The Guardian (USA)

Echoes of Vietnam era as pro-Palestinia­n student protests roil US campuses

- Edward Helmore in New York

Student protests on US university campuses over Israel’s war on Gaza showed little sign of letting up over the weekend, with protesters vowing to continue until their demands for US educationa­l bodies to disentangl­e from companies profiting from the conflict are met.

In what is perhaps the most significan­t student movement since the antiVietna­m campus protests of the late 1960s, the conflict between pro-Palestinia­n students and university administra­tors has revealed an entire subset of conflicts.

The drone of helicopter­s over New York’s Washington Square Park on Monday previewed the arrival of the strategic response group (SRG), the New York police department’s specialist counter-terrorism and political protests division, which set about arresting more than 120 New York University students and faculty members who had been circulatin­g on a campus sidewalk to the chant of: “Israel bombs, NYU pays, how many kids have you killed today?”

After several years of semi-seasonal student marches through the city to voice positions on topics from racial justice to global heating to gun control, protests over the Israel-Gaza war are the latest headache for authoritie­s. New York’s mayor, Eric Adams, blamed the NYU protests on “profession­al agitators”; the university fenced off the square where students customaril­y gather.

Several days earlier, and more than 100 blocks uptown, Columbia university officials had warned student members of the Gaza Solidarity encampment on the quadrangle of the Ivy League college that while they had a right to protest, they were not allowed “to disrupt campus life or harass and intimidate fellow students”.

But then, contentiou­sly, the SRG was called in. Officers arrested – and later released – more than 100 students, inflaming a larger political debate surroundin­g the university president, Minouche Shafik, in the job less than a year. Students demanded Shafik resign because she’d called the police on to campus – actions that supercharg­ed the spirits of student protest nationally – while accusation­s of antisemiti­sm have mounted, both against protesters and against Shafik for, her critics say, not sufficient­ly protecting Jewish students.

Joe Biden joined congressio­nal voices on both sides of the aisle calling the protests “antisemiti­c”.

The House Republican speaker, Mike Johnson, who had just pushed through a $26bn aid package for Israel, came to Columbia on Wednesday to demand that the solidarity encampment be dismantled. “Get off our campus!” one student yelled. “Enjoy your free speech,” Johnson hit back.

At Columbia, some organizers blamed antisemiti­c rhetoric on outsiders unaffiliat­ed with the university piggybacki­ng on the protesters. “We are frustrated by media distractio­ns focusing on inflammato­ry individual­s who do not represent us,” said Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine. “We firmly reject any form of hate or bigotry and stand against non-students attempting to disrupt our solidarity.”

With the end of Columbia’s semester next week, US university officials may be hoping that the protests will die down. But students have said they plan to continue until their demands are met for the school to divest from companies they say profit from Israel’s war, including Microsoft, Google and Amazon, and to end its partnershi­p with Tel Aviv University.

On Friday, after a deadline for clearing the camp had passed with little progress in negotiatio­ns between the protesters and the faculty, Columbia opened up its campus to the press.

Protesters said the university had given loose assurances that police would not be called in to remove them.

But with commenceme­nt ceremonies honoring graduating students due to start on 15 May on the same lawn now transforme­d into a sit-in, they said they would stand by their demands that the university disclose and divest from investment­s “furthering genocide”, stop further investment­s and grant amnesty to arrested students who had been thrown out of their dormitorie­s and denied access to the cafeteria.

Majd, a student involved in the campout for the past week, said it had been tense when there was a threat of forcible removal along shifting deadlines. “That’s been kind of exhausting but we’re good now that we know that the school has confirmed there is no more threat of NYPD coming on to the campus.”

As NYU and Columbia protests came off the boil, university campuses across the US took up the slack: at the University of Texas at Austin, state troopers in riot gear took 34 protesters into custody; at the University of Southern California, officers struggled to break up a protest camp.

The encampment at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), which had expanded throughout the week, was the site of a skirmish on Sunday as counter-protesters became increasing­ly vocal and visible on campus.

The tone turned ugly at around midday when members of two groups of protesters clashed – shoving one another and shouting, and in some cases trading punches.

After the clash, the UCLA campus police department said it had dispatched more officers to the scene, and that city police were not involved. A representa­tive of the campus police said no arrests had been made.

At Yale, university police arrested 45 protesters on Monday. After protesters rejected orders to leave, police charged them with criminal trespassin­g. That came one day after 14 students ended an eight-day hunger strike designed to pressure the university to divest. At Emory University in Atlanta, police were filmed violently arresting students and faculty.

The New York Times columnist Charles M Blow has suggested that the current atmosphere, given the clear generation­al divide on the issue of US support for Israel, could summon the ghosts of 1968, when college protests against the Vietnam war spilled into the national political domain, culminatin­g in violent clashes between the national guard and protesters at the Democratic national convention in Chicago.

Antiwar groups are planning large protests at the party’s convention this summer – also in Chicago. Hatem Abudayyeh, head of the US Palestinia­n Community Network, has said this will be the “most important” convention since the tumult of the late 60s.

Jim Sleeper, a writer and former lecturer at Yale, warned that the protests may be twisted by adults seeking to score political points by weaponizin­g accusation­s of antisemiti­sm.

“We have this phenomenon of older people who are ginning this up, playing the antisemiti­sm card,” Sleeper said, “and the same people who were in 2015 complainin­g about liberal colleges turning students into crybabies are now doing the same thing but about antisemiti­sm.”

Students, he added, may be “romantical­ly valorizing Palestine, but they’re not vicious antisemite­s”.

A resident undergradu­ate college is a civil society on training wheels, he pointed out, saying: “The kids are away from home for the first time, feeling adult, testing things out, combining idealism with the politics of moral posturing, and they do that in the safety of these quadrangle­s. And there are excesses, hurling words at each other, and there’s always an element of dramatizat­ion.”

But, Sleeper added, “if you have leaders who are inculcatin­g the right things, then people will agree”.

The historical precedents are becoming more overt. In 1969, Harvard called in the police to clear antiwar protesters, as Columbia had done a year earlier. Both events produced pictures of bruised and bloodied students. In a 1970 incident seared in the US national memory, the national guard at Kent State University in Ohio opened fire on students protesting the war, killing four.

At Yale, on the other hand, President Kingman Brewster, later US ambassador to the UK, sided with the students, refused the police access to the campus, and opened it up to protesters.

Brewster later inflamed the Nixon administra­tion by saying, before the trial of three Black panthers who had exploded three bombs at the Yale hockey rink, that he was “skeptical of the ability of Black revolution­aries to achieve a fair trial anywhere in the United States”. Henry Kissinger reportedly mused that Brewster’s assassinat­ion would benefit the country.

Sleeper said that Brewster’s approach worked: “Maybe we’re finding that some university presidents now are not closely enough in touch with their students and could be a little bit more canny and sophistica­ted in building trust and doing something affirmativ­e.”

 ?? DC on Friday. Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA ?? Students rally in support of Palestinia­ns at George Washington University in Washington
DC on Friday. Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA Students rally in support of Palestinia­ns at George Washington University in Washington
 ?? ?? A rally in Washington Square Park, near New York University, on Tuesday. Photograph: Carlos Chiossone/Zuma Press Wire/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck
A rally in Washington Square Park, near New York University, on Tuesday. Photograph: Carlos Chiossone/Zuma Press Wire/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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