"Revealed: British government spied on Palestinian refugees" by Asa Winstanley and Kit Klarenberg
"A cache of leaked documents obtained by The Electronic Intifada reveals the existence of a secret British intelligence project targeting Palestinian refugees."
This is an important investigative report which confirms the UK Governmentâs involvement in targeting Palestinian refugees using funding from the notorious âConflict, Stability and Security Fund.â
This comes as no surprise given that in 2015, investigative journalist Vanessa Beeley revealed that British taxpayers had been unwittingly funding the White Helmets operating in Syria via the UK Governmentâs Conflict, Stability and Security Fund.
By Asa Winstanley and Kit Klarenberg, 1 February 2023
Charlie Winter, Samar Batrawi, Harry Holcroft and Sarah Ashraf all worked on a British government effort to monitor Palestinian refugee camps for âcriticism of Western and Israeli foreign policy.â (Twitter/LinkedIn) Â
A cache of leaked documents obtained by The Electronic Intifada reveals the existence of a secret British intelligence project targeting Palestinian refugees.
Under the pretext of âacademic purpose,â a consortium of shadowy intelligence contractors agreed to conceal their ties to the British Foreign Office, for the apparent purpose of surveilling and manipulating Palestinians.
The group masquerading as researchers planned to interview residents of Palestinian refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon and the occupied West Bank as part of a British government initiative that was to be run out of the UK consulate in occupied East Jerusalem.
The project aimed to monitor âcriticism of Western and Israeli foreign policy.â
In a leaked risk assessment, the contractors emphasized âthe importance of ensuring confidentiality around the sources of funding and the aims of the program.â
They did so to mitigate the risk Palestinians in the refugee camps would âbecome suspicious,â or camp leaders would âobstruct and hamperâ the project, the risk assessment states.
You can read extracts from the leaked cache throughout this article, and in PDFs attached at the end.
Extract from the projectâs Risk Management document
At the same time, the contractors emphasized the need to gain the trust of their targets through âRegular and inclusive, engagement with local partner organizations, formal and informal authorities, youth and other stakeholdersâ in order to âcreate or reinforce buy-in and ownership of the project.â
But given that Palestinian refugees would not be told the real aims and objectives of the project they were expected to support, it would appear that the deception was a cover for British intelligence gathering.
The consortium was led by private intelligence contractor Adam Smith International, or ASI. The Institute for Strategic Dialogue, an âextremismâ think tank, was also involved.
According to the documents, ISD planned to âleverage its relationships and access in the region to undertake interviews with âFormer Fightersâ who have joined local and international violent extremist groups.â
ISD is funded by the British, US and various European governments, as well as by the European Union.
Among its âpartnersâ are two major Israel lobby groups that engage in anti-Palestinian propaganda, the Anti-Defamation League and Bânai Bârith International â though there is no indication these groups were involved in this project.
ISD did not respond to a request for comment.
ASI declined to comment on the documents, saying that, âQueries regarding any particular project should be directed to theâ British foreign office.
But one of the ASI researchers named in the leaks confirmed the project went ahead.
The stated aim of the project was to âcounterâ the âviolent extremismâ of groups such as ISIS and al-Qaida.
A leaked Foreign Office document setting out the requirements for the project says the findings would be used to improve targeting of subsequent âCountering Violent Extremismâ (or CVE) âinterventionsâ in the region, identifying âwhat types of intervention are most likely to be successful.â
However, the documents show it was primarily aimed at helping British government entities develop a better understanding of âthe extent to which Palestinian issues, and narratives about Palestinian issuesâ were a âdriver of radicalization.â
The requirements document specifies that it was part of the UK governmentâs âConflict, Stability and Security Fundâ which was worth $10.5 million that year.
A provisional budget of $120,000 was allocated to the project, according to the document.
The project ran from October 2018 until March 2019.
The ASIâs claim to be âcounteringâ al-Qaida is undermined by its record of support for the groupâs affiliates in Syria.
British government funding to one ASI project in Syria was halted soon after a 2017 BBC TV program exposedevidence that the contractors were funding and aiding al-Qaida.
Sensitive to the possibility of more bad publicity, the author of the leaked risk analysis for the Palestine project lists âinadvertently support[ing] terrorist or proscribed groupsâ as one of the programâs âmoderateâ risks.
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The ASI-led consortium proposed a study using in-person interviews in the camps combined with âsocial listeningâ technology to monitor social media and other online discussion.
âAnalysis will be conducted on which narratives are dominant,â their proposal explains. It aimed to ascertain whether âidentity issues, criticism of Western and Israeli foreign policy, or ideology, receive the most engagement.â
It boasts of âa research team of highly specialized young researchers who are at the cutting-edge of the growing field of Daesh [ISIS] and Al-Qaeda analysis.â
It promised that âthe research team will [do] an assessment of where the risk of radicalization around the Palestinian issue is most severe.â
The documents state that Batrawi, Winter and Ashraf were âresponsible for conducting the research and writing the final deliverable.â
They also boast of access to âtwo archives of Salafi-Jihadi propaganda maintained by Charlie Winter and Samar Batrawi.â
Harry Holcroft, a fourth member of the team, is named as the groupâs âCVE Intervention Expert.â
Holcroft is described as having âwell-developed networks across government, development, security and civil society sectorsâ and having gained a first class degree in Arabic with Persian.
He has also managed âclosed research projects on the intersection of extremism and Palestinian issues for HMG [Her Majestyâs Government].â
Deleted profiles of Holcroft formerly on the Institute for Strategic Dialogueâs website state that he spent years âliving and working across the region in Syria, Egypt, Qatar and Omanâ and âhas managed primary research in multiple geographies, including over 60 Former Foreign Terrorist Fighters.â
Holcroft also worked for the British embassy in Cairo and for Bell Pottinger, a notorious British lobbying firmthat was shut down after its role in stoking racial tensions and disseminating false information caused a national scandal in South Africa.
Winter and Ashraf did not respond to requests for comment. Holcroft could not be reached for comment.
Palestinian researcher distances herself
In responses emailed to The Electronic Intifada, Batrawi confirmed her involvement in the Adam Smith International project.
But she said she didnât travel to Palestine or interview Palestinians, was âmainly involved at the beginning (the background research phase)â and has âsince distanced myself from it.â She also denied any involvement in the final report.
Batrawi said of her involvement: âI believed that â as a Palestinian â my perspective on these issues could change these discourses/policies from within. This is no longer something I believe.â
She said her main tasks were to draft a background paper, provide feedback on a questionnaire that would be conducted in Palestine by ISD and to connect ISD with locals who could set up focus groups.
But on the last point, Batrawi said that âI was not able to do this.â
She also denied interacting with the British Consulate during the operation, and said she was unaware Palestinian interviewees were not informed of the British government role.
But Batrawi will undoubtedly be aware that her Palestinian identity and her knowledge and research on Palestinians were emphasized as selling points in the Adam Smith International proposal bidding for the British government contract.
A budget in the leaked documents allocated $12,000 to pay Batrawi for her role. Winter was to receive around $30,000, Ashraf $8,000 and Holcroft $10,000.
Batrawi said she was actually paid just over $8,000 for 14 days of work.
âClose collaborationâ with British consulate
In their leaked proposal, the contractors pledge to work in âclose collaborationâ with the British Consulate in Jerusalem.
The consulate is an important base of operations for MI6, Britainâs overseas spy agency.
Britainâs CVE programs are part of its controversial âPreventâ strategy, which successive governments have claimed helps counter terrorist attacks.
But faith groups have repeatedly condemned Prevent as Islamophobic, due to how it renders Britainâs entire Muslim community suspect on the basis of religion and ethnicity.
Public records related to the Foreign Officeâs multi-million-pound âMiddle East Peace Processâ program, from which the secret project revealed in the leaked documents was financed, state that the initiative is motivated by the âhigh risk of instabilityâ in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.
âPotential overspill of violence into Israelâ and, in particular, âterrorist attacks against Israelis,â are specifically cited as eventualities London intends to preemptively stop through a variety of clandestine operations.
These records also explain the program is aimed at halting the âcontinued decline of public confidence and support for a negotiated solutionâ among Palestinians.
The program is wrapped in the justification that Britain wants to âprotect the political and physical viability of a two-state solution,â but it aims to do so by manipulating Palestinians rather than by ending British support for Israelâs occupation and theft of Palestinian land.
Far from preventing âradicalizationâ by resolving legitimate Palestinian grievances against Britain and Israel, the Foreign Office seemingly wants to neutralize legitimate anger at brutal injustice via covert propaganda initiatives.
These propaganda narratives delegitimize reasonable condemnation of Israelâs settler-colonial barbarity, while falsely depicting Palestinian resistance as an equal contributor to violence and instability in the region.
Funding al-Qaida
Adam Smith International describes itself as a âglobal advisory company,â and has reaped hundreds of millions of dollars from Foreign Office contracts.
As noted, Adam Smith International has previously been embroiled in scandal. In 2017, an investigation by the BBCâs Panorama program revealed that ASI handed over British government funds to extremist groups in Syria, including members of Nour al-Din al-Zinki (a CIA-vetted and al-Qaida linked group which in 2016 infamously beheaded a child alleged to be a Palestinian fighter aligned with the Syrian government).
The money was provided as part of a project, run by Britain and five other Western governments, to fund the so-called Free Syrian Police.
ASI documents obtained by Panorama showed the contractor was aware 20 percent of all police salaries were being handed over âto pay for the military and security support that Zinki provides to the five FSP stations located [in] areas under its control.â
ASI at the time denied these findings. Yet in a statement to Panorama, it admitted to having funded extremists, claiming this was a mistake that was later rectified.
Panorama also uncovered evidence that Jabhat al-Nusra â the Syrian branch of al-Qaida â handpicked some of the âFree Syrian Police.â The program moreover found the force provided support to âcourtsâ managed by al-Qaida in some areas, including one case where a woman was stoned to death in the presence of FSP members for violating al-Nusraâs theocratic codes.
Extract from the leaked cache of ASI documents
The force backed by Adam Smith International even closed the road to allow the execution to take place.
After the Panorama episode â âThe Jihadis You Pay Forâ â aired in 2017, the British government suspended funding to the ASI project and launched an investigation.
Yet despite the scandal, the leaked cache shows that ASI has continued to tout the Syria scheme as evidence of its suitability to take on more British government projects.
The proposal for the project on Palestine lists ASIâs âAccess to Justice and Community Securityâ scheme in Syria as one of its successes.
âAJACS has worked in Syria to identify and support community leaders,â the proposal claims, saying the project provided âsupport for moderate opposition institutions.â
âRadicalizationâ
The bid documents do not offer any definition of âextremismâ or âradicalizationâ â meaning these terms can be easily weaponized against almost anyone.
Prevent has come under sustained criticism in the past. In 2015, a Prevent pamphlet listed âshowing a mistrust of mainstream media reports ⊠belief in conspiracy theories [and] appearing angry about government policies, especially foreign policyâ as potential warning signs of âradicalizationâ in schoolchildren.
The consortium promised to âleverage its relationships and access in the regionâ to conduct interviews with former members of âlocal and international violent extremist groups,â gathering further intelligence on the question.
Deceiving Palestinian interviewees, and the Popular Committees governing refugee camps, as to the true nature of the initiative in which they were engaged was apparently of paramount concern.
âHidden foreign agendaâ
The consortium forecast that âlocal communities [becoming] suspicious of the project and [viewing] it as pushing a hidden foreign agenda,â and Popular Committees working to âobstruct and hamperâ the program, were both major risks.
The risk assessment states these dangers could be overcome using âlocal and trusted researchersâ as cutouts, and publicly framing the project as purely âacademicâ in nature.
There is no evidence to suggest the British governmentâs âCVEâ approach is remotely effective in countering al-Qaida-style violence, or that holding or being exposed to âradicalâ viewpoints necessarily leads to violence in any case.
Thereâs no indication of widespread sympathy for such extremist entities among Palestinians either within or outside the occupied territories.
Like all other armed Palestinian groups, Hamas is essentially a national liberation movement. Its ideology is alien to the violent extremism of transnational jihadist groups like al-Qaida and ISIS.
Questions must be asked, therefore: Was the true purpose of this British government project more about spying on Palestinians, and manipulating public opinion about Israel, as part of its so-called âinterventionsâ?
And given ASIâs record of support for al-Qaida in Syria, if the British government was so concerned about ISIS and al-Qaida, why did it even invite ASI to bid on this âresearchâ contract in the first place?
Asa Winstanley is an investigative journalist and associate editor with The Electronic Intifada. Kit Klarenbergis an investigative journalist exploring the role of intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions.