 
are representing ordinary citizens, not prominent academics, not famous people, 
but ordinary residents of Germany.
Some of them are Arabs, Palestinians, others are Jewish residents of Germany, 
who have been charged under antisemitic speech laws because they’ve used terms 
at demonstrations to describe what the Israeli state is currently doing to Gaza 
that were historically applied to the actions of the Third Reich.
And there was a rather senior woman who is an Israeli living in Germany who was 
twice arrested within I believe a week period, a one-week period, for simply 
holding a sign. But many of the most vicious attacks against people on these 
grounds in Germany are aimed at Arab residents, unfamous Arab residents of 
Germany, some of whom are even being threatened with deportation.
And what I wanted to zero in on is, I’m constantly having arguments with people 
in Germany and elsewhere in Europe about these kinds of laws. As you see the 
rise of the AfD in Germany, the far right-wing party, the re-rise of the the 
far right, — and we’re seeing this in other European countries as well, and 
you’re certainly experiencing that in France. If right now Germans, ordinary 
Germans, don’t recognize that the weaponization of these laws against residents 
or citizens of Germany — because the German state has this “reason of state” 
that “we must defend Israel at all costs,” that’s the mentality here, and it in 
and of itself conflates Israel as a state with Judaism as a whole. 
But if you justify criminalizing this speech, right now, that is aimed at 
protesting against Israel’s actions in Gaza. And then if you have a far-right 
party take over, it’s so easy for that party to say, “Well, hey, that’s the 
standard. You’ve set the standard. We’re allowed to criminalize speech that we 
don’t like.” I think that’s extremely dangerous. You know, I can levy a million 
criticisms toward the United States, but at least we have a fundamental basis 
to argue about these issues from, and it’s the First Amendment. In Germany, and 
it’s leading the way, and in other European countries, they also have speech 
laws heading in this direction, or they’re contemplating them — these are 
extraordinarily dangerous laws. Extraordinarily dangerous.
JB: I am following that, and I certainly didn’t mean to imply that people who 
are famous should not be canceled or criminalized, but maybe other people can 
be. No, no, no. I’m quite aware — in fact, when I used to go to Germany, I 
visited many Israelis in exile who live in Berlin and who were working closely 
with Palestinians and were anti-Zionists, quite frankly, who thought that they 
would be able to live in Germany more easily than they could in Israel because 
of the cultural activities.
But those people, including, as you say, Jewish people of conscience, the 
Jüdische Stimme people, the Jewish voices people — they are being arrested, and 
we’re seeing German police arresting Jewish people in the name of defending 
against antisemitism. And of course, we’re also seeing German politicians and 
their apologists deciding whether or not a Jewish person’s critique of Zionism 
or critique of the Israeli state or the Israeli policy in Gaza amounts to 
antisemitism.
So Germans are brokering whether or not Jews are antisemitic or not, which I 
find appalling. And there’s no shame in that. You’re right about the raison 
d’état the reason of state in Germany, the unconditional support for the Jewish 
state of Israel. But, you know, they claim that the Jewish state of Israel is a 
democracy, and yet, if it were, which I don’t think it is, it would also 
accommodate free speech or robust criticism of the state’s actions. But it does 
not do that.
We’ve seeing that now in the sporadic persecution of Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, 
professor at Hebrew University, who was arrested in her bed just the other 
morning. Released now, but possibly facing new arrests as we speak. But in 
Germany as well, the suppression of criticism, of public criticism, is also an 
attack on democracy. So as they cancel and annul and criminalize all kinds of 
young people, including, as you say, Palestinians, people from Turkey, North 
Africa, Syria, you don’t have full citizenship or full residency or complete 
papers or are particularly vulnerable — we see a crackdown on the stateless or 
the precarious that suggests that police powers are legitimately being used to 
suppress open public criticism. What we associate with flourishing democracies.
So you’re right. The AFD, which according to the latest reports is gaining 
greater and greater support among German people, including German youth, is 
able to flourish in an environment in which state powers and police powers are 
being unleashed against people who are trying to express basic democratic 
rights: the rights to speak, to criticize, to assemble, to protest, to give 
names to what we see, to give the true name for what we see, to say the word 
“genocide.”
We could have a longer conversation about the spurious argument that is 
sometimes used against protesters, namely that the Jews are those who suffered 
genocide, therefore they cannot be enacting a genocide, and it is obscene to 
say that they are, and they use that word “obscene.” There is nothing that 
keeps a people who have suffered massively in life from afflicting massive 
suffering on others, even though the sufferings are different. There is nothing 
in the history of the world that precludes that.
There are no pure angels in the situation, but there is obviously an effort to 
control language and to suppress analogies and to keep the exceptional 
character of the Nazi genocide in place so that we cannot use the word 
“genocide” to name what very clearly complies with the legal definition of 
genocide. So I just think it is going to be a massive struggle in Germany to 
open up the critique of Israel, to accept the nonconsensus on Israel. 
“What if we imagined a transformation of that state, so that it was a state 
that represented all the inhabitants there, regardless of religion, regardless 
of race, national origin?”
I want to say one last thing about it, and here’s a kind of bad argument: If 
you say you’re an anti-Zionist in Israel, in Germany, and sometimes here in 
France as well, people think it means that you believe that Israel has no right 
to exist. They actually think that’s all it means. When you say you’re an 
anti-Zionist, they hear you saying, “I want the destruction of the state of 
Israel.” Now, you could be an anti-Zionist like I am, clearly, and wish for a 
state formation in which Palestinians and Jews live together and inhabit that 
earth together equally and without violence, supported by constitutional 
protections, by economic equality, the end to colonial structures, the end to 
occupation.
That’s not the death of the state of Israel, but it might involve a 
transformation of that state. And it’s that last point, like, what if we 
imagined a transformation of that state, so that it was a state that 
represented all the inhabitants there, regardless of religion, regardless of 
race, national origin?
We would just sound like old-style liberals, right? We would be like boring 
old-style liberals. Constitutional democracy. If you called for that, for a 
one-state solution, would you be calling for the end of the Jewish people or 
the death of the Jewish people or the destruction of the state? You would be 
calling for a transformation of the state that would be in the service of all 
the inhabitants, because living on conditions of equality, living equally free, 
living under justice is the end to a violent struggle for freedom, because 
freedom is there.
It’s the end of the violent struggle against the Palestinians because they are 
your neighbors and your equal citizens. I mean, it’s a vision of cohabitation. 
It’s not a violent act. So, you know, the state of Israel was founded one way; 
it could have been founded another way. There were bi-nationalists who wanted 
the state of Israel not to be founded on the basis of Jewish sovereignty. They 
lost that. And there have always been Jewish Israeli critics of the Jewish 
sovereignty principle who wanted Israel to be a democracy worthy of the name. 
Those are positive values, and at least they should be debated. And they could 
be debated in Germany because a lot of the people who held to this view were 
German Jews or German-speaking Czech Jews like Hans Kohn.
I mean, it’s just nonsense. Anyway, this is the nonsense that we’re left with 
in this world right now.
JS: Well, Judith Butler, you leave us with a lot to contemplate, and I know you 
have to go right now, but we’re so grateful for you, for taking the time to be 
with us here on Intercepted. Thank you so much.
JB: OK. Thank you very much.
MH: Judith Butler’s latest book is out now and called “Who’s Afraid of Gender?”
JS: Thank you so much for joining us, I’m Jeremy Scahill. 
MH: And I’m Murtaza Hussain.


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