
Palestine Action ‘terror' group behind RAF Brize Norton raid ‘plots attacks on three more air bases and drone factory'
PROTEST PLOT Palestine Action 'terror' group behind RAF Brize Norton raid 'plots attacks on three more air bases and drone factory'
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
THE Palestine Action group behind the RAF Brize Norton raid is plotting attacks on three more air bases and a drone factory.
The organisation is preparing to hit targets up and down the country, as reported by The Times and Telegraph.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
8
The activist group vandalised a military aircraft at RAF Brize Norton
Credit: Sky News
8
Protestors with banners reading 'We Are All Palestine Action' at the demonstration in London on Monday
Credit: Shutterstock Editorial
8
In their exclusive investigations, a Palestine Action meeting was recorded during which members talked about damage at the RAF Brize Norton.
The group, who said it will 'continue to operate' despite "intimidating tactics" had also been recruiting members before being officially proscribed a terrorist organisation.
The organiser of the 'direct action workshop', listened to by the Telegraph, said their members were aged from 18 to 80, from "nursery teachers to surgeons".
She said "anyone" could be a member as long as they "want to take direct action for Palestine".
Read More
NO ACTION Protester in Holocaust outfit goes unchallenged by cops amid 2-tier policing row
When talking about their targets, they were told to hit "everything you can find with a sledgehammer" and that "sacrifices" would have to be made.
Members were also asked to download the messaging app Signal, to allow for encrypted communication to be passed.
The discussion then focused on how to covertly target military bases.
Three RAF bases were highlighted as potential targets, RAF Cranwell and RAF Barkston Heath, both in Lincolnshire, and RAF Valley, in Anglesey, North Wales.
RAF Cranwell was the world's first Air Academy and still trains the next generation of RAF officers.
Meanwhile, RAF Barkston Heath is a relief landing ground for RAF Cranwell and is the home of 57 Sqn's B Flight of No 3 Flying Training School.
Elsewhere, RAF Valley on Anglesey is the No 4 Flying Training School, responsible for creating the UK's next generation of fighter pilots.
The female organiser further spread the message to take action against firms supplying arms to Israel.
This included one drone factory in Leicester that is home to UAV Tactical Systems.
The meeting's organiser was standing in front of a flag associated with the YPJ.
Details heard in the meeting by the Telegraph were passed on to the police and the Ministry of Defence.
8
RAF Brize Norton on Friday June 20 after the attack
Credit: ITV News
8
Police arresting a Palestine Action demonstrator on Monday
Credit: Alamy
8
Chaotic scenes in Trafalgar Square after members of Palestine Action staged a protest
Credit: Alamy
This comes after pro-Palestine protesters were seen clashing with cops as chaos erupted in London on Monday.
A huge mob descended on Trafalgar Square in central London, leading Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to announced she had decided to proscribe Palestine Action.
She explained that she will lay an order before Parliament next week which, if passed, will make membership and support for the protest group illegal.
The ban will see the organisation on par with Hamas, al-Qaeda and Islamic State.
The decision was made after activists from the pro-Palestinian group broke into RAF Brize Norton last week.
Speaking on Sunday, Met Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said he was "shocked" and "frustrated" at the planned demonstration today.
He wrote on social media: "I'm sure many people will be as shocked and frustrated as I am to see a protest taking place tomorrow in support of Palestine Action.
"This is an organised extremist criminal group, whose proscription as terrorists is being actively considered.
'Members are alleged to have caused millions of pounds of criminal damage, assaulted a police officer with a sledgehammer and last week claimed responsibility for breaking into an airbase and damaging aircraft.
'Multiple members of the group are awaiting trial accused of serious offences.
"The right to protest is essential and we will always defend it but actions in support of such a group go beyond what most would see as legitimate protest.'
Footage shared online showed two Palestine Action members breaking into the base and vandalising two planes in a "grotesque" breach of security.
They spray red paint into the rear of one of the jet's two engines and deep into the aircraft itself.
The pair of activists can then be seen roaming free across the grounds of the airbase on electric scooters.
Brize Norton is the RAF's largest airbase and home to more than 6,000 military and civilian personnel as well as the UK's largest military aircraft.
The MoD slammed the "vandalism of Royal Air Force assets" in a scathing statement.
A spokeswoman for the ministry said: "Our armed forces represent the very best of Britain.
"They put their lives on the line for us, and their display of duty, dedication and selfless personal sacrifice are an inspiration to us all.
"It is our responsibility to support those who defend us."
The shocking break-in at the Oxfordshire base prompted a security review at military bases across the UK.
Hundreds commented under videos of the activists' efforts on social media, asking how security could be "that lacking" at a major military air base.
A Thames Valley Police spokesman said: "We have received a report of people gaining access to RAF Brize Norton and causing criminal damage.
"An investigation has been launched and we are working with the Ministry of Defence Police and partners at RAF Brize Norton.
"Inquiries are ongoing to locate and arrest those responsible."
Palestine Action has since been desperately trying to recruit more members in a bid to create autonomous cells around the country.
In an article published in April, Huda Ammori, the group's co-founder, said: 'By being security-conscious and working in small groups, we can make it difficult for the authorities to respond to individual actions by targeting the movement as a whole – such that Palestine Action can continue to grow, even in hostile conditions.'
Those recruited have were also warned in the meeting they may face "legal risks" - but a free lawyer could be provided to them by the government if arrested.
But Palestine Action itself would not be paying for any legal fees.
Members were told they would have to accept a "level of sacrifice" for the cause, and it emerged there are 19 recruits already in prison.
The meeting leader did not tell participants that if Palestine Action is proscribed, members would in fact face being thrown behind bars for up to 14 years.
Despite talking about arrests, the organiser stressed this was not the goal, and urged everyone to avoid being identified.
All of the members were read out an 'actions agreement' which outlined everyone was there of their "own free will".
A Ministry of Defence spokesman told the Telegraph and Times: 'The UK's defence estate is vital to our national security and this government will not tolerate those who put that security at risk.
'This Government is taking the strong step of proscribing Palestine Action due to its activities, which are a threat to our national security.'
A spokesman for North Wales Police added: 'Our officers continue to liaise with MoD staff in relation to security matters at RAF Valley, Anglesey.
'The emergence of potential threats to the site is recognised, with the need for additional policing and security patrols kept under regular review.'
8
Members used red spray pain on the aircraft engine
Credit: Sky News

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
17 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Friday briefing: How years of siege, war and blockade led to the unravelling of Gaza's economy
Good morning. While much of the world's attention has been focused on Israel's conflict with Iran, the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza has worsened by the day. Since March, when Israel broke a ceasefire agreement and imposed a total blockade, very little food or medicine has been allowed in. Though the blockade was partially lifted on 19 May, only a trickle of desperately needed aid has made it through – and yesterday Israel closed the most direct route. Israeli forces have killed hundreds of Palestinians who are trying to access it, in what aid workers are now calling a 'death trap'. Israel is fighting allegations of genocide in Gaza, where it has killed more than 55,000 people. Truly to understand the scale of the catastrophe in Gaza, it's necessary to place it in historical context. This isn't just a crisis born in 2023: it's the culmination of nearly two decades of siege. For today's newsletter, I spoke to British-Palestinian economist Zayne Abudaka, senior fellow at the Institute for Social and Economic Progress in Ramallah, about how Gaza's years of economic strangulation has shaped the current crisis. That's after the headlines. Middle East crisis | Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has threatened to respond to any future US attack by striking American military bases in the Middle East. Welfare | Keir Starmer has offered Labour MPs 'massive concessions' on his controversial welfare bill in a move that has won over key rebels and is likely to have saved the prime minister from a damaging Commons defeat. The changes will reportedly cost the government several billion pounds over the next few years but will shore up the prime minister's precarious authority. UK weather | An amber heat health alert has been issued by the UK Health Security Agency for much of England because of predicted temperatures above 30C over the weekend. UK news | Two police officers who were involved in the strip-search of a black teenager at her school have been found to have committed gross misconduct. The search was 'disproportionate, inappropriate and unnecessary' and made the girl feel degraded and humiliated. Health | Scientists have developed a test to identify women with an increased risk of miscarriage, which could pave the way for new treatments to prevent pregnancy loss. The blockade of Gaza was imposed after Hamas took over in 2007 and Israel declared that it was now a 'hostile territory'. With the support of Egypt, Israel sealed Gaza by land, sea and air, devastating its economy, driving unemployment to record levels and leaving the population dependent on aid to survive. Though it may seem impossibly distant now, life before 2007 was very different, even though Israeli forces were still occupying Gaza. 'A lot of people talk about those times as better: there was more money, and a better economy,' Zayne Abudaka said. According to UN Trade and Development, real GDP per capita in Gaza dropped by more than 27% between 2006 and 2022. Here's how that happened – and how it shaped the current catastrophe. What was Gaza like before the blockade? Before the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, a Palestinian in Gaza could get in a car and drive to Haifa in Israel without checkpoints or permits. 'Obviously there were no civil rights, there was a lot of oppression, because you had an entire national identity without self-determination,' Abudaka said. 'But in terms of freedom of mobility, access to resources, and opening a business, it was pretty straightforward.' Before the formation of the Palestinian Authority (PA), the economy relied heavily on productive industries like farming, although farmers were, and still are, regularly harassed by Israelis, Abudaka said. Then the PA created a huge raft of public sector jobs. 'So all the people whose kids were going to become farmers, they started telling the children, 'why go through this headache? Why don't you work for the PA?'' The influx of aid, which increased rapidly until 2013, further empowered the PA to absorb workers from different sectors. 'The things that the Oslo accords had introduced, including the division of the different areas, lack of access to borders and to energy generation created a situation whereby the only jobs that were increasing were public sector and international NGO jobs,' Abduka said. 'And all the productive jobs like industry and agriculture started dying down.' He points to a stark statistic: in 1996, more than 20% of the Palestinian territories' GDP came from industry. Today, it hovers around 10%. When the second intifada erupted in 2000, the deaths of thousands of Palestinians and Israelis were accompanied by an intensifying Israeli occupation and the destruction of key infrastructure. 'We lost 30 to 40% of our GDP in a single year,' Abudaka said. 'Cities were under siege, curfews were imposed, you couldn't leave your house. It was a dramatic escalation in violence. People were left feeling desperate.' What has been the impact of the siege? After Israel imposed its blockade, trade and investment collapsed. 'Unfortunately the PA did not direct its finances to investing in the economic productive base,' Abudaka said. 'So you have a lack of investment, less jobs, and end up in a situation where two-thirds of young people are unemployed.' The siege imposed restrictions on a list of items that it was claimed that Hamas could use to make weapons and rockets – many of which were essentials for civilian life. It included wedding dresses, baby bottles and nappies, and water and sewage pumps. Agriculture also suffered from the territory's extreme density. Gaza spans just 360 sq km, and its population grew significantly before the war. As a result, traditional farmland quickly became overbuilt. 'In the north of Gaza, there was an area called Sheikh Ijlin, which was known for really good grapes. The area has 300,000 people living in one sq km. If you had walked in that area, you would have seen buildings and grapes side by side.' How did Gaza try to adapt? Gaza's local authorities set out new rules to manage the siege economy. 'You would go on the ministry website and see how many dunams, a unit of area, of every single plant they had. So they managed to say, 'We need this many tomatoes, so we'll do that',' Abudaka said. In some ways, Gaza's strangled economy had the potential to function better than the more prosperous West Bank's. 'The West Bank is not one continuous area,' Abudaka said. 'The PA controls these tiny islands that are surrounded by settlements. Although Gaza was seized, it was one area. So the people living there had control over their resources, which meant that they had services that worked. They had agriculture production despite everything.' But these adapted resources were battered by the wars that followed in 2008, 2012, 2014, 2021, and 2023. After each war came promises of reconstruction, but only a fraction of the aid money that was pledged ever materialised, Abudaka said. Israel wanted reassurances that aid that went in couldn't fund Hamas's military activity, Abudaka said. 'This led to the creation of the Gaza Reconstruction Mechanism, which is a security arrangement where Israeli security checks the goods that enter. It didn't stop Hamas from building tunnels. It did annihilate Gaza's economy.' What does the future hold for those living there? What is now unfolding in Gaza is a process of 'de-development,' Abudaka said. In 2006, about 63% of Palestinians in Gaza relied on aid. Today, almost all of Gaza's 2.3 million inhabitants depend on humanitarian assistance. A smaller, yet still damaging version of this is playing out in the occupied West Bank. Abudaka pointed to the banking system as one example. 'Because we don't have our own currency, we use four, including the Israeli shekel. But we can't deposit physical shekels with the Israeli central bank unless we prove where they came from. So Palestinian banks end up holding piles of cash they can't use. That limits lending, which hurts growth,' he said. Another issue is clearance revenues. 'Because we don't have a customs authority at the border, the Israeli authorities will collect that tax in our place. And then they'll send us the money back, but we have to show them receipts, which is often impossible because we don't control the borders. Then we go to the Israelis and say, 'You owe us 100m.' And they say, 'No … we're keeping the other 50m because you didn't provide all the receipts. On top of that, the Israelis take 3% as a fee.' Now far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich is trying to stop the money altogether. 'But this isn't the whole story … He wants the PA to be simply a military force that looks Palestinian, but is actually Israeli. A force that controls Palestinians, but doesn't provide them with services.' This crushing Israeli control over every facet of ordinary life, Abudaka said, is forcing young Palestinians to confront a difficult question. 'You do see a lot of Palestinian young people who are saying, listen, I love my country. I just don't have a future,' he says. 'We have really been steadfast, but this can't go on.' Kirsty Major kicks off a fascinating series on Europe's housing crisis and how it's stoking support for the far right – but, she reports, it doesn't have to be this way. (And do subscribe to our weekly email This Is Europe.) Craille Maguire Gillies, production editor, newsletters Ahead of the Women's Euro 2025 kicking off on Wednesday, the Guardian has compiled these interactive profiles of every one of the 368 women taking part, each written by local journalists from each nation. Charlie Lindlar, acting deputy editor, newsletters I loved this compilation of Guardian readers' favourite films of 2025 so far. I don't typically seek out a new Nic Cage film, but after one reader made a compelling case for The Surfer, I just might check it out. (Thanks Joe in Leeds!) Craille An interesting piece here from Nicole Carpenter on what happens when game developers are falsely accused of using generative AI in their work. 'It's completely unfair that so many people who have honed their craft for years are … being wrongfully accused,' says one. Charlie In her newsletter Culture Study, Anne Helen Petersen has an earnest obit for Mozilla's Pocket, which has joined other web-reading tools in the internet cemetery in the cloud. 'I miss the internet that wanted to be read, not scrolled.' Craille Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Football | Manchester City won Group G of the Club World Cup with a dominant performance on Thursday, beating Juventus 5-2 at Camping World Stadium. Erling Haaland's goal in the second half marked the 300th of his career. Cricket | England have fast-tracked Jofra Archer into their squad to face India in the second Test at Edgbaston next week. The 30-year-old fast bowler returns to the Test setup for the first time since February 2021. Football | Cristiano Ronaldo has signed a new two-year deal at Al Nassr, extending his stay with the Saudi Pro League team to June 2027, when the forward will be 42. The Guardian leads with ''Massive concessions' on welfare bill win over key Labour rebels'. The Financial Times has 'Starmer yields to avert Labour 'civil war' over cuts to welfare'. The Daily Mail and the Telegraph both go with 'Starmer caves in to rebels on benefits', while the Times has 'PM pledges protections for disabled to rescue bill'. The Mirror says 'New hope on PIPs', while the Sun goes its own way, reporting 'Killer back stalking Cheryl'. Our critics' roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now Music Lorde: Virgin | ★★★★☆ Lorde began her career speaking directly to her fellow teens about stuff that mattered to them – paving the way for Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo et al in the process – and is now continuing to grow up alongside her fans. That's always a tough job, but one Lorde seems more than capable of thanks to writing that remains as skilful and incisive as it did when she was precociously skewering pop's obsession with unattainable lifestyles from an Auckland suburb in 2013. Virgin is powerful, moving, personal but universal – and packed with bangers. Alexis Petridis TVThe Bear | ★★★★☆ Recalibrate your palate: The Bear is not the show it used to be. More than ever, it's a show about family – the traumas they inflict on each other and the power they have to soothe them – and how families extend to friends and colleagues who can be just as beloved and just as maddening. Where once The Bear made pulses pound, now it lets the happy tears flow; the second half of the season is like one long therapy session. Jack Seale Film FI | ★★★★☆ Brad Pitt gets behind the wheel in this outrageously cheesy but extravagantly shot Formula One melodrama. Along with a lot of enjoyable hokum about the old guy mentoring the rookie hothead, F1 the Movie gives you the corporate sheen, real-life race footage with Brad as the star in an unreasonably priced car, the tech fetish of the cars themselves (almost making you forget how amazingly ugly they are), and the bizarre occult spectacle of motor racing. Peter Bradshaw Games Death Stranding 2 | ★★★★★ This latest offering from Hideo Kojima has the atmosphere and narrative delivery of arthouse cinema. It's light of touch in its storytelling but exhaustive in its gameplay systems, and the tension between the two makes it compelling. Of the many things the game is trying to say, the message that comes to the fore is: you are never truly alone. Global disasters, big tech, even death itself – these things might abstract the way we connect to one another, but they can't sever the connection altogether. Not bad for a game about delivering boxes. Phil Iwaniuk 'It'll push disabled people into poverty': Labour's controversial welfare bill Guardian columnist Frances Ryan on the reality of being disabled in the UK and the impact of the government's proposed cuts. A bit of good news to remind you that the world's not all bad Waymap, a new app-based navigation technology designed to assist blind, partially sighted, and disabled people, has been installed at Lord's cricket ground in London. Lord's is the first sports stadium in the world to use such a personal GPS system. England visually impaired cricketer Moshfique Ahmed was among the first to test the app at Lord's. Using his cane and following the app's voice directions, he was able to move independently around the ground. Although he encountered a few misdirections, these issues were attributed to the app still learning his walking style. Ahmed expressed hope that this technology could significantly improve accessibility for visually impaired sports fans, 'I know so many people who are into sports but don't go. This would push the door completely open for them.' Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday And finally, the Guardian's puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Alarm raised over slow pace of payouts to UK veterans fired over sexuality
An MP has raised alarm at the slow pace of a scheme to compensate LGBT service personnel dismissed or discharged from the forces because of their sexuality, saying that at the current rate it could take more than a decade to complete the process. Jess Brown-Fuller, the Liberal Democrat MP for Chichester, said she began examining the LGBT Financial Recognition Scheme, formally launched in December, due to the experiences of a constituent, who is one of just 69 people to have been compensated, of more than 1,200 who have applied. Liz Stead, who was discharged from the RAF in 1969 after letters between her and her girlfriend were discovered by military police, said her case had been given priority because she has a rare lung condition. While she received compensation last month for being discharged, she is still awaiting news of a possible separate payout over how she was treated while in service. Stead, 77, who was a radar operator, spent six months in what she calls 'limbo' after the letters were discovered, which put her at the mercy of a ban on gay people serving in the UK military in place from 1967 to 2000. Stead had served for three years when she met her girlfriend, who was also a radar operator at RAF Boulmer in Northumberland, in 1968. When Stead was moved to a posting near London the pair wrote to each other. In July that year the couple had arranged to meet up in person. Stead explained: 'She didn't turn up. The military police had arrested her and searched her belongings, and got hold of my letters. 'They got a statement from her, and asked me to do a statement – well, they coerced and bullied me to admit my sexuality. They arrested me, then searched my accommodation so they could get hold of her letters. And then for six months, I was left in limbo because we were seen as a security risk. They then made a decision, and gave us a week's notice we were being discharged.' Stead was also given a criminal conviction for 'same-sex sexual activity' – but was never told about it. She only discovered this after she applied to the LGBT scheme and was granted a pardon, as well as given compensation. Stead, who later worked as a business manager for a council, said she believed the conviction might have been the reason why she had once been turned down for a job with a government department. She said: 'When I found out about the conviction I just thought – what? My wife said to me: 'Are you sure you didn't do anything else?' I said: 'No, absolutely not. I would remember that.'' Brown-Fuller used a parliamentary question on Thursday to highlight Stead's case and to push the government to make sure claims were processed more quickly. She cited statistics from mid-June showing that of 1,289 applications, 44 have been completed, a timetable which if maintained would take about 14 years to clear the backlog. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) said later the total was now 69. 'It will take years to settle all of these applications, and veterans in their 60s, 70s and 80s potentially don't have years for those payments to be settled,' Brown-Fuller said. 'My frustration is shared by the LGBTQ+ veterans, because they're angry, they're frustrated and they're disappointed that they're still experiencing these delays. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion 'I think the government is totally aware of the issue, because there is cross-party support for this scheme. What it is not fully grasping is that the minister needs to get a handle on how quickly those payments are going out and the process.' Stead, who lives in Chichester, is still in touch with her former girlfriend, who is in London, and has helped her complete an application to the compensation scheme. Stead says that last time she heard, her ex-girlfriend was still waiting for compensation. An MoD spokesperson said: 'We deeply regret the treatment of LGBT serving personnel between 1967 and 2000 which was wholly unacceptable. 'While we don't hold comprehensive records of personnel discharged due to sexuality, we're working with organisations like Fighting with Pride to ensure that we reach as many LGBT veterans who may have been affected. 'We also encourage anyone who may think that they're affected to contact us so that we can see if we can help, and the Home Office also runs the disregards and pardons scheme for people wishing to have historic 'offences' wiped from their records.'


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Palestine Action's next military targets explained in organiser's video
Palestine Action is planning a wave of action across Britain after breaking into RAF Brize Norton and damaging military aircraft, an investigation has revealed Pro-Palestine organisation, Palestine Action, is orchestrating a nationwide wave of protests against British military sites and defence companies, an investigation by The Telegraph has discovered. The group recently infiltrated RAF Brize Norton and vandalised several military aircraft. An undercover probe has since unveiled their future targets, discussed in a private meeting. With the group's imminent banning as a terrorist organisation in the works, they have stepped up efforts to enlist new members. At the secret gathering, organisers explained how the group's supporters come from diverse backgrounds - ranging from "nursery teachers to surgeons", with ages spanning from 18 to 80. Members brainstormed various methods of disrupting the targeted facilities, including trespassing onto factory premises. They were also schooled on creating autonomous cells capable of launching action on airbases without being caught, reports the Express. Meeting materials shared among attendees singled out RAF Cranwell and RAF Barkston Heath in Lincolnshire, as well as RAF Valley in Anglesey, North Wales, as primary targets. Additionally, a Leicester-based drone manufacturing facility, as well as various defence contractors accused of shipping arms to Israel, were pinpointed as potential flashpoints. The Telegraph confirmed that The Ministry of Defence and law enforcement agencies had been notified of the group's plans for imminent action. An alert was previously sounded after members of Palestine Action infiltrated RAF Brize Norton, dousing two aeroplanes in red paint and potentially causing damage worth millions, setting off a sweeping security assessment. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper condemned the incursion as "disgraceful" and has signalled intentions to prescribe the organisation. Undeterred, Palestine Action asserts it will mount a legal fight against the proscription. Meanwhile, the group is running intense recruitment sessions, aiming to bolster its network of autonomous cells. The trio of RAF bases that have been identified all have connections with Elbit Systems UK, a defence firm that has been repeatedly singled out by Palestine Action. Notably, RAF Cranwell holds the distinction of being the initial Air Academy globally, Barkston Heath aids in flying instruction, and RAF Valley is pivotal for training upcoming fighter pilots. The list of potential targets includes UAV Tactical Systems, a drone company partially owned by Elbit. A report from an online "direct action workshop," obtained by our source reveals that a female activist exhorted approximately 50 aspiring members about the need to make personal "sacrifices" in support of their cause. She spoke of the group spearheading an emerging wave of persistent assaults. The leader denouncing the government's move to outlaw the group described it as "draconian and dangerous." Participants were instructed to download the encrypted messaging app Signal and await anonymous directives from the organisers. Recruits would be organised into independent cells to devise their own strategies. This cell-based structure is intended to protect leaders from legal repercussions, a strategy also employed by movements such as Extinction Rebellion. New members were sternly cautioned to never disclose details of upcoming actions or the identities of fellow participants. "We do not provide police with any information that may compromise activists, actions or the movement... cause comes first," the organiser informed the group. A Ministry of Defence spokesperson commented: "The UK's defence estate is vital to our national security and this government will not tolerate those who put that security at risk. "This Government is taking the strong step of proscribing Palestine Action due to its activities, which are a threat to our national security." A North Wales Police spokesperson stated: "Our officers continue to liaise with MoD staff in relation to security matters at RAF Valley, Anglesey. "The emergence of potential threats to the site is recognised, with the need for additional policing and security patrols kept under regular review."