Revealed: The internal police guidance on chanting âdeath to the IDFâ
Last summer, as the death toll in Gaza climbed above 50,000, punk group Bob Vylan provoked a media storm by chanting âdeath, death to the IDFâ at Glastonbury festival.
The scene was broadcast live on the BBC and quickly racked up millions of views online.
Shortly after, Avon and Somerset police launched an investigation into the group with reference to Article 5 of the Public Order Act, carrying a maximum fine of ÂŁ1,000.
That force âcontacted hundreds of peopleâ and âconducted a voluntary police interviewâ but closed the investigation in December, saying there was âinsufficientâ evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction.
Frontman Pascal Robinson-Foster, also known as Bobby Vylan, subsequently told documentary-maker Louis Theroux he was ânot regretfulâ and would âdo it again tomorrowâ.
He led the same chant at a protest marking Al Quds day in London last week.
Last week, the Metropolitan police said they are âinvestigatingâ the incident, despite the outcome of the previous investigation.
Declassified has now seen internal Metropolitan police guidance which aims to clarify for officers how âdeath to the IDFâ chants should be dealt with.
It states that being an IDF soldier should not be considered a protected characteristic â in part because many Britons are serving for Israel.
The information raises concerns about how pressure groups might be attempting to politicise policing in Britain in order to protect the interests and reputation of a foreign army.
Robinson-Foster told Declassified: âItâs shocking to see the extent the British government and their police forces will go to protect the interests of Israel, a foreign government that is committing genocide.
âAfter British nationals arrive back in the UK after serving an army known for committing war crimes, they are free to live out their days peacefully with no investigations into potential complicity in war crimes in Gaza.
âWhilst other British citizens including doctors, musicians, students and pensioners are repeatedly investigated and harassed for opposing those war crimesâ.
The guidance
The document, obtained through a Freedom of Information request and published on WhatDoTheyKnow, was authored by the Metropolitan police and dated December 2025.
It noted that the IDF âis made up not only from a diverse cross-section of Israel, but from recruits worldwide (including the UK)â.
Declassified recently revealed that more than 2,000 Britons were among over 50,000 foreign nationals to have served in the IDF amid the Gaza genocide.
In light of its diverse membership, the guidance said the IDF is ânot a racial group for the purpose of the criminal lawâ and being a member is therefore not a protected characteristic.
This position was echoed by Jonathan Hall, the UKâs independent reviewer of terrorism legislation.
Last year, he said: âItâs quite hard to show off the back of saying âDeath to the IDFâ that he [Robinson-Foster] intended people in the audience to hate Jewsâ.
The police guidance further noted that words âlikely to cause harassment, alarm or distressâ must be voiced âwithin sight and hearing of someone likely to be causedâ distress.
For instance, it said, âthere is a big difference between someone who has voluntarily attended an event⌠and someone who by chance overhears the words in a public spaceâ.
In other words, chanting a controversial slogan at an event that people have chosen to attend is quite different to chanting it at passerbys in the street.
The document is reproduced at the foot of this article.
Cancelled events
Further FOI documents obtained by Declassified raise concerns about how Bob Vylan concerts may have been disrupted due to political pressure from Whitehall.
Last October, the punk group cancelled two shows in Manchester and Leeds, blaming âpolitical pressureâ from education secretary Bridget Phillipson.
Phillipson, a recipient of funding from the pro-Israel lobby, had declared that universities have the powers to âtake action to prevent harassment and intimidationâ ahead of the gigs.
Declassified asked the department for education for all of its correspondence with Manchester Academy and the University of Manchester regarding Bob Vylanâs show in the city.
It confirmed that correspondence exists but refused to release any information, saying it would prejudice the departmentâs ability to offer âfree and frankâ advice in the future.
The decision not to release the information had been taken by âa ministerâ who, âin her reasonable opinionâ, concluded disclosure would have such a âprejudicial effectâ.
The department subsequently acknowledged that the minister who blocked the release of the information was Baroness Jacqui Smith.
She had previously called Bob Vylanâs set at Glastonbury âappallingâ, saying it âcompletely overstepped the markâ, and defended UK prime minister Keir Starmer after he claimed Israel had the ârightâ to cut off water and power to Gaza.
A similar FOI request issued to the University of Manchester â for correspondence with the Department for Education â was refused.
While acknowledging that Britons serve in the IDF, the British police are yet to issue any arrest warrants for potential involvement in war crimes.
Declassified is publishing the guidance here (see page 39):
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