Disaster Thom Yorke says “witch-hunt” over Israel stance “wakes me up at night” as Radiohead members share views - Jonny Greenwood has said “the left look for traitors, the right for converts and it’s depressing that we are the closest they can get"

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By Max Pilley
25th October 2025

Yorke has said the “witch-hunt” over Radiohead’s stance on Israel and Palestine “wakes him up at night”, while his bandmates have also shared their views on the issue.

All five members of the band have given an interview to The Times in which they have laid out their own perspectives on the controversies faced by Radiohead in recent years.

In 2017, they encountered a backlash when they played a show in Tel Aviv, Israel despite protests urging them to cancel the gig from the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, as well as criticism from Roger Waters, Thurston Moore, Young Fathers and others.

Last year, Yorke clashed with a protester during a solo show in Melbourne, arguing with an individual from the crowd and storming off stage, before later issuing a lengthy statement explaining his decision.
Jonny Greenwood, meanwhile, has come in for criticism for making records with Israeli musician Dudu Tassa, and saw two UK gigs with Tassa cancelled earlier this year after protesters called for a boycott. Greenwood, who is married to an Israeli artist, also played with Tassa in Tel Aviv last year.

When Radiohead announced their first shows in over seven years in September, the BDS argued that the band’s “complicit silence” and support of Israeli performers during the “genocide against Palestinians in Gaza” should lead to a boycott of the shows.

“They’re telling me what it is that I’ve done with my life, and what I should do next, and that what I think is meaningless,” he explained. “People want to take what I’ve done that means so much to millions of people and wipe me out. But this is not theirs to take from me – and I don’t consider I’m a bad person.”

“A few times recently I’ve had ‘Free Palestine!’ shouted at me on the street. I talked to a guy. His shtick was, ‘You have a platform, a duty and must distance yourself from Jonny.’ But I said, ‘You and me, standing on the street in London, shouting at each other? Well, the true criminals, who should be in front of the ICC [International Criminal Court], are laughing at us squabbling among ourselves in the public realm and on social media – while they just carry on with impunity, murdering people.’ It’s an expression of impotency. It’s a purity test, low-level Arthur Miller witch-hunt. I utterly respect the dismay but it’s very odd to be on the receiving end.”

Greenwood described the backlash as “the embodiment of the left”, adding: “The left look for traitors, the right for converts and it’s depressing that we are the closest they can get.” Revealing that he is currently working on a record with Israeli and Middle Eastern musicians, he added: “And it’s nuts I feel frightened to admit that. Yet that feels progressive to me – booing at a concert does not strike me as brave or progressive.”

“Look, I have been to anti-government protests in Israel and you cannot move for all the ‘Fuck Ben-Gvir’ stickers,” Greenwood continued, referring to controversial Israeli minister of national security Itamar Ben-Gvir. “I spend a lot of time there with family and cannot just say, ‘I’m not making music with you fuckers because of the government.’ It makes no sense to me. I have no loyalty – or respect, obviously – to their government, but I have both for the artists born there.”

Yorke was asked whether he would play in Israel with Radiohead again. “Absolutely not,” he replied. “I wouldn’t want to be 5,000 miles anywhere near the Netanyahu regime but Jonny has roots there. So I get it.”

“I would also politely disagree with Thom,” Greenwood responded. “I would argue that the government is more likely to use a boycott and say, ‘Everyone hates us – we should do exactly what we want.’ Which is far more dangerous.”

“It’s nuts,” he added. “The only thing that I’m ashamed of is that I’ve dragged Thom and the others into this mess – but I’m not ashamed of working with Arab and Jewish musicians. I can’t apologise for that.”

Guitarist Ed O’Brien, meanwhile, had his say on the issue, claiming: “We should have played Ramallah in the West Bank as well.”

“I am not going to judge anybody,” he said in reference to his bandmates’ stances. “But the brutal truth is that, while we were once all tight, we haven’t really spoken to one another much – and that’s OK.”

Drummer Philip Selway added: “What BDS are asking of us is impossible. They want us to distance ourselves from Jonny, but that would mean the end of the band and Jonny is coming from a very principled place. But it’s odd to be ostracised by artists we generally felt quite aligned to.”

In the past, Yorke has spoken out on the reaction to the band’s Tel Aviv show by stating: Playing a country isn’t the same as endorsing its government. We don’t endorse Netanyahu any more than Trump.

The band’s return to the stage will consist of multiple dates each in Madrid, Bologna, London’s O2, Copenhagen and Berlin between November 4 and December 12. Tickets sold out quickly in September, with the band sharing earlier this month that they were sending out “a few more unlock codes” for tickets.

The group’s most recent live performance took place on August 1, 2018 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia. It marked the end of their ‘A Moon Shaped Pool’ tour in support of their 2017 album of the same name – which they have yet to follow up.

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I just ish some major band would say "we don't care about Israel or Palestine. If the issue is so damned important to you, then go over there and pick up a rifle. But we all know you're not going to do that, so shut the fuck up about the whole thing and get on with your lives."

Either that or "we hope both sides actively wipe each other off the face of the Earth so we're done with the whole thing once and for all."
 
You are a millionaire, dude. Don't argue with random nobodies. Just grow a spine and tell them to fuck off.
Either that or have the roadies give him "backstage passes" and then beat the shit out of him when he goes backstage.

"I dunno officer, he came back here and attacked us. The roadies stepped in and saved our lives. It's just a damned shame his phone got broken in the process and we didn't have any cameras back here. A damned shame."
 
I just ish some major band would say "we don't care about Israel or Palestine. If the issue is so damned important to you, then go over there and pick up a rifle. But we all know you're not going to do that, so shut the fuck up about the whole thing and get on with your lives."
Yeah but the last time people went to war for a foreign country everybody made fun of them. That's gotta have a chilling effect.
 
All these times, the rock bands were given a free pass to take a swipe at the fascist regime and they were all able to do it without any restraint to the orange man. Only now Radiohead is truly is in between a rock and a hard place. This is why rock bands should just play their stuff and distance themselves from politics. If they could have done that form the beginning, they wouldn't need to give out the opinions on whether they agree on what Israel's doing.
 
Whats wrong lemonface, did those wonderful lefties you courted for all of your career all of a sudden turn round and bite you? maybe rant about fascism some more, or have a cry over brexit, again.
 
I just ish some major band would say "we don't care about Israel or Palestine. If the issue is so damned important to you, then go over there and pick up a rifle. But we all know you're not going to do that, so shut the fuck up about the whole thing and get on with your lives."

Either that or "we hope both sides actively wipe each other off the face of the Earth so we're done with the whole thing once and for all."
The only band IMO who could do that and carry it off without losing their base is Iron Maiden.

Bruce doesn't give a shit about snowflakes - he's patriotic, pro-Brexit (as are most of the band, I think Janick is as well or doesn't mind) and they've made millions anyway.

Most Maiden fans (99.9%) only care about the music and not politics.
 
Playing a country isn’t the same as endorsing its government. We don’t endorse Netanyahu any more than Trump.
Ah, now there you see you’re being logical. That doesn’t work these days.
They really shouldn’t have said anything at all.
Yorke put out a statement that was pretty well considered along those lines but the problem is that they don’t to hear your reasons, they want your complete submission. They aren’t interested in your four pages of eloquent reasoning, Thom. They want you on your knees, or destroyed if you disagree with them.
When you’re someone earnest who thinks that if you’re honest and explain people will listen, that’s quite a shock. I get it, I spent half of Covid earnestly trying to explain to people because I’m am earnest type too, and I knew I was right, and if i could just get them to listen to me, it’d be ok. It wasn’t, and several metaphorical (and one actual) bloody noses later I realised this and that I’d been silly to even try. No ones listening, this isn’t a debate it’s a takedown.
If that’s how you are, I don’t think you can change that. I’m just a pleb with no money, fans or cushioning so perhaps I learned that lesson a bit faster (albeit still far too slow, but I’m an idiot who wants to believe people can be reasonable.)
Radiohead are intelligent chaps and from a time as well where you could disagree on stuff without it turning into a world ending tantrum. Trouble is the world has moved on and now it’s so polarised that if you find yourself on the ‘wrong’ side then you’re getting cancelled.
Roger waters waded into this whole mess with a series of emails that were starting out with threats (‘I’m contacting you first to capitulate before I sic my mates on you’ basically) and it’s been depressing to see. There’s clearly a lot of pressure on anyone in the public eye.
Everyone’s fucking insane these days.
Remember: there’s nothing whatsoever you can say to make these people leave you alone. They only want capitulation. So say the minimum, keep making great music and make sure there’s good security at those gigs.
Hopefully we get a diss track as epic as ‘myxomatosis’ or ‘punch up at a wedding’ out of it.
Radiohead roadies probably not the fisticuffs type, perhaps tape them to a chair and give them a music theory lecture until they break?
It’s sad anyway. I just want to enjoy seeing them play again.
 
I looked it up and realized Jonny Greenwood is married to a Jewish Israeli woman. that’s why they’ve been so hesitant about it
 
The time is ripe for a spiritual successor to punk music. Fuck Israel, fuck Palestine, luv me working class, hate me globalists, gonna brandish swastikas just to make anyone who cares fucking shit themselves. Do it, Thom.
 
Well, the true criminals, who should be in front of the ICC [International Criminal Court], are laughing at us squabbling among ourselves in the public realm and on social media – while they just carry on with impunity, murdering people.’ It’s an expression of impotency.
To mention the ICC in one sentence and an expression of impotency in the next and not realize the irony is <chef's kiss>.
 
Yorke has said the “witch-hunt” over Radiohead’s stance on Israel and Palestine “wakes him up at night”, while his bandmates have also shared their views on the issue.
Which in turn, makes me sleep very well knowing leftist virtue signallers are deathly afraid of their psychotic fans for stepping out of line for even a second.
If only politicians shared the same sentiment about their constituents.
 
If only politicians shared the same sentiment about their constituents.
Politicians are very good at dislodging the ‘symbol’ of an action onto others. they are very good at doing the damage and then avoiding any consequences at all. If the average politicians genuinely faced public wrath the world would be a much better place. When I’m empress, I will ensure that all politicians live without security in the poorest most deprived ward of their domain, to focus their attention on working for their constituents and improving conditions.

The average rock group isn’t setting policy.
Being famous is being focused on. That leads people to think their opinions are important and so why not stroke the ego by standing up for whatever cause? I think a lot of us would if we had a platform. if I was world famous I’d be cleaning our waterways up.
They do it some of them for the exposure and some because they genuinely believe it.
Trouble is their opinions are only allowed to the degree that they don’t disrupt the real power’s ability to accumulate power or money. So it’s served politicians very well the last few decades to have bands and film stars be ‘the voice of this opinion.’ They don’t set it or stop it, but they’re the glamorous face of it and they lead consensus.
The public has now been trained to actively attack anyone who disagrees with their side, the polarisation is such that kids in college are taught that ideas can hurt them, to protest everything - they’re effectively a red army, ready to be aimed at whatever the state doesn’t want. They don’t think for themselves, they simply react, and attack. There is no compromise, no listening, the other side is to be destroyed. That’s it.
And when it all falls down or gets messy the politicians who did the damage scurry away, and the famous people are left with an army of cult believers who have been trained to attack anyone who opposes the idea.
I rather like Radiohead, and I’m sorry this is going on. Imagine being best friends for several decades and then having this kind of thing drive a wedge between you - not worth losing good friendships over other people’s insane politics. Should’ve realised labour were snakes in 1997. Politicians are all snakes. None of them are good people.
 
Artists just need to stop trying to appease the terminally online Twitter babies and ignore them. You don't even have to literally tell them to fuck off. Just ignore them as much as possible and if confronted in person, say it isn't your place to discuss whatever it is they want to whine about.
Playing a country isn’t the same as endorsing its government. We don’t endorse Netanyahu any more than Trump.
Unfortunately Mr. Radiohead Guy, there's a significant number of people that are incapable of not seeing everything in black and white. I'm not a fan of all the people who've sold out to Saudi Arabia the last few years but I also know that by doing so they aren't literally saying they support their government. This is because I have at least one brain cell and can see more colors than black and white.
 
The average rock group isn’t setting policy.
Being famous is being focused on. That leads people to think their opinions are important and so why not stroke the ego by standing up for whatever cause? I think a lot of us would if we had a platform. if I was world famous I’d be cleaning our waterways up.
They do it some of them for the exposure and some because they genuinely believe it.
Trouble is their opinions are only allowed to the degree that they don’t disrupt the real power’s ability to accumulate power or money. So it’s served politicians very well the last few decades to have bands and film stars be ‘the voice of this opinion.’ They don’t set it or stop it, but they’re the glamorous face of it and they lead consensus.
The issue I have is why does anyone care what any entertainer think or feel about anything? I don't ask the girl handing me my Egg McMuffin and Coffee through the window at McDonald's her opinion on the Israel/Palestine situation and I don't ask my doctor his take on Trump's East Wing ballroom renovation any more than I ask rock stars for breakfast tips or health advice. Their job is to get up, sing songs for my pleasure, and entertain me. Just like it's my doctor's job to tell the the truth about my physical condition and what I need to do to improve it and the McDonald's girl to tell me how much my breakfast costs me. I don't ask anyone to go outside of their area of expertise.

I mean, it's one thing if it's just a couple guys in a bar or people sitting next to each other of a cross-Atlantic flight just looking to pass time by talking, but I don't really care that the guy on the other side of the conversation is a celebrity of some sort. If it's a famous guitarist I'll ask for a couple guitar tips, sure, but I'm not going to ask him for foreign policy insights.

I just don't get the idea that someone is a celeb so he simply MUST be an expert and tell us all about every subject, especially one as polarizing as modern politics.
 
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