JFeed Staff JUN 1, 2026
A new anti-Israel campaign is
publishing maps and location details of factories, ports, vessels and supply
routes it claims are connected to Israel’s military infrastructure, while
encouraging activists to disrupt those sites.
A new anti-Israel campaign is
publishing maps and location details of factories, ports, vessels and supply
routes it claims are connected to Israel’s military infrastructure, while
encouraging activists to disrupt those sites.
The project, launched by Global
Intifada under the name “Genocide Supply Chain,” claims to identify companies
and transport routes involved in supplying military equipment to Israel. Its
stated goal is to help activists “disarm” Israel by targeting the supply chain
behind the IDF.
But the campaign’s scope appears
broader than Israel-linked companies alone. Some Western defense firms with no
known direct Israeli contracts are also listed, based on claims that they
contribute to a wider defense ecosystem or could transfer technology through
allied governments.
The map includes profiles of
facilities, ports and companies, with claims about what each site produces and
how it is allegedly connected to Israel. Each entry is given a confidence
rating, reflecting how strongly the campaign says the information supports its
claim.
Some targets have obvious
Israel-related links, including facilities connected to Israeli defense firm
Elbit Systems. Others are more indirect. One Glasgow shipyard was reportedly
listed not because it builds vessels for Israel, but because it contributes to
the broader “global naval design and technology ecosystem.” A Washington-based
company was included despite the map acknowledging no known Israeli contracts,
citing concern over possible technology transfer from the United States to
Israel.
The campaign calls on dockworkers to
refuse work connected to suspect vessels and encourages activists to organize
pickets. It also promotes “direct action” alongside groups such as Palestine
Action, whose actions have often included vandalism and sabotage against
defense-linked sites.
Global Intifada’s messaging frames
the campaign as part of a broader struggle against Israel, Western defense
industries and what it calls one global war machine. It also seeks to reclaim
the term “intifada,” arguing that it should be understood as resistance rather
than terrorism.
The group appears to be closely
connected to Gaza flotilla activist networks, including through joint social
media activity and promotion of organizations involved in flotilla campaigns.
The publication of target maps
raises concerns that anti-Israel activism is moving further from protest toward
coordinated disruption and potential sabotage of industrial, maritime and
defense infrastructure.
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