READ | 'The Abduction of Mahmoud Khalil' by Wadie E. Said

The Abduction of Mahmoud Khalil
by Wadie E. Said

If the secretary of state can simply declare a legal permanent resident deportable based on their constitutionally protected activities, the First Amendment no longer applies to noncitizens.

Though the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil has been widely covered, it still does not cease to shock. A legal permanent resident of the United States, Khalil was returning to his Columbia University apartment building with his pregnant wife (a U.S. citizen) when he was approached by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents looking to take him into custody in connection with his role as a prominent student protester on campus. The whole affair had a slapdash quality to it: the ICE agents claimed to be revoking his student visa, only to be told he had a green card, which prompted confusion. The lead agent, who had been honored by Donald Trump during his first presidency, then spoke to Khalil’s lawyer on the phone, but promptly hung up when the lawyer requested a copy of the warrant the agent claimed to have in his possession.

After Khalil was arrested and whisked away, his lawyer filed a habeas petition to have him released. This makes perfect sense; in a deportation action, qualified noncitizens are usually not detained unless there is a fear that they will abscond or otherwise pose a danger to the community. In this instance, there is neither, as Khalil’s wife is here, and he has not been charged with any crimes. In what looks like retaliation for filing the habeas action, the immigration authorities moved Khalil to a detention facility in Louisiana. This move also functions as an attempt to render him subject to the judges of the Western District of Louisiana, a far more conservative region of the equally conservative United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

The villainous nature of this move—taking Khalil over 1,000 miles away from his pregnant wife—could not be more obvious. The official White House X account post announcing Trump’s order to put Khalil into deportation proceedings began with a taunting “Shalom, Mahmoud!” And as the documents supporting his habeas petition cited, a recent case from the Second Circuit found it unconstitutional to impose punitive immigration-related consequences in retaliation for a noncitizen exercising their rights to protected speech and advocacy.

The Mahmoud Khalil detention is a new iteration of an old practice: using a Palestinian to shatter constitutional protections and increase government power. In this instance, the target is the free speech rights of all noncitizens. But we should be forewarned that if the government gets its way here, the speech rights of citizens will be next up in its crosshairs.

For decades, Palestinians have been subject to government overreach at the expense of constitutional rights more broadly. The examples from recent history are legion. In the wake of the Black September group’s attack on the Israeli Olympic team compound during the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, the Nixon administration established the Cabinet Committee to Combat Terrorism (CCCT), which charged the FBI, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS, the precursor to ICE), and the State Department with monitoring and surveilling Arab noncitizens and American citizens of Arab origin alike. The CCCT’s most invasive and high-profile program, Operation Boulder, involved heightened visa reviews for all Arab noncitizens. Despite the program processing some 150,000 people, which resulted in a few hundred exclusions and deportations, it was discontinued in 1975 because in the government’s view it did not produce results. That is another way of stating that the Arab population in this country, including Palestinians, was not the terrorist threat that the government believed them to be. One unintended effect of the increased surveillance was to make the country’s hitherto politically withdrawn Arab community much more mobilized to meet the threat of government repression.

In the 1980s the Reagan administration once again targeted Palestinian immigrants for deportation. In an action overseen by then Assistant Attorney General John Bolton, the government tried to remove Fouad Rafeedie, a legal permanent resident of Palestinian origin from Ohio, on the grounds of his alleged membership in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), designated a terrorist group by the government, after he attended a conference in Syria. He had received authorization to travel in and out of the United States and completed his trip within two weeks. When he returned, he and his companions were stopped and questioned at the airport about their trip. Based on confidential information, the government tried to put Rafeedie in summary exclusion proceedings. Exclusion differs from deportation in that the government may turn a noncitizen away at the border without a hearing or any right of appeal. All the federal courts that reviewed his case held that Rafeedie had a right to due process; as a legal permanent resident, he could not be summarily excluded. The government eventually dropped its attempts to remove Rafeedie, but the point was clear: the government was not afraid to use Palestinians to attempt to expand its powers, even in the face of obvious constitutional limits.

In 1987, INS agents arrested seven Palestinian immigrants and one Kenyan citizen (the L.A. 8) on charges they were members of the PFLP. The government suspected them based on their activities in Southern California, which entailed distributing literature and holding events around the Palestinian cause. Although they were targeted for their political views, some were charged with minor infractions, like overstaying a student visa or working without authorization. As the PFLP was a Marxist-Leninist group, they were accused of being removable on the basis of membership in a communist organization under the McCarran-Walter Act, which was ultimately declared unconstitutional and later repealed by Congress. The L.A. 8 prosecution was a twenty-year saga of deportation charges dismissed and new charges being filed as immigration law changed. Their case was finally dismissed in 2007, after the government failed to turn over the actual evidence demonstrating that they were in fact members of the PFLP.

In an article I wrote with Anthony O’Rourke at the end of 2023 in Dissent, we criticized the call by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) to have the FBI investigate students protesting the Israeli military’s genocidal campaign for purportedly providing material support to Hamas, a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). There never appeared to be a link between the protestors, who represented all walks of American life, and any FTO, let alone Hamas. The FBI, with its massive investigatory powers, surely knew that. The crime of providing material support to an FTO in the form of speech requires working in coordination with, or at the direction of, the FTO itself—something the protestors were plainly not doing. Independent advocacy for an FTO remains protected speech, even for a noncitizen. But facts and logic never win out when the issue is standing up for Palestinian rights in the United States.

The passage of the material support law itself in 1996 relied on what I believed to be a false premise—that foreign terrorist groups were raising money for violent activities under the guise of charitable organizations. There has never been any evidence produced that this was true. But that did not stop Congress from passing the law, for which the ADL and several other pro-Israeli groups lobbied.

In the post-9/11 world, the paranoid belief that terrorists lurked among us, bamboozling well-meaning Americans and spiriting away their money to fund violence, produced the conviction of five Palestinian Americans in 2008 on charges of materially supporting Hamas through the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, then the country’s largest Muslim charity. The government never disputed that the money the Holy Land Five raised went to people in need and that they had no links to any violent activity—only that the aid enhanced Hamas’s legitimacy in the eyes of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. This was a far cry from raising money for violence through charity, but it did not derail the prosecution from producing sentences of up to sixty-five years in federal prison for the defendants’ nonviolent humanitarian activities. The outcome severely chilled charitable donations to Palestinians in need, as potential donors in the United States feared being on the wrong side of a terrorism investigation.

I know to be on my guard when discussing Palestine and its relationship to American law. Nonfactual and sensationalized claims are the order of the day. That’s why I had a nagging feeling as I listened to both Joe Biden and Trump repeatedly condemn the campus protests in 2023 and 2024. As a candidate, Trump threatened to deport those involved should he be elected. He made good on his promise with two executive orders that demand a crackdown on pro-Palestine protestors on campus, under the guise of combating antisemitism. The first order, from January 20, calls for enhanced vetting of what it deems the “foreign terrorist threat,” based on the assumption that such individuals are either already in the United States or actively trying to come here, and deporting them or excluding them as the case may be. The second order, issued nine days after, calls for action against those who are engaged in antisemitism, specifically targeting campus protesters and directly linking them to the October 7 attacks. It urges a number of measures, including “encouraging” the attorney general to pursue criminal prosecutions of those who would conspire to deny Jewish students their civil and constitutional rights.

Khalil’s case, coming on the heels of these executive orders, represents an attempted legal innovation made permissible by his Palestinian identity. Despite some fundamentally flimsy accusations of his “Hamas-aligned” activity, or possession of Hamas-supporting flyers—for which it has produced no evidence—the government finally admitted what it considers to be the deportability grounds. It was not relying on the wide and expansive concept of material support to Hamas, because it was clear that he had provided none. Instead, the government is arguing that he is deportable as an “alien whose presence or activities in the United States the Secretary of State has reasonable ground to believe would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States,” a statutory provision that was declared unconstitutional in the one judicial opinion to have considered the law. Although the case was later dismissed on other grounds, the court noted that it would be impossible to know how to conform their speech beforehand to the unknown and shifting nature of U.S. foreign policy. No material support, no criminal grounds—just the determination of the secretary of state that a stateless Palestinian’s presence has adverse foreign policy consequences, based solely on First Amendment protected speech and association. At this point, we might pause here to ask a question on the substantive nature of what these “adverse foreign policy consequences” might be. During the over seventeen months since October 7, has there been any daylight between the United States and Israel on the fundamental issue of denying Palestinians any say in their future? We have witnessed a truly unprecedented level of military, diplomatic, and economic aid from the United States to the Israeli government during what a vast network of individual scholars, human rights groups, UN bodies, and multiple sovereign nations label a genocide. And the aid has not only never stopped, it has increased beyond all rationality.

The federal immigration statute that covers exclusion—a process far less protective of noncitizens than deportation—states that a noncitizen “shall not be excludable or subject to restrictions or conditions on entry into the United States under clause (i) because of the alien’s past, current, or expected beliefs, statements, or associations, if such beliefs, statements, or associations would be lawful within the United States, unless the Secretary of State personally determines that the alien’s admission would compromise a compelling United States foreign policy interest.” The same provision also makes it clear that the secretary of state has to inform the heads of congressional committees on the judiciary and foreign affairs if they intend to designate someone under this part of the statute. The presumption is that the free speech rights of a noncitizen must be respected; given that this presumption exists in the far less protective realm of exclusion, it should function as a greater protection in the deportation hearings that Khalil is facing.

The true danger of Khalil’s proposed deportation is not in these procedural niceties. The Supreme Court has made it clear that the First Amendment applies to everyone in the United States, citizen or not, and regardless of whether the government finds it offensive. If the secretary of state can simply declare a legal permanent resident deportable as a threat to foreign policy based on their First Amendment protected activities, the First Amendment no longer applies to noncitizens in the United States. We must view this action as part and parcel of the Trump administration’s other challenges to what is settled constitutional law, such as the executive order purporting to overturn birthright citizenship.

In other words, Mahmoud Khalil’s plight constitutes a test case in amending the Constitution by executive action, free from the safeguards that make amendment such a difficult process. Here the beachhead is a stateless Palestinian, targeted in his homeland for extermination, and now persecuted in his supposed place of refuge. The American penchant for unfair treatment of Palestinians continues apace. We can only hope that the courts see this unconstitutional power grab for what it is—but the angry and unthinking self-righteousness of the executive makes for a terrifying foe.

Wadie E. Said

Wadie E. Said is a Professor of Law and Dean’s Faculty Fellow at the University of Colorado Law School and the author of Crimes of Terror.

Originally published in Dissent on March 14, 2025.

ATTEND | Mahmoud Khalil and the Assault on Academic Freedom: Peter Beinart in Conversation w/ Nadia Abu El-Haj

Join Jewish Currents editor-at-large Peter Beinart for a virtual discussion of the recent assault on academic freedom—especially for pro-Palestinian activists—with Columbia University’s Nadia Abu El-Haj. Abu El-Haj is Ann Whitney Olin Professor in the departments of anthropology at Barnard College and Columbia University and co-director of the Center for Palestine Studies. In her recent essay in The New York Review of Books, “Mahmoud is Not Safe,” she writes about the detention of Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil.

This event is open to Jewish Currents members. In addition to our print and digital subscriptions, we now have a membership program. This new initiative is for those hungry for community, learning, and conversation. By becoming a member, you will receive our print magazine, invitations to exclusive events—like this one!—and more.

Whether you’re a long-time subscriber or a new reader, we hope you’ll join us as a Jewish Currents member today!

This live event and its recording will have automated closed captioning. For accommodation requests or questions about accessibility, please reach out to events@jewishcurrents.org.

WATCH | 'Preoccupations: Whatever Happened to Prehistory in Palestine?' Event Recording

In February 2025, Columbia Global Center Amman hosted Brian Boyd, Co-Director of the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University, for a public talk titled Preoccupations: Whatever Happened to Prehistory in Palestine?  

Dr. Boyd examined the near-total absence of prehistoric research in contemporary Palestinian archaeology and how “prehistory” was introduced during the British Mandate, embedding frameworks that continue to shape archaeological narratives, public perceptions, and higher education today. 

During this event, in partnership with the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia, he explored how archaeologists (primarily British and French) during the Mandate classified prehistoric material remains by cultural and ethnic groups, an approach fundamental to early Western archaeology but still pervasive in 21st-century studies of the area. The imposed framework of “Palaeolithic-Mesolithic-Neolithic,” developed for Europe’s past, remains dominant, shaping interpretations of social and ethnic development. While much has been written on archaeology’s influence on historical narratives, the lasting impact of European prehistory, introduced in the 1920s, remains under-examined. Revisiting these frameworks reveals archaeology’s role in shaping our understanding of history and consider its obligations in the present.

APPLY | 2025-26 IAL Application Cycle Now Open

The Center for Palestine Studies invites applications to the 2025-26 Ibrahim Abu-Lughod Award in Palestine Studies!

The IAL is a nine-month fellowship that recognizes and fosters innovative and ground-breaking scholarship on issues related to Palestine and Palestinians. The award will support a scholar working on a book project in any field of the humanities or social sciences who will spend the academic year at Columbia University in New York, pursuing their research and writing, contributing to curricular matters, and participating in the intellectual life of the Center for Palestine Studies.

The competition is open to all post-doctoral scholars who share the mission of the Center for Palestine Studies to advance the production and circulation of knowledge on Palestinian history, culture, society, and politics through outstanding scholarship. 

Applications are due March 24, 2025.

ATTEND | A Panel Discussion with Didier Fassin and Enzo Traverso 03/05/25

Two New Books on Gaza
A panel discussion with the authors

Chair: A. Dirk Moses
Panelists: Didier Fassin, Enzo Traverso, Nadia Abu El-Haj, and Diana Greenwald

Wednesday, 5 March, 3.30-5.00pm
The City College of New York

Shepard Hall, Room 107
160 Convent Avenue, New York, 10031 (entrance by 140th Street)

Nadia Abu El-Haj is Ann Whitney Olin Professor in the Departments of Anthropology at Barnard College and Columbia University and Co-Director of the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University. She also serves as Vice President and Vice Chair of the Board at The Institute for Palestine Studies in Washington, DC. She is the author of numerous journal articles published on topics ranging from the history of archaeology in Palestine, the question of race and genomics today, and post-9/11 American militarism. Abu El-Haj has published three books: Facts on the Ground: Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society (2001), The Genealogical Science: The Search for Jewish Origins and the Politics of Epistemology (2012), and Combat Trauma: Imaginaries of War and Citizenship in post-911 America (Verso, 2022).

Didier Fassin is James D. Wolfensohn Professor of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, and Professor at the Collège de France, Chair Moral Questions and Social Issues. He is an anthropologist and a sociologist. Initially trained as a physician, he practiced internal medicine and taught public health at the University Hospital of La Pitié Salpétrière, before turning to the social sciences. He was the founding director of IRIS, the Interdisciplinary Research Institute in Social Sciences. In 2009, he was appointed at the Institute for Advanced Study. In 2019, he was elected to the Annual Chair in Public Health at the Collège de France, where his inaugural Lecture was titled “The Inequality of Lives.” In 2022, he was elected at the Collège de France on his current permanent chair, delivering an inaugural lecture titled “The Social Sciences in a Time of Crisis.” A member of the Academia Europea and the American Philosophical Society, he received the Gold Medal for anthropology at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Huxley Memorial Memorial Medal of the British Royal Anthropological Institute. He has authored twenty books, which were translated in ten languages and several of which were granted awards, and edited twenty-seven collective volumes. He occasionally writes for the New York Times, the London Review of BooksThe GuardianLe MondeLiberation, and is a regular contributor to Alternatives Économiques.

Diana Greenwald is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the City College of New York, (CUNY), where she researches the politics of the Middle East, nationalism, conflict, and state-building. Her book, Mayors in the Middle: Indirect Rule and Local Government in Occupied Palestine (Columbia University Press, 2024), examines Palestinian local politics under Israeli occupation. Diana’s research has been published in PS: Political Science & PoliticsMiddle East Law and Governance, and Civil Wars. Her writing has also appeared in The National InterestThe Washington Post's Monkey Cage, +972 Magazine, and Foreign Policy

A. Dirk Moses is the Spitzer Professor of International Relations at the City College of New York, (CUNY). He is the author and editor of publications on genocide, including The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression(Cambridge University Press, 2021). Recent anthologies include The Holocaust Museum and Human Rights: Transnational Perspectives on Contemporary Memorials (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2025), and The Russian Invasion of Ukraine Victims Perpetrators Justice and the Question of Genocide (Routledge, 2024). He edits the Journal of Genocide Research, which is hosting a forum on Gaza and Genocide Studies. www.dirkmoses.com

Enzo Traverso is Susan and Barton Winokur Professor in the Humanities at Cornell University. His research focuses on the intellectual history and the political ideas of modern and contemporary Europe. He was born in Italy, studied history at the University of Genoa and received his PhD from the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris in 1989. Before coming to Cornell in 2013, he taught political science for twenty years in France. He has been a visiting professor in several European and Latin American universities. His books include Gaza Faces History (Other Press, 2024); Singular Pasts: The “I” in Historiography (Columbia University Press, 2022); Revolutions: An Intellectual History (Verso, 2021); Left-Wing Melancholia: Marxism, History and Memory (Columbia University Press, 2017); Fire and Blood: The European Civil War 1914-1945 (Verso, 2016).

Registration information

ID required. Non-CUNY guests should email Jenifer Roman jroman@ccny.cuny.edu to be placed on the guest list for entry to Shepard Hall.

APPLY | Columbia Global Emerging Scholars Fellowship Program

The Columbia Global Emerging Scholars Fellowship Program provides opportunities for early-career scholars — who hold refugee status or have been forcibly displaced — to enhance their research capabilities, broaden professional networks, and support their reintegration into academia in the humanities and/or humanistic social sciences. Following a successful four-year pilot program in Amman from 2020 to 2023, the Mellon Foundation expanded the program to the Global Centers in Amman, Nairobi and Santiago in 2024, with a generous grant for annual fellowships for the next three years.

ATTEND | Palestinian Automata, 2/20/25

Since 2005, Gaza has been enclosed within a complex of drones, robotic weapons, and artificial intelligences that convert the Palestinian lifeworld into endless streams of data that drive Israeli siege warfare. This lecture maps this ecology of technics, its logics, and shifting diagrams of operation which have been modulated and intensified after October 2023 to carry out a semi-automated campaign of annihilation at a scale and pace unmatched in 21st Century warfare. 

Ali H. Musleh is the Ibrahim Abu-Lughod Postdoctoral Fellow at the Columbia University Center for Palestine Studies. His research explores how weapon technologies shape the worlds of war we inhabit. With a focus on Palestine, his first book manuscript examines the movement of settler colonialism into the robotic age of war.

Organized by the Princeton Palestine Studies Colloquium. For more info, click here.

VENUE
McCosh 28
Princeton University

DATE
Feb 20, 2025
4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

ATTEND | Inscriptions Unbound: Edward Said’s Library

This exhibit features inscriptions from approximately 50 books selected from Edward Said’s book collections, which are housed in the Edward Said Reading Room (Butler Library), the Middle East Institute, and his former New York City apartment. The exhibit provides a sampling of the numerous inscriptions that friends, students, family members, and admirers left in the opening pages of the books that they gifted to Edward Said. These heartfelt messages reveal Said’s profound and far-reaching influence, weaving a narrative of deep and broad intellectual and personal connections across peoples, disciplines, genres, times, and geographies. The inscriptions bear testimony to Said’s intellectual brilliance, but also to the deep empathy, courage, and vision that defined his lifelong advocacy for justice, human rights, and intellectual freedom. 

Curated by Joy Al-Nemri (MESAAS alumna).

 

VENUE
Butler Library, Room/Area: 3rd Floor Exhibit Space
535 W. 114 St., New York, NY 10027

DATE
Thursday, February 13, 2025 - Thursday, May 15, 2025 (all day)

EVENT CONTACT
Kaoukab Chebaro,
Columbia University Libraries
kc3287@columbia.edu