HOLDER v. HUMANITARIAN LAW PROJECT
Supreme Court Cases
561 U.S. 1 (2010)
Opinions
Majority Opinion Author
John Roberts
Majority Participants
Dissenting Participants
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
HOLDER, ATTORNEY GENERAL, et al. v. HUMANITARIAN LAW PROJECT et al.
certiorari to the United States court of appeals for the ninth circuit
No. 08â1498.âArgued February 23, 2010âDecided June 21, 2010
It is a federal crime to âknowingly provid[e] material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization.â 18 U. S. C. §2339B(a)(1). The authority to designate an entity a âforeign terrorist organizationâ rests with the Secretary of State, and is subject to judicial review. â[T]he term âmaterial support or resourcesâ means any property, tangible or intangible, or service, including currency or monetary instruments or financial securities, financial services, lodging, training, expert advice or assistance, safehouses, false documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities, weapons, lethal substances, explosives, personnel (1 or more individuals who may be or include oneself), and transportation, except medicine or religious materials.â §2339A(b)(1). Over the years, §2339B and the definition of âmaterial support or resourcesâ have been amended, inter alia, to clarify that a violation requires knowledge of the foreign groupâs designation as a terrorist organization or its commission of terrorist acts, §2339B(a)(1); and to define the terms âtraining,â §2339A(b)(2), âexpert advice or assistance,â §2339A(b)(3), and âpersonnel,â §2339B(h).
Among the entities the Secretary of State has designated âforeign terrorist organization[s]â are the Partiya Karkeran Kurdistan (PKK) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which aim to establish independent states for, respectively, Kurds in Turkey and Tamils in Sri Lanka. Although both groups engage in political and humanitarian activities, each has also committed numerous terrorist attacks, some of which have harmed American citizens. Claiming they wish to support those groupsâ lawful, nonviolent activities, two U. S. citizens and six domestic organizations (hereinafter plaintiffs) initiated this constitutional challenge to the material-support statute. The litigation has had a complicated 12-year history. Ultimately, the District Court partially enjoined the enforcement of the material-support statute against plaintiffs. After the Ninth Circuit affirmed, plaintiffs and the Government cross-petitioned for certiorari. The Court granted both petitions.
As the litigation now stands, plaintiffs challenge §2339Bâs prohibition on providing four types of material supportââtraining,â âexpert advice or assistance,â âservice,â and âpersonnelââasserting violations of the Fifth Amendmentâs Due Process Clause on the ground that the statutory terms are impermissibly vague, and violations of their First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and association. They claim that §2339B is invalid to the extent it prohibits them from engaging in certain specified activities, including training PKK members to use international law to resolve disputes peacefully; teaching PKK members to petition the United Nations and other representative bodies for relief; and engaging in political advocacy on behalf of Kurds living in Turkey and Tamils living in Sri Lanka.
Held: The material-support statute, §2339B, is constitutional as applied to the particular forms of support that plaintiffs seek to provide to foreign terrorist organizations. Pp. 8â36.
(a) This preenforcement challenge to §2339B is a justiciable Article III case or controversy. Plaintiffs face âa credible threat of prosecutionâ and âshould not be required to await and undergo a criminal prosecution as the sole means of seeking relief.â Babbitt v. Farm Workers, 442 U. S. 289, 298. P. 10.
(b) The Court cannot avoid the constitutional issues in this litigation by accepting plaintiffsâ argument that the material-support statute, when applied to speech, should be interpreted to require proof that a defendant intended to further a foreign terrorist organizationâs illegal activities. That reading is inconsistent with §2339Bâs text, which prohibits âknowinglyâ providing material support and demonstrates that Congress chose knowledge about the organizationâs connection to terrorism, not specific intent to further its terrorist activities, as the necessary mental state for a violation. Plaintiffsâ reading is also untenable in light of the sections immediately surrounding §2339B, whichâunlike §2339Bâdo refer to intent to further terrorist activity. See §§2339A(a), 2339C(a)(1). Finally, there is no textual basis for plaintiffsâ argument that the same language in §2339B should be read to require specific intent with regard to speech, but not with regard to other forms of material support. Pp. 10â12.
(c) As applied to plaintiffs, the material-support statute is not unconstitutionally vague. The Ninth Circuit improperly merged plaintiffsâ vagueness challenge with their First Amendment claims, holding that âtraining,â âservice,â and a portion of âexpert advice or assistanceâ were impermissibly vague because they applied to protected speechâregardless of whether those applications were clear. The Court of Appeals also contravened the rule that â[a] plaintiff who engages in some conduct that is clearly proscribed cannot complain of the vagueness of the law as applied to the conduct of others.â Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 455 U. S. 489, 495.
The material-support statute, in its application to plaintiffs, âprovide[s] a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited.â United States v. Williams, 553 U. S. 285, 304. The statutory terms at issue hereââtraining,â âexpert advice or assistance,â âservice,â and âpersonnelââare quite different from the sorts of terms, like â âannoyingâ â and â âindecent,â â that the Court has struck down for requiring âwholly subjective judgments without statutory definitions, narrowing context, or settled legal meanings.â Id., at 306. Congress has increased the clarity of §2339Bâs terms by adding narrowing definitions, and §2339Bâs knowledge requirement further reduces any potential for vagueness, see Hill v. Colorado, 530 U. S. 703, 732.
Although the statute may not be clear in every application, the dispositive point is that its terms are clear in their application to plaintiffsâ proposed conduct. Most of the activities in which plaintiffs seek to engage readily fall within the scope of âtrainingâ and âexpert advice or assistance.â In fact, plaintiffs themselves have repeatedly used those terms to describe their own proposed activities. Plaintiffsâ resort to hypothetical situations testing the limits of âtrainingâ and âexpert advice or assistanceâ is beside the point because this litigation does not concern such situations. See Scales v. United States, 367 U. S. 203, 223. Gentile v. State Bar of Nev., 501 U. S. 1030, 1049â1051, distinguished. Plaintiffsâ further contention, that the statute is vague in its application to the political advocacy they wish to undertake, runs afoul of §2339B(h), which makes clear that âpersonnelâ does not cover advocacy by those acting entirely independently of a foreign terrorist organization, and the ordinary meaning of âservice,â which refers to concerted activity, not independent advocacy. Context confirms that meaning: Independently advocating for a cause is different from the prohibited act of providing a service âto a foreign terrorist organization.â §2339B(a)(1).
Thus, any independent advocacy in which plaintiffs wish to engage is not prohibited by §2339B. On the other hand, a person of ordinary intelligence would understand the term âserviceâ to cover advocacy performed in coordination with, or at the direction of, a foreign terrorist organization. Plaintiffs argue that this construction of the statute poses difficult questions of exactly how much direction or coordination is necessary for an activity to constitute a âservice.â Because plaintiffs have not provided any specific articulation of the degree to which they seek to coordinate their advocacy with the PKK and the LTTE, however, they cannot prevail in their preenforcement challenge. See Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party, 552 U. S. 442, 454. Pp. 13â20.
(d) As applied to plaintiffs, the material-support statute does not violate the freedom of speech guaranteed by the First Amendment. Pp. 20â34.
(1) Both plaintiffs and the Government take extreme positions on this question. Plaintiffs claim that Congress has banned their pure political speech. That claim is unfounded because, under the material-support statute, they may say anything they wish on any topic. Section 2339B does not prohibit independent advocacy or membership in the PKK and LTTE. Rather, Congress has prohibited âmaterial support,â which most often does not take the form of speech. And when it does, the statute is carefully drawn to cover only a narrow category of speech to, under the direction of, or in coordination with foreign groups that the speaker knows to be terrorist organizations. On the other hand, the Government errs in arguing that the only thing actually at issue here is conduct, not speech, and that the correct standard of review is intermediate scrutiny, as set out in United States v. °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô, 391 U. S. 367, 377. That standard is not used to review a content-based regulation of speech, and §2339B regulates plaintiffsâ speech to the PKK and the LTTE on the basis of its content. Even if the material-support statute generally functions as a regulation of conduct, as applied to plaintiffs the conduct triggering coverage under the statute consists of communicating a message. Thus, the Court âmust [apply] a more demanding standardâ than the one described in °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô. Texas v. Johnson, 491 U. S. 397, 403. Pp. 20â23.
(2) The parties agree that the Governmentâs interest in combating terrorism is an urgent objective of the highest order, but plaintiffs argue that this objective does not justify prohibiting their speech, which they say will advance only the legitimate activities of the PKK and LTTE. Whether foreign terrorist organizations meaningfully segregate support of their legitimate activities from support of terrorism is an empirical question. Congress rejected plaintiffsâ position on that question when it enacted §2339B, finding that âforeign organizations that engage in terrorist activity are so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.â §301(a), 110 Stat. 1247, note following §2339B. The record confirms that Congress was justified in rejecting plaintiffsâ view. The PKK and the LTTE are deadly groups. It is not difficult to conclude, as Congress did, that the taint of their violent activities is so great that working in coordination with them or at their command legitimizes and furthers their terrorist means. Moreover, material support meant to promote peaceable, lawful conduct can be diverted to advance terrorism in multiple ways. The record shows that designated foreign terrorist organizations do not maintain organizational firewalls between social, political, and terrorist operations, or financial firewalls between funds raised for humanitarian activities and those used to carry out terrorist attacks. Providing material support in any form would also undermine cooperative international efforts to prevent terrorism and strain the United Statesâ relationships with its allies, including those that are defending themselves against violent insurgencies waged by foreign terrorist groups. Pp. 23â28.
(3) The Court does not rely exclusively on its own factual inferences drawn from the record evidence, but considers the Executive Branchâs stated view that the experience and analysis of Government agencies charged with combating terrorism strongly support Congressâs finding that all contributions to foreign terrorist organizationsâeven those for seemingly benign purposesâfurther those groupsâ terrorist activities. That evaluation of the facts, like Congressâs assessment, is entitled to deference, given the sensitive national security and foreign relations interests at stake. The Court does not defer to the Governmentâs reading of the First Amendment. But respect for the Governmentâs factual conclusions is appropriate in light of the courtsâ lack of expertise with respect to national security and foreign affairs, and the reality that efforts to confront terrorist threats occur in an area where information can be difficult to obtain, the impact of certain conduct can be difficult to assess, and conclusions must often be based on informed judgment rather than concrete evidence. The Court also finds it significant that Congress has been conscious of its own responsibility to consider how its actions may implicate constitutional concerns. Most importantly, Congress has avoided any restriction on independent advocacy, or indeed any activities not directed to, coordinated with, or controlled by foreign terrorist groups. Given the sensitive interests in national security and foreign affairs at stake, the political branches have adequately substantiated their determination that prohibiting material support in the form of training, expert advice, personnel, and services to foreign terrorist groups serves the Governmentâs interest in preventing terrorism, even if those providing the support mean to promote only the groupsâ nonviolent ends.
As to the particular speech plaintiffs propose to undertake, it is wholly foreseeable that directly training the PKK on how to use international law to resolve disputes would provide that group with information and techniques that it could use as part of a broader strategy to promote terrorism, and to threaten, manipulate, and disrupt. Teaching the PKK to petition international bodies for relief also could help the PKK obtain funding it would redirect to its violent activities. Plaintiffsâ proposals to engage in political advocacy on behalf of Kurds and Tamils, in turn, are phrased so generally that they cannot prevail in this preenforcement challenge. The Court does not decide whether any future applications of the material-support statute to speech or advocacy will survive First Amendment scrutiny. It simply holds that §2339B does not violate the freedom of speech as applied to the particular types of support these plaintiffs seek to provide. Pp. 28â34.
(e) Nor does the material-support statute violate plaintiffsâ First Amendment freedom of association. Plaintiffs argue that the statute criminalizes the mere fact of their associating with the PKK and the LTTE, and thereby runs afoul of this Courtâs precedents. The Ninth Circuit correctly rejected this claim because §2339B does not penalize mere association, but prohibits the act of giving foreign terrorist groups material support. Any burden on plaintiffsâ freedom of association caused by preventing them from supporting designated foreign terrorist organizations, but not other groups, is justified for the same reasons the Court rejects their free speech challenge. Pp. 34â35.
552 F. 3d 916, affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Roberts, C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Stevens, Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito, JJ., joined. Breyer, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Ginsburg and Sotomayor, JJ., joined.
Together with No. 09â89, Humanitarian Law Project et al. v. Holder, Attorney General, et al., also on certiorari to the same court.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
NOS. 08-1498 AND 09-89
ERIC H. HOLDER, Jr., ATTORNEY GENERAL, et al., PETITIONERS
08â1498v.
HUMANITARIAN LAW PROJECT et al.
HUMANITARIAN LAW PROJECT, et al., PETITIONERS
09â89v.
ERIC H. HOLDER, Jr., ATTORNEY GENERAL, et al.
on writs of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 21, 2010]
Chief Justice Roberts delivered the opinion of the Court.
Congress has prohibited the provision of âmaterial support or resourcesâ to certain foreign organizations that engage in terrorist activity. 18 U. S. C. §2339B(a)(1). That prohibition is based on a finding that the specified organizations âare so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.â Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), §301(a)(7), 110 Stat. 1247, note following 18 U. S. C. §2339B (Findings and Purpose). The plaintiffs in this litigation seek to provide support to two such organizations. Plaintiffs claim that they seek to facilitate only the lawful, nonviolent purposes of those groups, and that applying the material-support law to prevent them from doing so violates the Constitution. In particular, they claim that the statute is too vague, in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and that it infringes their rights to freedom of speech and association, in violation of the First Amendment. We conclude that the material-support statute is constitutional as applied to the particular activities plaintiffs have told us they wish to pursue. We do not, however, address the resolution of more difficult cases that may arise under the statute in the future.
I
This litigation concerns 18 U. S. C. §2339B, which makes it a federal crime to âknowingly provid[e] material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization.â[1] Congress has amended the definition of âmaterial support or resourcesâ periodically, but at present it is defined as follows:
â[T]he term âmaterial support or resourcesâ means any property, tangible or intangible, or service, including currency or monetary instruments or financial securities, financial services, lodging, training, expert advice or assistance, safehouses, false documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities, weapons, lethal substances, explosives, personnel (1 or more individuals who may be or include oneself), and transportation, except medicine or religious materials.â §2339A(b)(1); see also §2339B(g)(4).
The authority to designate an entity a âforeign terrorist organizationâ rests with the Secretary of State. 8 U. S. C. §§1189(a)(1), (d)(4). She may, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Attorney General, so designate an organization upon finding that it is foreign, engages in âterrorist activityâ or âterrorism,â and thereby âthreatens the security of United States nationals or the national security of the United States.â §§1189(a)(1), (d)(4). â â[N]ational securityâ means the national defense, foreign relations, or economic interests of the United States.â §1189(d)(2). An entity designated a foreign terrorist organization may seek review of that designation before the D. C. Circuit within 30 days of that designation. §1189(c)(1).
In 1997, the Secretary of State designated 30 groups as foreign terrorist organizations. See 62 Fed. Reg. 52650. Two of those groups are the Kurdistan Workersâ Party (also known as the Partiya Karkeran Kurdistan, or PKK) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The PKK is an organization founded in 1974 with the aim of establishing an independent Kurdish state in southeastern Turkey. Humanitarian Law Project v. Reno, 9 F. Supp. 2d 1176, 1180â1181 (CD Cal. 1998); Brief for Petitioners in No. 08â1498, p. 6 (hereinafter Brief for Government). The LTTE is an organization founded in 1976 for the purpose of creating an independent Tamil state in Sri Lanka. 9 F. Supp. 2d, at 1182; Brief for Government 6. The District Court in this action found that the PKK and the LTTE engage in political and humanitarian activities. See 9 F. Supp. 2d, at 1180â1182. The Government has presented evidence that both groups have also committed numerous terrorist attacks, some of which have harmed American citizens. See App. 128â133. The LTTE sought judicial review of its designation as a foreign terrorist organization; the D. C. Circuit upheld that designation. See Peopleâs Mojahedin Organization of Iran v. Dept. of State, 182 F. 3d 17, 18â19, 25 (1999). The PKK did not challenge its designation. 9 F. Supp. 2d, at 1180.
Plaintiffs in this litigation are two U. S. citizens and six domestic organizations: the Humanitarian Law Project (HLP) (a human rights organization with consultative status to the United Nations); Ralph Fertig (the HLPâs president, and a retired administrative law judge); Nagalingam Jeyalingam (a Tamil physician, born in Sri Lanka and a naturalized U. S. citizen); and five nonprofit groups dedicated to the interests of persons of Tamil descent. Brief for Petitioners in No. 09â89, pp. ii, 10 (hereinafter Brief for Plaintiffs); App. 48. In 1998, plaintiffs filed suit in federal court challenging the constitutionality of the material-support statute, §2339B. Plaintiffs claimed that they wished to provide support for the humanitarian and political activities of the PKK and the LTTE in the form of monetary contributions, other tangible aid, legal training, and political advocacy, but that they could not do so for fear of prosecution under §2339B. 9 F. Supp. 2d, at 1180â1184.[2]
As relevant here, plaintiffs claimed that the material-support statute was unconstitutional on two grounds: First, it violated their freedom of speech and freedom of association under the First Amendment, because it criminalized their provision of material support to the PKK and the LTTE, without requiring the Government to prove that plaintiffs had a specific intent to further the unlawful ends of those organizations. Id., at 1184. Second, plaintiffs argued that the statute was unconstitutionally vague. Id., at 1184â1185.
Plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction, which the District Court granted in part. The District Court held that plaintiffs had not established a probability of success on their First Amendment speech and association claims. See id., at 1196â1197. But the court held that plaintiffs had established a probability of success on their claim that, as applied to them, the statutory terms âpersonnelâ and âtrainingâ in the definition of âmaterial supportâ were impermissibly vague. See id., at 1204.
The Court of Appeals affirmed. 205 F. 3d 1130, 1138 (CA9 2000). The court rejected plaintiffsâ speech and association claims, including their claim that §2339B violated the First Amendment in barring them from contributing money to the PKK and the LTTE. See id., at 1133â1136. But the Court of Appeals agreed with the District Court that the terms âpersonnelâ and âtrainingâ were vague because it was âeasy to imagine protected expression that falls within the boundsâ of those terms. Id., at 1138; see id., at 1137.
With the preliminary injunction issue decided, the action returned to the District Court, and the parties moved for summary judgment on the merits. The District Court entered a permanent injunction against applying to plaintiffs the bans on âpersonnelâ and âtrainingâ support. See No. CVâ98â1971 ABC (BQRx), 2001 WL 36105333 (CD Cal., Oct. 2, 2001). The Court of Appeals affirmed. 352 F. 3d 382 (CA9 2003).
Meanwhile, in 2001, Congress amended the definition of âmaterial support or resourcesâ to add the term âexpert advice or assistance.â Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001 (Patriot Act), §805(a)(2)(B), 115 Stat. 377. In 2003, plaintiffs filed a second action challenging the constitutionality of that term as applied to them. 309 F. Supp. 2d 1185, 1192 (CD Cal. 2004).
In that action, the Government argued that plaintiffs lacked standing and that their pre-enforcement claims were not ripe. Id., at 1194. The District Court held that plaintiffsâ claims were justiciable because plaintiffs had sufficiently demonstrated a âgenuine threat of imminent prosecution,â id., at 1195 (internal quotation marks omitted), and because §2339B had the potential to chill plaintiffsâ protected expression, see id., at 1197â1198. On the merits, the District Court held that the term âexpert advice or assistanceâ was impermissibly vague. Id., at 1201. The District Court rejected, however, plaintiffsâ First Amendment claims that the new term was substantially overbroad and criminalized associational speech. See id., at 1202, 1203.
The parties cross-appealed. While the cross-appeals were pending, the Ninth Circuit granted en banc rehearing of the panelâs 2003 decision in plaintiffsâ first action (involving the terms âpersonnelâ and âtrainingâ). See 382 F. 3d 1154, 1155 (2004). The en banc court heard reargument on December 14, 2004. See 380 F. Supp. 2d 1134, 1138 (CD Cal. 2005). Three days later, Congress again amended §2339B and the definition of âmaterial support or resources.â Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (IRTPA), §6603, 118 Stat. 3762â3764.
In IRTPA, Congress clarified the mental state necessary to violate §2339B, requiring knowledge of the foreign groupâs designation as a terrorist organization or the groupâs commission of terrorist acts. §2339B(a)(1). Congress also added the term âserviceâ to the definition of âmaterial support or resources,â §2339A(b)(1), and defined âtrainingâ to mean âinstruction or teaching designed to impart a specific skill, as opposed to general knowledge,â §2339A(b)(2). It also defined âexpert advice or assistanceâ to mean âadvice or assistance derived from scientific, technical or other specialized knowledge.â §2339A(b)(3). Finally, IRTPA clarified the scope of the term âpersonnelâ by providing:
âNo person may be prosecuted under [§2339B] in connection with the term âpersonnelâ unless that person has knowingly provided, attempted to provide, or conspired to provide a foreign terrorist organization with 1 or more individuals (who may be or include himself) to work under that terrorist organizationâs direction or control or to organize, manage, supervise, or otherwise direct the operation of that organization. Individuals who act entirely independently of the foreign terrorist organization to advance its goals or objectives shall not be considered to be working under the foreign terrorist organizationâs direction and control.â §2339B(h).
Shortly after Congress enacted IRTPA, the en banc Court of Appeals issued an order in plaintiffsâ first action. 393 F. 3d 902, 903 (CA9 2004). The en banc court affirmed the rejection of plaintiffsâ First Amendment claims for the reasons set out in the Ninth Circuitâs panel decision in 2000. See ibid. In light of IRTPA, however, the en banc court vacated the panelâs 2003 judgment with respect to vagueness, and remanded to the District Court for further proceedings. Ibid. The Ninth Circuit panel assigned to the cross-appeals in plaintiffsâ second action (relating to âexpert advice or assistanceâ) also remanded in light of IRTPA. See 380 F. Supp. 2d, at 1139.
The District Court consolidated the two actions on remand. See ibid. The court also allowed plaintiffs to challenge the new term âservice.â See id., at 1151, n. 24. The parties moved for summary judgment, and the District Court granted partial relief to plaintiffs on vagueness grounds. See id., at 1156.
The Court of Appeals affirmed once more. 552 F. 3d 916, 933 (CA9 2009). The court first rejected plaintiffsâ claim that the material-support statute would violate due process unless it were read to require a specific intent to further the illegal ends of a foreign terrorist organization. See id., at 926â927. The Ninth Circuit also held that the statute was not overbroad in violation of the First Amendment. See id., at 931â932. As for vagueness, the Court of Appeals noted that plaintiffs had not raised a âfacial vagueness challenge.â Id., at 929, n. 6. The court held that, as applied to plaintiffs, the terms âtraining,â âexpert advice or assistanceâ (when derived from âother specialized knowledgeâ), and âserviceâ were vague because they âcontinue[d] to cover constitutionally protected advocacy,â but the term âpersonnelâ was not vague because it âno longer criminalize[d] pure speech protected by the First Amendment.â Id., at 929â931.
The Government petitioned for certiorari, and plaintiffs filed a conditional cross-petition. We granted both petitions. 557 U. S. ___ (2009).
II
Given the complicated 12-year history of this litigation, we pause to clarify the questions before us. Plaintiffs challenge §2339Bâs prohibition on four types of material supportââtraining,â âexpert advice or assistance,â âservice,â and âpersonnel.â They raise three constitutional claims. First, plaintiffs claim that §2339B violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment because these four statutory terms are impermissibly vague. Second, plaintiffs claim that §2339B violates their freedom of speech under the First Amendment. Third, plaintiffs claim that §2339B violates their First Amendment freedom of association.
Plaintiffs do not challenge the above statutory terms in all their applications. Rather, plaintiffs claim that §2339B is invalid to the extent it prohibits them from engaging in certain specified activities. See Brief for Plaintiffs 16â17, n. 10. With respect to the HLP and Judge Fertig, those activities are: (1) âtrain[ing] members of [the] PKK on how to use humanitarian and international law to peacefully resolve disputesâ; (2) âengag[ing] in political advocacy on behalf of Kurds who live in Turkeyâ; and (3) âteach[ing] PKK members how to petition various representative bodies such as the United Nations for relief.â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1; see 380 F. Supp. 2d, at 1136. With respect to the other plaintiffs, those activities are: (1) âtrain[ing] members of [the] LTTE to present claims for tsunami-related aid to mediators and international bodiesâ; (2) âoffer[ing] their legal expertise in negotiating peace agreements between the LTTE and the Sri Lankan governmentâ; and (3) âengag[ing] in political advocacy on behalf of Tamils who live in Sri Lanka.â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1; see 380 F. Supp. 2d, at 1137.
Plaintiffs also state that âthe LTTE was recently defeated militarily in Sri Lanka,â so â[m]uch of the support the Tamil organizations and Dr. Jeyalingam sought to provide is now moot.â Brief for Plaintiffs 11, n. 5. Plaintiffs thus seek only to support the LTTE âas a political organization outside Sri Lanka advocating for the rights of Tamils.â Ibid. Counsel for plaintiffs specifically stated at oral argument that plaintiffs no longer seek to teach the LTTE how to present claims for tsunami-related aid, because the LTTE now âhas no role in Sri Lanka.â Tr. of Oral Arg. 63. For that reason, helping the LTTE negotiate a peace agreement with Sri Lanka appears to be moot as well. Thus, we do not consider the application of §2339B to those activities here.
One last point. Plaintiffs seek pre-enforcement review of a criminal statute. Before addressing the merits, we must be sure that this is a justiciable case or controversy under Article III. We conclude that it is: Plaintiffs face âa credible threat of prosecutionâ and âshould not be required to await and undergo a criminal prosecution as the sole means of seeking relief.â Babbitt v. Farm Workers, 442 U. S. 289, 298 (1979) (internal quotation marks omitted). See also MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 549 U. S. 118, 128â129 (2007).
Plaintiffs claim that they provided support to the PKK and the LTTE before the enactment of §2339B and that they would provide similar support again if the statuteâs allegedly unconstitutional bar were lifted. See 309 F. Supp. 2d, at 1197. The Government tells us that it has charged about 150 persons with violating §2339B, and that several of those prosecutions involved the enforcement of the statutory terms at issue here. See Brief for Government 5. The Government has not argued to this Court that plaintiffs will not be prosecuted if they do what they say they wish to do. Cf. Tr. of Oral Arg. 57â58. See Babbitt, supra, at 302. See also Milavetz, Gallop & Milavetz, P. A. v. United States, 559 U. S. ___, ___, ___ (2010) (slip op., at 4, 19) (considering an as-applied pre-enforcement challenge brought under the First Amendment). Based on these considerations, we conclude that plaintiffsâ claims are suitable for judicial review (as one might hope after 12 years of litigation).
III
Plaintiffs claim, as a threshold matter, that we should affirm the Court of Appeals without reaching any issues of constitutional law. They contend that we should interpret the material-support statute, when applied to speech, to require proof that a defendant intended to further a foreign terrorist organizationâs illegal activities. That interpretation, they say, would end the litigation because plaintiffsâ proposed activities consist of speech, but plaintiffs do not intend to further unlawful conduct by the PKK or the LTTE.
We reject plaintiffsâ interpretation of §2339B because it is inconsistent with the text of the statute. Section 2339B(a)(1) prohibits âknowinglyâ providing material support. It then specifically describes the type of knowledge that is required: âTo violate this paragraph, a person must have knowledge that the organization is a designated terrorist organization . . ., that the organization has engaged or engages in terrorist activity âŚ, or that the organization has engaged or engages in terrorism⌠.â Ibid. Congress plainly spoke to the necessary mental state for a violation of §2339B, and it chose knowledge about the organizationâs connection to terrorism, not specific intent to further the organizationâs terrorist activities.
Plaintiffsâ interpretation is also untenable in light of the sections immediately surrounding §2339B, both of which do refer to intent to further terrorist activity. See §2339A(a) (establishing criminal penalties for one who âprovides material support or resources . . . knowing or intending that they are to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out, a violation ofâ statutes prohibiting violent terrorist acts); §2339C(a)(1) (setting criminal penalties for one who âunlawfully and willfully provides or collects funds with the intention that such funds be used, or with the knowledge that such funds are to be used, in full or in part, in order to carry outâ other unlawful acts). Congress enacted §2339A in 1994 and §2339C in 2002. See §120005(a), 108 Stat. 2022 (§2339A); §202(a), 116 Stat. 724 (§2339C). Yet Congress did not import the intent language of those provisions into §2339B, either when it enacted §2339B in 1996, or when it clarified §2339Bâs knowledge requirement in 2004.
Finally, plaintiffs give the game away when they argue that a specific intent requirement should apply only when the material-support statute applies to speech. There is no basis whatever in the text of §2339B to read the same provisions in that statute as requiring intent in some circumstances but not others. It is therefore clear that plaintiffs are asking us not to interpret §2339B, but to revise it. âAlthough this Court will often strain to construe legislation so as to save it against constitutional attack, it must not and will not carry this to the point of perverting the purpose of a statute.â Scales v. United States, 367 U. S. 203, 211 (1961).
Scales is the case on which plaintiffs most heavily rely, but it is readily distinguishable. That case involved the Smith Act, which prohibited membership in a group advocating the violent overthrow of the government. The Court held that a person could not be convicted under the statute unless he had knowledge of the groupâs illegal advocacy and a specific intent to bring about violent overthrow. Id., at 220â222, 229. This action is different: Section 2339B does not criminalize mere membership in a designated foreign terrorist organization. It instead prohibits providing âmaterial supportâ to such a group. See infra, at 20â21, 35. Nothing about Scales suggests the need for a specific intent requirement in such a case. The Court in Scales, moreover, relied on both statutory text and precedent that had interpreted closely related provisions of the Smith Act to require specific intent. 367 U. S., at 209, 221â222. Plaintiffs point to nothing similar here.
We cannot avoid the constitutional issues in this litigation through plaintiffsâ proposed interpretation of §2339B.[3]
IV
We turn to the question whether the material-support statute, as applied to plaintiffs, is impermissibly vague under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. âA conviction fails to comport with due process if the statute under which it is obtained fails to provide a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited, or is so standardless that it authorizes or encourages seriously discriminatory enforcement.â United States v. Williams, 553 U. S. 285, 304 (2008). We consider whether a statute is vague as applied to the particular facts at issue, for â[a] plaintiff who engages in some conduct that is clearly proscribed cannot complain of the vagueness of the law as applied to the conduct of others.â Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 455 U. S. 489, 495 (1982). We have said that when a statute âinterferes with the right of free speech or of association, a more stringent vagueness test should apply.â Id., at 499. âBut âperfect clarity and precise guidance have never been required even of regulations that restrict expressive activity.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;Williams, supra, at 304 (quoting Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U. S. 781, 794 (1989)).
The Court of Appeals did not adhere to these principles. Instead, the lower court merged plaintiffsâ vagueness challenge with their First Amendment claims, holding that portions of the material-support statute were unconstitutionally vague because they applied to protected speechâregardless of whether those applications were clear. The court stated that, even if persons of ordinary intelligence understood the scope of the term âtraining,â that term would âremai[n] impermissibly vagueâ because it could âbe read to encompass speech and advocacy protected by the First Amendment.â 552 F. 3d, at 929. It also found âserviceâ and a portion of âexpert advice or assistanceâ to be vague because those terms covered protected speech. Id., at 929â930.
Further, in spite of its own statement that it was not addressing a âfacial vagueness challenge,â id., at 929, n. 6, the Court of Appeals considered the statuteâs application to facts not before it. Specifically, the Ninth Circuit relied on the Governmentâs statement that §2339B would bar filing an amicus brief in support of a foreign terrorist organizationâwhich plaintiffs have not told us they wish to do, and which the Ninth Circuit did not say plaintiffs wished to doâto conclude that the statute barred protected advocacy and was therefore vague. See id., at 930. By deciding how the statute applied in hypothetical circumstances, the Court of Appealsâ discussion of vagueness seemed to incorporate elements of First Amendment overbreadth doctrine. See id., at 929â930 (finding it âeasy to imagineâ protected expression that would be barred by §2339B (internal quotation marks omitted)); id., at 930 (referring to both vagueness and overbreadth).
In both of these respects, the Court of Appeals contravened the rule that â[a] plaintiff who engages in some conduct that is clearly proscribed cannot complain of the vagueness of the law as applied to the conduct of others.â Hoffman Estates, supra, at 495. That rule makes no exception for conduct in the form of speech. See Parker v. Levy, 417 U. S. 733, 755â757 (1974). Thus, even to the extent a heightened vagueness standard applies, a plaintiff whose speech is clearly proscribed cannot raise a successful vagueness claim under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment for lack of notice. And he certainly cannot do so based on the speech of others. Such a plaintiff may have a valid overbreadth claim under the First Amendment, but our precedents make clear that a Fifth Amendment vagueness challenge does not turn on whether a law applies to a substantial amount of protected expression. See Williams, supra, at 304; Hoffman Estates, supra, at 494â495, 497. Otherwise the doctrines would be substantially redundant.
Under a proper analysis, plaintiffsâ claims of vagueness lack merit. Plaintiffs do not argue that the material-support statute grants too much enforcement discretion to the Government. We therefore address only whether the statute âprovide[s] a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited.â Williams, 553 U. S., at 304.
As a general matter, the statutory terms at issue here are quite different from the sorts of terms that we have previously declared to be vague. We have in the past âstruck down statutes that tied criminal culpability to whether the defendantâs conduct was âannoyingâ or âindecentââwholly subjective judgments without statutory definitions, narrowing context, or settled legal meanings.â Id., at 306; see also Papachristou v. Jacksonville, 405 U. S. 156, n. 1 (1972) (holding vague an ordinance that punished âvagrants,â defined to include ârogues and vagabonds,â âpersons who use juggling,â and âcommon night walkersâ (internal quotation marks omitted)). Applying the statutory terms in this actionââtraining,â âexpert advice or assistance,â âservice,â and âpersonnelââdoes not require similarly untethered, subjective judgments.
Congress also took care to add narrowing definitions to the material-support statute over time. These definitions increased the clarity of the statuteâs terms. See §2339A(b)(2) (â âtrainingâ means instruction or teaching designed to impart a specific skill, as opposed to general knowledgeâ); §2339A(b)(3) (â âexpert advice or assistanceâ means advice or assistance derived from scientific, technical or other specialized knowledgeâ); §2339B(h) (clarifying the scope of âpersonnelâ). And the knowledge requirement of the statute further reduces any potential for vagueness, as we have held with respect to other statutes containing a similar requirement. See Hill v. Colorado, 530 U. S. 703, 732 (2000); Posters âNâ Things, Ltd. v. United States, 511 U. S. 513, 523, 526 (1994); see also Hoffman Estates, 455 U. S., at 499.
Of course, the scope of the material-support statute may not be clear in every application. But the dispositive point here is that the statutory terms are clear in their application to plaintiffsâ proposed conduct, which means that plaintiffsâ vagueness challenge must fail. Even assuming that a heightened standard applies because the material-support statute potentially implicates speech, the statutory terms are not vague as applied to plaintiffs. See Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U. S. 104, 114â115 (1972) (rejecting a vagueness challenge to a criminal law that implicated First Amendment activities); Scales, 367 U. S., at 223 (same).
Most of the activities in which plaintiffs seek to engage readily fall within the scope of the terms âtrainingâ and âexpert advice or assistance.â Plaintiffs want to âtrain members of [the] PKK on how to use humanitarian and international law to peacefully resolve disputes,â and âteach PKK members how to petition various representative bodies such as the United Nations for relief.â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1. A person of ordinary intelligence would understand that instruction on resolving disputes through international law falls within the statuteâs definition of âtrainingâ because it imparts a âspecific skill,â not âgeneral knowledge.â §2339A(b)(2). Plaintiffsâ activities also fall comfortably within the scope of âexpert advice or assistanceâ: A reasonable person would recognize that teaching the PKK how to petition for humanitarian relief before the United Nations involves advice derived from, as the statute puts it, âspecialized knowledge.â §2339A(b)(3). In fact, plaintiffs themselves have repeatedly used the terms âtrainingâ and âexpert adviceâ throughout this litigation to describe their own proposed activities, demonstrating that these common terms readily and naturally cover plaintiffsâ conduct. See, e.g., Brief for Plaintiffs 10, 11; App. 56, 58, 59, 61, 62, 63, 80, 81, 98, 99, 106, 107, 117.
Plaintiffs respond by pointing to hypothetical situations designed to test the limits of âtrainingâ and âexpert advice or assistance.â They argue that the statutory definitions of these terms use words of degreeâlike âspecific,â âgeneral,â and âspecializedââand that it is difficult to apply those definitions in particular cases. See Brief for Plaintiffs 27 (debating whether teaching a course on geography would constitute training); id., at 29. And they cite Gentile v. State Bar of Nev., 501 U. S. 1030 (1991), in which we found vague a state bar rule providing that a lawyer in a criminal case, when speaking to the press, âmay state without elaboration . . . the general nature of the . . . defense.â Id., at 1048 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Whatever force these arguments might have in the abstract, they are beside the point here. Plaintiffs do not propose to teach a course on geography, and cannot seek refuge in imaginary cases that straddle the boundary between âspecific skillsâ and âgeneral knowledge.â See Parker v. Levy, 417 U. S., at 756. We emphasized this point in Scales, holding that even if there might be theoretical doubts regarding the distinction between âactiveâ and ânominalâ membership in an organizationâalso terms of degreeâthe defendantâs vagueness challenge failed because his âcase present[ed] no such problem.â 367 U. S., at 223.
Gentile was different. There the asserted vagueness in a state bar rule was directly implicated by the facts before the Court: Counsel had reason to suppose that his particular statements to the press would not violate the rule, yet he was disciplined nonetheless. See 501 U. S., at 1049â1051. We did not suggest that counsel could escape discipline on vagueness grounds if his own speech were plainly prohibited.
Plaintiffs also contend that they want to engage in âpolitical advocacyâ on behalf of Kurds living in Turkey and Tamils living in Sri Lanka. 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1. They are concerned that such advocacy might be regarded as âmaterial supportâ in the form of providing âpersonnelâ or âservice[s],â and assert that the statute is unconstitutionally vague because they cannot tell.
As for âpersonnel,â Congress enacted a limiting definition in IRTPA that answers plaintiffsâ vagueness concerns. Providing material support that constitutes âpersonnelâ is defined as knowingly providing a person âto work under that terrorist organizationâs direction or control or to organize, manage, supervise, or otherwise direct the operation of that organization.â §2339B(h). The statute makes clear that âpersonnelâ does not cover independent advocacy: âIndividuals who act entirely independently of the foreign terrorist organization to advance its goals or objectives shall not be considered to be working under the foreign terrorist organizationâs direction and control.â Ibid.
â[S]erviceâ similarly refers to concerted activity, not independent advocacy. See Websterâs Third New International Dictionary 2075 (1993) (defining âserviceâ to mean âthe performance of work commanded or paid for by another: a servantâs duty: attendance on a superiorâ; or âan act done for the benefit or at the command of anotherâ). Context confirms that ordinary meaning here. The statute prohibits providing a service âto a foreign terrorist organization.â §2339B(a)(1) (emphasis added). The use of the word âtoâ indicates a connection between the service and the foreign group. We think a person of ordinary intelligence would understand that independently advocating for a cause is different from providing a service to a group that is advocating for that cause.
Moreover, if independent activity in support of a terrorist group could be characterized as a âservice,â the statuteâs specific exclusion of independent activity in the definition of âpersonnelâ would not make sense. Congress would not have prohibited under âserviceâ what it specifically exempted from prohibition under âpersonnel.â The other types of material support listed in the statute, including âlodging,â âweapons,â âexplosives,â and âtransportation,â §2339A(b)(1), are not forms of support that could be provided independently of a foreign terrorist organization. We interpret âserviceâ along the same lines. Thus, any independent advocacy in which plaintiffs wish to engage is not prohibited by §2339B. On the other hand, a person of ordinary intelligence would understand the term âserviceâ to cover advocacy performed in coordination with, or at the direction of, a foreign terrorist organization.
Plaintiffs argue that this construction of the statute poses difficult questions of exactly how much direction or coordination is necessary for an activity to constitute a âservice.â See Reply Brief for Petitioners in No. 09â89, p. 14 (hereinafter Reply Brief for Plaintiffs) (âWould any communication with any member be sufficient? With a leader? Must the ârelationshipâ have any formal elements, such as an employment or contractual relationship? What about a relationship through an intermediary?â). The problem with these questions is that they are entirely hypothetical. Plaintiffs have not provided any specific articulation of the degree to which they seek to coordinate their advocacy with the PKK and the LTTE. They have instead described the form of their intended advocacy only in the most general terms. See, e.g., Brief for Plaintiffs 10â11 (plaintiffs âwould like, among other things, to offer their services to advocate on behalf of the rights of the Kurdish people and the PKK before the United Nations and the United States Congressâ (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted)); App. 59 (plaintiffs would like to âwrite and distribute publications supportive of the PKK and the cause of Kurdish liberationâ and âadvocate for the freedom of political prisoners in Turkeyâ).
Deciding whether activities described at such a level of generality would constitute prohibited âservice[s]â under the statute would require âsheer speculationââwhich means that plaintiffs cannot prevail in their preenforcement challenge. See Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party, 552 U. S. 442, 454 (2008). It is apparent with respect to these claims that âgradations of fact or charge would make a difference as to criminal liability,â and so âadjudication of the reach and constitutionality of [the statute] must await a concrete fact situation.â Zemel v. Rusk, 381 U. S. 1, 20 (1965).
V
A
We next consider whether the material-support statute, as applied to plaintiffs, violates the freedom of speech guaranteed by the First Amendment. Both plaintiffs and the Government take extreme positions on this question. Plaintiffs claim that Congress has banned their âpure political speech.â E.g., Brief for Plaintiffs 2, 25, 43. It has not. Under the material-support statute, plaintiffs may say anything they wish on any topic. They may speak and write freely about the PKK and LTTE, the governments of Turkey and Sri Lanka, human rights, and international law. They may advocate before the United Nations. As the Government states: âThe statute does not prohibit independent advocacy or expression of any kind.â Brief for Government 13. Section 2339B also âdoes not prevent [plaintiffs] from becoming members of the PKK and LTTE or impose any sanction on them for doing so.â Id., at 60. Congress has not, therefore, sought to suppress ideas or opinions in the form of âpure political speech.â Rather, Congress has prohibited âmaterial support,â which most often does not take the form of speech at all. And when it does, the statute is carefully drawn to cover only a narrow category of speech to, under the direction of, or in coordination with foreign groups that the speaker knows to be terrorist organizations.[4]
For its part, the Government takes the foregoing too far, claiming that the only thing truly at issue in this litigation is conduct, not speech. Section 2339B is directed at the fact of plaintiffsâ interaction with the PKK and LTTE, the Government contends, and only incidentally burdens their expression. The Government argues that the proper standard of review is therefore the one set out in United States v. °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô, 391 U. S. 367 (1968). In that case, the Court rejected a First Amendment challenge to a conviction under a generally applicable prohibition on destroying draft cards, even though °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô had burned his card in protest against the draft. See id., at 370, 376, 382. In so doing, we applied what we have since called âintermediate scrutiny,â under which a âcontent-neutral regulation will be sustained under the First Amendment if it advances important governmental interests unrelated to the suppression of free speech and does not burden substantially more speech than necessary to further those interests.â Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 520 U. S. 180, 189 (1997) (citing °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô, supra, at 377).
The Government is wrong that the only thing actually at issue in this litigation is conduct, and therefore wrong to argue that °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô provides the correct standard of review.[5] °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô does not provide the applicable standard for reviewing a content-based regulation of speech, see R. A. V. v. St. Paul, 505 U. S. 377, 385â386 (1992); Texas v. Johnson, 491 U. S. 397, 403, 406â407 (1989), and §2339B regulates speech on the basis of its content. Plaintiffs want to speak to the PKK and the LTTE, and whether they may do so under §2339B depends on what they say. If plaintiffsâ speech to those groups imparts a âspecific skillâ or communicates advice derived from âspecialized knowledgeââfor example, training on the use of international law or advice on petitioning the United Nationsâthen it is barred. See Brief for Government 33â34. On the other hand, plaintiffsâ speech is not barred if it imparts only general or unspecialized knowledge. See id., at 32.
The Government argues that §2339B should nonetheless receive intermediate scrutiny because it generally functions as a regulation of conduct. That argument runs headlong into a number of our precedents, most prominently Cohen v. California, 403 U. S. 15 (1971). Cohen also involved a generally applicable regulation of conduct, barring breaches of the peace. See id., at 16. But when Cohen was convicted for wearing a jacket bearing an epithet, we did not apply °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô. See 403 U. S., at 16, 18. Instead, we recognized that the generally applicable law was directed at Cohen because of what his speech communicatedâhe violated the breach of the peace statute because of the offensive content of his particular message. We accordingly applied more rigorous scrutiny and reversed his conviction. See id., at 18â19, 26.
This suit falls into the same category. The law here may be described as directed at conduct, as the law in Cohen was directed at breaches of the peace, but as applied to plaintiffs the conduct triggering coverage under the statute consists of communicating a message. As we explained in Texas v. Johnson: âIf the [Governmentâs] regulation is not related to expression, then the less stringent standard we announced in United States v. °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ô for regulations of noncommunicative conduct controls. If it is, then we are outside of °żâB°ůžąąđ˛Ôâs test, and we must [apply] a more demanding standard.â 491 U. S., at 403 (citation omitted).
B
The First Amendment issue before us is more refined than either plaintiffs or the Government would have it. It is not whether the Government may prohibit pure political speech, or may prohibit material support in the form of conduct. It is instead whether the Government may prohibit what plaintiffs want to doâprovide material support to the PKK and LTTE in the form of speech.
Everyone agrees that the Governmentâs interest in combating terrorism is an urgent objective of the highest order. See Brief for Plaintiffs 51. Plaintiffsâ complaint is that the ban on material support, applied to what they wish to do, is not ânecessary to further that interest.â Ibid. The objective of combating terrorism does not justify prohibiting their speech, plaintiffs argue, because their support will advance only the legitimate activities of the designated terrorist organizations, not their terrorism. Id., at 51â52.
Whether foreign terrorist organizations meaningfully segregate support of their legitimate activities from support of terrorism is an empirical question. When it enacted §2339B in 1996, Congress made specific findings regarding the serious threat posed by international terrorism. See AEDPA §§301(a)(1)â(7), 110 Stat. 1247, note following 18 U. S. C. §2339B (Findings and Purpose). One of those findings explicitly rejects plaintiffsâ contention that their support would not further the terrorist activities of the PKK and LTTE: â[F]oreign organizations that engage in terrorist activity are so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.â §301(a)(7) (emphasis added).
Plaintiffs argue that the reference to âany contributionâ in this finding meant only monetary support. There is no reason to read the finding to be so limited, particularly because Congress expressly prohibited so much more than monetary support in §2339B. Congressâs use of the term âcontributionâ is best read to reflect a determination that any form of material support furnished âtoâ a foreign terrorist organization should be barred, which is precisely what the material-support statute does. Indeed, when Congress enacted §2339B, Congress simultaneously removed an exception that had existed in §2339A(a) (1994 ed.) for the provision of material support in the form of âhumanitarian assistance to persons not directly involved inâ terrorist activity. AEDPA §323, 110 Stat. 1255; 205 F. 3d, at 1136. That repeal demonstrates that Congress considered and rejected the view that ostensibly peaceful aid would have no harmful effects.
We are convinced that Congress was justified in rejecting that view. The PKK and the LTTE are deadly groups. âThe PKKâs insurgency has claimed more than 22,000 lives.â Declaration of Kenneth R. McKune, App. 128, Âś5. The LTTE has engaged in extensive suicide bombings and political assassinations, including killings of the Sri Lankan President, Security Minister, and Deputy Defense Minister. Id., at 130â132; Brief for Government 6â7. âOn January 31, 1996, the LTTE exploded a truck bomb filled with an estimated 1,000 pounds of explosives at the Central Bank in Colombo, killing 100 people and injuring more than 1,400. This bombing was the most deadly terrorist incident in the world in 1996.â McKune Affidavit, App. 131, Âś6.h. It is not difficult to conclude as Congress did that the âtain[t]â of such violent activities is so great that working in coordination with or at the command of the PKK and LTTE serves to legitimize and further their terrorist means. AEDPA §301(a)(7), 110 Stat. 1247.
Material support meant to âpromot[e] peaceable, lawful conduct,â Brief for Plaintiffs 51, can further terrorism by foreign groups in multiple ways. âMaterial supportâ is a valuable resource by definition. Such support frees up other resources within the organization that may be put to violent ends. It also importantly helps lend legitimacy to foreign terrorist groupsâlegitimacy that makes it easier for those groups to persist, to recruit members, and to raise fundsâall of which facilitate more terrorist attacks. âTerrorist organizations do not maintain organizational âfirewallsâ that would prevent or deter . . . sharing and commingling of support and benefits.â McKune Affidavit, App. 135, Âś11. â[I]nvestigators have revealed how terrorist groups systematically conceal their activities behind charitable, social, and political fronts.â M. Levitt, Hamas: Politics, Charity, and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad 2â3 (2006). âIndeed, some designated foreign terrorist organizations use social and political components to recruit personnel to carry out terrorist operations, and to provide support to criminal terrorists and their families in aid of such operations.â McKune Affidavit, App. 135, Âś11; Levitt, supra, at 2 (âMuddying the waters between its political activism, good works, and terrorist attacks, Hamas is able to use its overt political and charitable organizations as a financial and logistical support network for its terrorist operationsâ).
Money is fungible, and â[w]hen foreign terrorist organizations that have a dual structure raise funds, they highlight the civilian and humanitarian ends to which such moneys could be put.â McKune Affidavit, App. 134, Âś9. But âthere is reason to believe that foreign terrorist organizations do not maintain legitimate financial firewalls between those funds raised for civil, nonviolent activities, and those ultimately used to support violent, terrorist operations.â Id., at 135, Âś12. Thus, â[f]unds raised ostensibly for charitable purposes have in the past been redirected by some terrorist groups to fund the purchase of arms and explosives.â Id., at 134, Âś10. See also Brief for Anti-Defamation League as Amicus Curiae 19â29 (describing fundraising activities by the PKK, LTTE, and Hamas); Regan v. Wald, 468 U. S. 222, 243 (1984) (upholding Presidentâs decision to impose travel ban to Cuba âto curtail the flow of hard currency to Cubaâcurrency that could then be used in support of Cuban adventurismâ). There is evidence that the PKK and the LTTE, in particular, have not ârespected the line between humanitarian and violent activities.â McKune Affidavit, App. 135, Âś13 (discussing PKK); see id., at 134 (LTTE).
The dissent argues that there is âno natural stopping placeâ for the proposition that aiding a foreign terrorist organizationâs lawful activity promotes the terrorist organization as a whole. Post, at 10. But Congress has settled on just such a natural stopping place: The statute reaches only material support coordinated with or under the direction of a designated foreign terrorist organization. Independent advocacy that might be viewed as promoting the groupâs legitimacy is not covered. See supra, at 18â21.[6]
Providing foreign terrorist groups with material support in any form also furthers terrorism by straining the United Statesâ relationships with its allies and undermining cooperative efforts between nations to prevent terrorist attacks. We see no reason to question Congressâs finding that âinternational cooperation is required for an effective response to terrorism, as demonstrated by the numerous multilateral conventions in force providing universal prosecutive jurisdiction over persons involved in a variety of terrorist acts, including hostage taking, murder of an internationally protected person, and aircraft piracy and sabotage.â AEDPA §301(a)(5), 110 Stat. 1247, note following 18 U. S. C. §2339B (Findings and Purpose). The material-support statute furthers this international effort by prohibiting aid for foreign terrorist groups that harm the United Statesâ partners abroad: âA number of designated foreign terrorist organizations have attacked moderate governments with which the United States has vigorously endeavored to maintain close and friendly relations,â and those attacks âthreaten [the] social, economic and political stabilityâ of such governments. McKune Affidavit, App. 137, Âś16. â[O]ther foreign terrorist organizations attack our NATO allies, thereby implicating important and sensitive multilateral security arrangements.â Ibid.
For example, the Republic of Turkeyâa fellow member of NATOâis defending itself against a violent insurgency waged by the PKK. Brief for Government 6; App. 128. That nation and our other allies would react sharply to Americans furnishing material support to foreign groups like the PKK, and would hardly be mollified by the explanation that the support was meant only to further those groupsâ âlegitimateâ activities. From Turkeyâs perspective, there likely are no such activities. See 352 F. 3d, at 389 (observing that Turkey prohibits membership in the PKK and prosecutes those who provide support to that group, regardless of whether the support is directed to lawful activities).
C
In analyzing whether it is possible in practice to distinguish material support for a foreign terrorist groupâs violent activities and its nonviolent activities, we do not rely exclusively on our own inferences drawn from the record evidence. We have before us an affidavit stating the Executive Branchâs conclusion on that question. The State Department informs us that â[t]he experience and analysis of the U. S. government agencies charged with combating terrorism strongly suppor[t]â Congressâs finding that all contributions to foreign terrorist organizations further their terrorism. McKune Affidavit, App. 133, Âś8. See Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 555 U. S. ___, ___ (2008) (slip op., at 14â15) (looking to similar affidavits to support according weight to national security claims). In the Executiveâs view: âGiven the purposes, organizational structure, and clandestine nature of foreign terrorist organizations, it is highly likely that any material support to these organizations will ultimately inure to the benefit of their criminal, terrorist functionsâregardless of whether such support was ostensibly intended to support non-violent, non-terrorist activities.â McKune Affidavit, App. 133, Âś8.
That evaluation of the facts by the Executive, like Congressâs assessment, is entitled to deference. This litigation implicates sensitive and weighty interests of national security and foreign affairs. The PKK and the LTTE have committed terrorist acts against American citizens abroad, and the material-support statute addresses acute foreign policy concerns involving relationships with our Nationâs allies. See id., at 128â133, 137. We have noted that âneither the Members of this Court nor most federal judges begin the day with briefings that may describe new and serious threats to our Nation and its people.â Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U. S. 723, 797 (2008). It is vital in this context ânot to substitute . . . our own evaluation of evidence for a reasonable evaluation by the Legislative Branch.â Rostker v. Goldberg, 453 U. S. 57, 68 (1981). See Wald, 468 U. S., at 242; Haig v. Agee, 453 U. S. 280, 292 (1981).
Our precedents, old and new, make clear that concerns of national security and foreign relations do not warrant abdication of the judicial role. We do not defer to the Governmentâs reading of the First Amendment, even when such interests are at stake. We are one with the dissent that the Governmentâs âauthority and expertise in these matters do not automatically trump the Courtâs own obligation to secure the protection that the Constitution grants to individuals.â Post, at 23. But when it comes to collecting evidence and drawing factual inferences in this area, âthe lack of competence on the part of the courts is marked,â Rostker, supra, at 65, and respect for the Governmentâs conclusions is appropriate.
One reason for that respect is that national security and foreign policy concerns arise in connection with efforts to confront evolving threats in an area where information can be difficult to obtain and the impact of certain conduct difficult to assess. The dissent slights these real constraints in demanding hard proofâwith âdetail,â âspecific facts,â and âspecific evidenceââthat plaintiffsâ proposed activities will support terrorist attacks. See post, at 9, 16, 23. That would be a dangerous requirement. In this context, conclusions must often be based on informed judgment rather than concrete evidence, and that reality affects what we may reasonably insist on from the Government. The material-support statute is, on its face, a preventive measureâit criminalizes not terrorist attacks themselves, but aid that makes the attacks more likely to occur. The Government, when seeking to prevent imminent harms in the context of international affairs and national security, is not required to conclusively link all the pieces in the puzzle before we grant weight to its empirical conclusions. See Zemel v. Rusk, 381 U. S., at 17 (â[B]ecause of the changeable and explosive nature of contemporary international relations, . . . Congress . . . must of necessity paint with a brush broader than that it customarily wields in domestic areasâ).
This context is different from that in decisions like Cohen. In that case, the application of the statute turned on the offensiveness of the speech at issue. Observing that âone manâs vulgarity is anotherâs lyric,â we invalidated Cohenâs conviction in part because we concluded that âgovernmental officials cannot make principled distinctions in this area.â 403 U. S., at 25. In this litigation, by contrast, Congress and the Executive are uniquely positioned to make principled distinctions between activities that will further terrorist conduct and undermine United States foreign policy, and those that will not.
We also find it significant that Congress has been conscious of its own responsibility to consider how its actions may implicate constitutional concerns. First, §2339B only applies to designated foreign terrorist organizations. There is, and always has been, a limited number of those organizations designated by the Executive Branch, see, e.g., 74 Fed. Reg. 29742 (2009); 62 Fed. Reg. 52650 (1997), and any groups so designated may seek judicial review of the designation. Second, in response to the lower courtsâ holdings in this litigation, Congress added clarity to the statute by providing narrowing definitions of the terms âtraining,â âpersonnel,â and âexpert advice or assistance,â as well as an explanation of the knowledge required to violate §2339B. Third, in effectuating its stated intent not to abridge First Amendment rights, see §2339B(i), Congress has also displayed a careful balancing of interests in creating limited exceptions to the ban on material support. The definition of material support, for example, excludes medicine and religious materials. See §2339A(b)(1). In this area perhaps more than any other, the Legislatureâs superior capacity for weighing competing interests means that âwe must be particularly careful not to substitute our judgment of what is desirable for that of Congress.â Rostker, supra, at 68. Finally, and most importantly, Congress has avoided any restriction on independent advocacy, or indeed any activities not directed to, coordinated with, or controlled by foreign terrorist groups.
At bottom, plaintiffs simply disagree with the considered judgment of Congress and the Executive that providing material support to a designated foreign terrorist organizationâeven seemingly benign supportâbolsters the terrorist activities of that organization. That judgment, however, is entitled to significant weight, and we have persuasive evidence before us to sustain it. Given the sensitive interests in national security and foreign affairs at stake, the political branches have adequately substantiated their determination that, to serve the Governmentâs interest in preventing terrorism, it was necessary to prohibit providing material support in the form of training, expert advice, personnel, and services to foreign terrorist groups, even if the supporters meant to promote only the groupsâ nonviolent ends.
We turn to the particular speech plaintiffs propose to undertake. First, plaintiffs propose to âtrain members of [the] PKK on how to use humanitarian and international law to peacefully resolve disputes.â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1. Congress can, consistent with the First Amendment, prohibit this direct training. It is wholly foreseeable that the PKK could use the âspecific skill[s]â that plaintiffs propose to impart, §2339A(b)(2), as part of a broader strategy to promote terrorism. The PKK could, for example, pursue peaceful negotiation as a means of buying time to recover from short-term setbacks, lulling opponents into complacency, and ultimately preparing for renewed attacks. See generally A. Marcus, Blood and Belief: The PKK and the Kurdish Fight for Independence 286â295 (2007) (describing the PKKâs suspension of armed struggle and subsequent return to violence). A foreign terrorist organization introduced to the structures of the international legal system might use the information to threaten, manipulate, and disrupt. This possibility is real, not remote.
Second, plaintiffs propose to âteach PKK members how to petition various representative bodies such as the United Nations for relief.â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1. The Government acts within First Amendment strictures in banning this proposed speech because it teaches the organization how to acquire ârelief,â which plaintiffs never define with any specificity, and which could readily include monetary aid. See Brief for Plaintiffs 10â11, 16â17, n. 10; App. 58â59, 80â81. Indeed, earlier in this litigation, plaintiffs sought to teach the LTTE âto present claims for tsunami-related aid to mediators and international bodies,â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1, which naturally included monetary relief. Money is fungible, supra, at 26, and Congress logically concluded that money a terrorist group such as the PKK obtains using the techniques plaintiffs propose to teach could be redirected to funding the groupâs violent activities.
Finally, plaintiffs propose to âengage in political advocacy on behalf of Kurds who live in Turkey,â and âengage in political advocacy on behalf of Tamils who live in Sri Lanka.â 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1. As explained above, supra, at 19â20, plaintiffs do not specify their expected level of coordination with the PKK or LTTE or suggest what exactly their âadvocacyâ would consist of. Plaintiffsâ proposals are phrased at such a high level of generality that they cannot prevail in this preenforcement challenge. See supra, at 20; Grange, 552 U. S., at 454; Zemel, 381 U. S., at 20.
In responding to the foregoing, the dissent fails to address the real dangers at stake. It instead considers only the possible benefits of plaintiffsâ proposed activities in the abstract. See post, at 13â15. The dissent seems unwilling to entertain the prospect that training and advising a designated foreign terrorist organization on how to take advantage of international entities might benefit that organization in a way that facilitates its terrorist activities. In the dissentâs world, such training is all to the good. Congress and the Executive, however, have concluded that we live in a different world: one in which the designated foreign terrorist organizations âare so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.â AEDPA §301(a)(7). One in which, for example, âthe United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees was forced to close a Kurdish refugee camp in northern Iraq because the camp had come under the control of the PKK, and the PKK had failed to respect its âneutral and humanitarian nature.â â McKune Affidavit, App. 135â136, Âś13. Training and advice on how to work with the United Nations could readily have helped the PKK in its efforts to use the United Nations camp as a base for terrorist activities.
If only good can come from training our adversaries in international dispute resolution, presumably it would have been unconstitutional to prevent American citizens from training the Japanese Government on using international organizations and mechanisms to resolve disputes during World War II. It would, under the dissentâs reasoning, have been contrary to our commitment to resolving disputes through â âdeliberative forces,â â post, at 13 (quoting Whitney v. California, 274 U. S. 357, 375 (1927) (Brandeis, J., concurring)), for Congress to conclude that assisting Japan on that front might facilitate its war effort more generally. That view is not one the First Amendment requires us to embrace.
All this is not to say that any future applications of the material-support statute to speech or advocacy will survive First Amendment scrutiny. It is also not to say that any other statute relating to speech and terrorism would satisfy the First Amendment. In particular, we in no way suggest that a regulation of independent speech would pass constitutional muster, even if the Government were to show that such speech benefits foreign terrorist organizations. We also do not suggest that Congress could extend the same prohibition on material support at issue here to domestic organizations. We simply hold that, in prohibiting the particular forms of support that plaintiffs seek to provide to foreign terrorist groups, §2339B does not violate the freedom of speech.
VI
Plaintiffsâ final claim is that the material-support statute violates their freedom of association under the First Amendment. Plaintiffs argue that the statute criminalizes the mere fact of their associating with the PKK and the LTTE, thereby running afoul of decisions like De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U. S. 353 (1937), and cases in which we have overturned sanctions for joining the Communist Party, see, e.g., Keyishian v. Board of Regents of Univ. of State of N. Y., 385 U. S. 589 (1967); United States v. Robel, 389 U. S. 258 (1967).
The Court of Appeals correctly rejected this claim because the statute does not penalize mere association with a foreign terrorist organization. As the Ninth Circuit put it: âThe statute does not prohibit being a member of one of the designated groups or vigorously promoting and supporting the political goals of the group. . . . What [§2339B] prohibits is the act of giving material support . . . .â 205 F. 3d, at 1133. Plaintiffs want to do the latter. Our decisions scrutinizing penalties on simple association or assembly are therefore inapposite. See, e.g., Robel, supra, at 262 (âIt is precisely because th[e] statute sweeps indiscriminately across all types of association with Communist-action groups, without regard to the quality and degree of membership, that it runs afoul of the First Amendmentâ); De Jonge, supra, at 362.
Plaintiffs also argue that the material-support statute burdens their freedom of association because it prevents them from providing support to designated foreign terrorist organizations, but not to other groups. See Brief for Plaintiffs 56; Reply Brief for Plaintiffs 37â38. Any burden on plaintiffsâ freedom of association in this regard is justified for the same reasons that we have denied plaintiffsâ free speech challenge. It would be strange if the Constitution permitted Congress to prohibit certain forms of speech that constitute material support, but did not permit Congress to prohibit that support only to particularly dangerous and lawless foreign organizations. Congress is not required to ban material support to every group or none at all.
*ââśÄ*ââśÄ*
The Preamble to the Constitution proclaims that the people of the United States ordained and established that charter of government in part to âprovide for the common defence.â As Madison explained, â[s]ecurity against foreign danger is . . . an avowed and essential object of the American Union.â The Federalist No. 41, p. 269 (J. Cooke ed. 1961). We hold that, in regulating the particular forms of support that plaintiffs seek to provide to foreign terrorist organizations, Congress has pursued that objective consistent with the limitations of the First and Fifth Amendments.
The judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[1] In full, 18 U. S. C. §2339B(a)(1) provides: âUnlawful conduct.âWhoever knowingly provides material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization, or attempts or conspires to do so, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 15 years, or both, and, if the death of any person results, shall be imprisoned for any term of years or for life. To violate this paragraph, a person must have knowledge that the organization is a designated terrorist organization . . ., that the organization has engaged or engages in terrorist activity . . ., or that the organization has engaged or engages in terrorism . . . .â The terms âterrorist activityâ and âterrorismâ are defined in 8 U. S. C. §1182(a)(3)(B)(iii), and 22 U. S. C. §2656f(d)(2), respectively.
[2] At the time plaintiffs first filed suit, 18 U. S. C. §2339B(a) (2000 ed.) provided: âWhoever, within the United States or subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, knowingly provides material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization, or attempts or conspires to do so, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 10 years, or both.â See Humanitarian Law Project v. Reno, 9 F. Supp. 2d 1205, 1207 (CD Cal. 1998). And 18 U. S. C. §2339A(b) (2000 ed.) defined âmaterial support or resourcesâ to mean âcurrency or other financial securities, financial services, lodging, training, safehouses, false documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities, weapons, lethal substances, explosives, personnel, transportation, and other physical assets, except medicine or religious materials.â
[3] The dissent would interpret the statute along the same lines as the plaintiffs, to prohibit speech and association âonly when the defendant knows or intends that those activities will assist the organizationâs unlawful terrorist actions.â Post, at 17 (opinion of Breyer, J.). According to the dissent, this interpretation is âfairly possibleâ and adopting it would avoid constitutional concerns. Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). The dissentâs interpretation of §2339B fails for essentially the same reasons as plaintiffsâ. Congress explained what âknowinglyâ means in §2339B, and it did not choose the dissentâs interpretation of that term. In fact, the dissent proposes a mental-state requirement indistinguishable from the one Congress adopted in §§2339A and 2339C, even though Congress used markedly different language in §2339B.
[4] The dissent also analyzes the statute as if it prohibited â[p]eaceful political advocacyâ or âpure speech and association,â without more. Post, at 9, 17. Section 2339B does not do that, and we do not address the constitutionality of any such prohibitions. The dissentâs claim that our decision is inconsistent with this Courtâs cases analyzing those sorts of restrictions, post, at 11â12, is accordingly unfounded.
[5] The Government suggests in passing that, to the extent plaintiffsâ activities constitute speech, that speech is wholly unprotected by the First Amendment. The Government briefly analogizes speech coordinated with foreign terrorist organizations to speech effecting a crime, like the words that constitute a conspiracy. Brief for Government 46; Reply Brief for Government 31â32, and n. 8. See, e.g., Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co., 336 U. S. 490, 498, 502 (1949). We do not consider any such argument because the Government does not develop it: The Governmentâs submission is that applying §2339B to plaintiffs triggers intermediate First Amendment scrutinyânot that it triggers no First Amendment scrutiny at all.
[6] The dissent also contends that the particular sort of material support plaintiffs seek to provide cannot be diverted to terrorist activities, in the same direct way as funds or goods. Post, at 8â9. This contention misses the point. Both common sense and the evidence submitted by the Government make clear that material support of a terrorist groupâs lawful activities facilitates the groupâs ability to attract âfunds,â âfinancing,â and âgoodsâ that will further its terrorist acts. See McKune Affidavit, App. 134â136.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
NOS. 08-1498 AND 09-89
ERIC H. HOLDER, Jr., ATTORNEY GENERAL, et al., PETITIONERS
v.
HUMANITARIAN LAW PROJECT et al.
on writs of certiorari to the United states Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
[June 21, 2010]
Justice Breyer, with whom Justices Ginsburg and Sotomayor join, dissenting.
Like the Court, and substantially for the reasons it gives, I do not think this statute is unconstitutionally vague. But I cannot agree with the Courtâs conclusion that the Constitution permits the Government to prosecute the plaintiffs criminally for engaging in coordinated teaching and advocacy furthering the designated organizationsâ lawful political objectives. In my view, the Government has not met its burden of showing that an interpretation of the statute that would prohibit this speech- and association-related activity serves the Governmentâs compelling interest in combating terrorism. And I would interpret the statute as normally placing activity of this kind outside its scope. See Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S. 22, 62 (1932); Ashwander v. TVA, 297 U. S. 288, 346â347 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring).
I
The statute before us forbids âknowingly provid[ing]â âa foreign terrorist organizationâ with âmaterial support or resources,â defined to include, among other things, âtraining,â âexpert advice or assistance,â âpersonnel,â and âservice.â 18 U. S. C. §§2339B(a)(1), (g)(4); §2339A(b)(1). The Secretary of State has designated the Kurdistan Workersâ Party (PKK) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) as âforeign terrorist organizationsââa designation authorized where the organization is âforeign,â threatens the security of the United States or its nationals, and engages in âterrorist activity,â defined to include âanyâ of such activities as âhighjackingâ and âassassination,â or the âuse of ⌠any ⌠weapon or dangerous device ⌠with intent to endanger, directly or indirectly, the safety of one or more individuals.â 62 Fed. Reg. 52650 (1997); 8 U. S. C. §1182(a)(3)(B)(iii); 18 U. S. C. §2339B(a)(1).
The plaintiffs, all United States citizens or associations, now seek an injunction and declaration providing that, without violating the statute, they can (1) âtrain members of [the] PKK on how to use humanitarian and international law to peacefully resolve disputesâ; (2) âengage in political advocacy on behalf of Kurds who live in Turkeyâ; (3) âteach PKK members how to petition various representative bodies such as the United Nations for reliefâ; and (4) âengage in political advocacy on behalf of Tamils who live in Sri Lanka.â Humanitarian Law Project v. Mukasey, 552 F. 3d 916, 921, n. 1 (CA9 2009); ante, at 9. All these activities are of a kind that the First Amendment ordinarily protects.
In my view, the Government has not made the strong showing necessary to justify under the First Amendment the criminal prosecution of those who engage in these activities. All the activities involve the communication and advocacy of political ideas and lawful means of achieving political ends. Even the subjects the plaintiffs wish to teachâusing international law to resolve disputes peacefully or petitioning the United Nations, for instanceâconcern political speech. We cannot avoid the constitutional significance of these facts on the basis that some of this speech takes place outside the United States and is directed at foreign governments, for the activities also involve advocacy in this country directed to our government and its policies. The plaintiffs, for example, wish to write and distribute publications and to speak before the United States Congress. App. 58â59.
That this speech and association for political purposes is the kind of activity to which the First Amendment ordinarily offers its strongest protection is elementary. See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254, 269 (1964) (The First Amendment â âwas fashioned to assure unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about of political and social changes desired by the peopleâ â (quoting Roth v. United States, 354 U. S. 476, 484 (1957)); Lovell v. City of Griffin, 303 U. S. 444, 452 (1938) (rejecting licensing scheme for distribution of âpamphlets and leaflets,â âhistoric weapons in the defense of libertyâ); R. A. V. v. St. Paul, 505 U. S. 377, 422 (1992) (Stevens, J., concurring in judgment) (âOur First Amendment decisions have created a rough hierarchy in the constitutional protection of speechâ in which â[c]ore political speech occupies the highest, most protected positionâ); Hill v. Colorado, 530 U. S. 703, 787 (2000) (Kennedy, J., dissenting) (âLaws punishing speech which protests the lawfulness or morality of the governmentâs own policy are the essence of the tyrannical power the First Amendment guards againstâ); Citizens United v. Federal Election Commân, 558 U. S. ___, ___ (2010) (slip op., at 33) (âIf the First Amendment has any force, it prohibits Congress from fining or jailing citizens, or associations of citizens, for simply engaging in political speechâ).
Although in the Courtâs view the statute applies only where the PKK helps to coordinate a defendantâs activities, ante, at 21, the simple fact of âcoordinationâ alone cannot readily remove protection that the First Amendment would otherwise grant. That amendment, after all, also protects the freedom of association. See NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co., 458 U. S. 886, 911 (1982) (The First Amendmentâs protections âof speech, assembly, association, and petition, âthough not identical, are inseparableâ â (quoting Thomas v. Collins, 323 U. S. 516, 530 (1945))); De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U. S. 353, 364 (1937) (describing the âright of peaceable assemblyâ as âa right cognate to those of free speech and free presses and ⌠equally fundamentalâ); see also Roberts v. United States Jaycees, 468 U. S. 609, 622 (1984). âCoordinationâ with a political group, like membership, involves association.
âCoordinationâ with a group that engages in unlawful activity also does not deprive the plaintiffs of the First Amendmentâs protection under any traditional âcategoricalâ exception to its protection. The plaintiffs do not propose to solicit a crime. They will not engage in fraud or defamation or circulate obscenity. Cf. United States v. Stevens, 559 U. S. ___ , ___ (2010) (slip op., at 5â6) (describing âcategoriesâ of unprotected speech). And the First Amendment protects advocacy even of unlawful action so long as that advocacy is not âdirected to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and . . . likely to incite or produce such action.â Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U. S. 444, 447 (1969) (per curiam) (emphasis added). Here the plaintiffs seek to advocate peaceful, lawful action to secure political ends; and they seek to teach others how to do the same. No one contends that the plaintiffsâ speech to these organizations can be prohibited as incitement under Brandenburg.
Moreover, the Court has previously held that a person who associates with a group that uses unlawful means to achieve its ends does not thereby necessarily forfeit the First Amendmentâs protection for freedom of association. See Scales v. United States, 367 U. S. 203, 229 (1961) (â[Q]uasi-political parties or other groups that may embrace both legal and illegal aims differ from a technical conspiracy, which is defined by its criminal purposeâ); see also NAACP, supra, at 908 (âThe right to associate does not lose all constitutional protection merely because some members of the group may have participated in conduct or advocated doctrine that itself is not protectedâ). Rather, the Court has pointed out in respect to associating with a group advocating overthrow of the Government through force and violence: âIf the persons assembling have committed crimes elsewhere ⌠, they may be prosecuted for their ⌠violation of valid laws. But it is a different matter when the State, instead of prosecuting them for such offenses, seizes upon mere participation in a peaceable assembly and a lawful public discussion as the basis for a criminal charge.â De Jonge, supra, at 365 (striking down conviction for attending and assisting at Communist Party meeting because â[n]otwithstanding [the partyâs] objectives, the defendant still enjoyed his personal right of free speech and to take part in peaceable assembly having a lawful purposeâ).
Not even the âserious and deadly problemâ of international terrorism can require automatic forfeiture of First Amendment rights. §301(a)(1), 110 Stat. 1247, note following 18 U. S. C. §2339B. Cf. §2339B(i) (instructing courts not to âconstru[e] or appl[y the statute] so as to abridge the exercise of right guaranteed under the First Amendmentâ). After all, this Court has recognized that not â â[e]ven the war power ⌠remove[s] constitutional limitations safeguarding essential liberties.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;United States v. Robel, 389 U. S. 258, 264 (1967) (quoting Home Building & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell, 290 U. S. 398, 426 (1934)). See also Abrams v. United States, 250 U. S. 616, 628 (1919) (Holmes, J., dissenting) (â[A]s against dangers peculiar to war, as against others, the principle of the right to free speech is always the sameâ). Thus, there is no general First Amendment exception that applies here. If the statute is constitutional in this context, it would have to come with a strong justification attached.
It is not surprising that the majority, in determining the constitutionality of criminally prohibiting the plaintiffsâ proposed activities, would apply, not the kind of intermediate First Amendment standard that applies to conduct, but â âa more demanding standard.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;Ante, at 23 (quoting Texas v. Johnson, 491 U. S. 397, 403 (1989)). Indeed, where, as here, a statute applies criminal penalties and at least arguably does so on the basis of content-based distinctions, I should think we would scrutinize the statute and justifications âstrictlyââto determine whether the prohibition is justified by a âcompellingâ need that cannot be âless restrictivelyâ accommodated. See Houston v. Hill, 482 U. S. 451, 459 (1987) (criminal penalties); Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union, 535 U. S. 564, 573 (2002) (content-based); Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of N. Y. State Crime Victims Bd., 502 U. S. 105, 118 (1991) (same); Consolidated Edison Co. of N. Y. v. Public Serv. Commân of N. Y., 447 U. S. 530, 540 (1980) (strict scrutiny); First Nat. Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U. S. 765, 786 (1978) (same).
But, even if we assume for argumentâs sake that âstrict scrutinyâ does not apply, no one can deny that we must at the very least âmeasure the validity of the means adopted by Congress against both the goal it has sought to achieve and the specific prohibitions of the First Amendment.â Robel, supra, 268, n. 20 (describing constitutional task where the Court is faced âwith a clear conflict between a federal statute enacted in the interests of national security and an individualâs exercise of his First Amendment rightsâ). And here I need go no further, for I doubt that the statute, as the Government would interpret it, can survive any reasonably applicable First Amendment standard. See, e.g., Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 520 U. S. 180, 189 (1997) (describing intermediate scrutiny). Cf. Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Government PAC, 528 U. S. 377, 402 (2000) (Breyer, J., concurring) (examining whether a statute worked speech-related harm âout of proportion to the statuteâs salutary effects uponâ other interests).
The Government does identify a compelling countervailing interest, namely, the interest in protecting the security of the United States and its nationals from the threats that foreign terrorist organizations pose by denying those organizations financial and other fungible resources. I do not dispute the importance of this interest. But I do dispute whether the interest can justify the statuteâs criminal prohibition. To put the matter more specifically, precisely how does application of the statute to the protected activities before us help achieve that important security-related end? See Simon & Schuster, 502 U. S., at 118 (requiring that ânarrowly drawnâ means further a âcompelling state interestâ by the least restrictive means (internal quotation marks omitted)); Turner, supra, at 189 (requiring âadvance[ment of] important governmental interests unrelated to the suppression of free speechâ without âburden[ing] substantially more speech than necessary to further those interestsâ); Robel, supra, at 268, n. 20 (requiring measurement of the âmeans adopted by Congress against ⌠the [security] goal it has sought to achieveâ). See also Nixon, 528 U. S., at 402 (Breyer, J., concurring); Federal Election Commân v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc., 551 U. S. 449, 478 (2007) (opinion of Roberts, C. J.) (âA court ⌠must ensure that [the interest justifying a statutory restriction] supports each application of [the] statuteâ).
The Government makes two efforts to answer this question. First, the Government says that the plaintiffsâ support for these organizations is âfungibleâ in the same sense as other forms of banned support. Being fungible, the plaintiffsâ support could, for example, free up other resources, which the organization might put to terrorist ends. Brief for Respondents in No. 09â89, pp. 54â56 (hereinafter Government Brief).
The proposition that the two very different kinds of âsupportâ are âfungible,â however, is not obviously true. There is no obvious way in which undertaking advocacy for political change through peaceful means or teaching the PKK and LTTE, say, how to petition the United Nations for political change is fungible with other resources that might be put to more sinister ends in the way that donations of money, food, or computer training are fungible. It is far from obvious that these advocacy activities can themselves be redirected, or will free other resources that can be directed, towards terrorist ends. Thus, we must determine whether the Government has come forward with evidence to support its claim.
The Government has provided us with no empirical information that might convincingly support this claim. Instead, the Government cites only to evidence that Congress was concerned about the âfungibleâ nature in general of resources, predominately money and material goods. It points to a congressional finding that âforeign organizations that engage in terrorist activity are so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.â §301(a)(7), 110 Stat. 1247, note following 18 U. S. C. §2339B (emphasis added). It also points to a House Reportâs statement that âsupply[ing] funds, goods, or servicesâ would âhel[p] defray the cost to the terrorist organization of running the ostensibly legitimate activities,â and âin turn fre[e] an equal sum that can then be spent on terrorist activities.â H. R. Rep. No. 104â383, p. 81 (1995) (emphasis added). Finally, the Government refers to a State Department officialâs affidavit describing how ostensibly charitable contributions have either been âredirectedâ to terrorist ends or, even if spent charitably, have âunencumber[ed] funds raised from other sources for use in facilitating violent, terrorist activities and gaining political support for these activities.â Declaration of Kenneth R. McKune, App. 134, 136 (emphasis added).
The most one can say in the Governmentâs favor about these statements is that they might be read as offering highly general support for its argument. The statements do not, however, explain in any detail how the plaintiffsâ political-advocacy-related activities might actually be âfungibleâ and therefore capable of being diverted to terrorist use. Nor do they indicate that Congress itself was concerned with âsupportâ of this kind. The affidavit refers to âfunds,â âfinancing,â and âgoodsâânone of which encompasses the plaintiffsâ activities. Ibid. The statutory statement and the House Report use broad terms like âcontributionsâ and âservicesâ that might be construed as encompassing the plaintiffsâ activities. But in context, those terms are more naturally understood as referring to contributions of goods, money, or training and other services (say, computer programming) that could be diverted to, or free funding for, terrorist ends. See infra, at 15â16. Peaceful political advocacy does not obviously fall into these categories. And the statute itself suggests that Congress did not intend to curtail freedom of speech or association. See §2339B(i) (âNothing in this section shall be construed or applied so as to abridge the exercise of rights guaranteed under the First Amendmentâ); see also infra, at 18â19.
Second, the Government says that the plaintiffsâ proposed activities will âbolste[r] a terrorist organizationâs efficacy and strength in a communityâ and âundermin[e] this nationâs efforts to delegitimize and weaken those groups.â Government Brief 56 (emphasis added). In the Courtâs view, too, the Constitution permits application of the statute to activities of the kind at issue in part because those activities could provide a group that engages in terrorism with âlegitimacy.â Ante, at 25. The Court suggests that, armed with this greater âlegitimacy,â these organizations will more readily be able to obtain material support of the kinds Congress plainly intended to banâmoney, arms, lodging, and the like. See ibid.
Yet the Government does not claim that the statute forbids any speech âlegitimatingâ a terrorist group. Rather, it reads the statute as permitting (1) membership in terrorist organizations, (2) âpeaceably assembling with members of the PKK and LTTE for lawful discussion,â or (3) âindependent advocacyâ on behalf of these organizations. Government Brief 66, 61, 13. The Court, too, emphasizes that activities not âcoordinated withâ the terrorist groups are not banned. See ante, at 21, 26, 31 (emphasis added). And it argues that speaking, writing, and teaching aimed at furthering a terrorist organizationâs peaceful political ends could âmak[e] it easier for those groups to persist, to recruit members, and to raise funds.â Ante, at 25.
But this âlegitimacyâ justification cannot by itself warrant suppression of political speech, advocacy, and association. Speech, association, and related activities on behalf of a group will often, perhaps always, help to legitimate that group. Thus, were the law to accept a âlegitimatingâ effect, in and of itself and without qualification, as providing sufficient grounds for imposing such a ban, the First Amendment battle would be lost in untold instances where it should be won. Once one accepts this argument, there is no natural stopping place. The argument applies as strongly to âindependentâ as to âcoordinatedâ advocacy. But see ante, at 26â27. That fact is reflected in part in the Governmentâs claim that the ban here, so supported, prohibits a lawyer hired by a designated group from filing on behalf of that group an amicus brief before the United Nations or even before this Court. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 47â49, 53.
That fact is also reflected in the difficulty of drawing a line designed to accept the legitimacy argument in some instances but not in others. It is inordinately difficult to distinguish when speech activity will and when it will not initiate the chain of causation the Court suggestsâa chain that leads from peaceful advocacy to âlegitimacyâ to increased support for the group to an increased supply of material goods that support its terrorist activities. Even were we to find some such line of distinction, its application would seem so inherently uncertain that it would often, perhaps always, âchillâ protected speech beyond its boundary. In short, the justification, put forward simply in abstract terms and without limitation, must always, or it will never, be sufficient. Given the nature of the plaintiffsâ activities, âalwaysâ cannot possibly be the First Amendmentâs answer.
Regardless, the âlegitimacyâ justification itself is inconsistent with critically important First Amendment case law. Consider the cases involving the protection the First Amendment offered those who joined the Communist Party intending only to further its peaceful activities. In those cases, this Court took account of congressional findings that the Communist Party not only advocated theoretically but also sought to put into practice the overthrow of our Government through force and violence. The Court had previously accepted Congressâ determinations that the American Communist Party was a âCommunist action organizationâ which (1) acted under the âcontrol, direction, and disciplineâ of the world Communist movement, a movement that sought to employ âespionage, sabotage, terrorism, and any other means deemed necessary, to establish a Communist totalitarian dictatorship,â and (2) âendeavor[ed]â to bring about âthe overthrow of existing governments by . . . force if necessary.â Communist Party of United States v. Subversive Activities Control Bd., 367 U. S. 1, 5â6 (1961) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Nonetheless, the Court held that the First Amendment protected an Americanâs right to belong to that partyâdespite whatever âlegitimatingâ effect membership might have hadâas long as the person did not share the partyâs unlawful purposes. See, e.g., De Jonge, 299 U. S. 353; Scales, 367 U. S., at 228â230; Elfbrandt v. Russell, 384 U. S. 11, 17 (1966); Keyishian v. Board of Regents of Univ. of State of N. Y., 385 U. S. 589, 605â610 (1967); Robel, 389 U. S. 258 (holding that national security interests did not justify overbroad criminal prohibition on members of Communist-affiliated organizations working in any defense-related facility). As I have pointed out, those cases draw further support from other cases permitting pure advocacy of even the most unlawful activityâas long as that advocacy is not âdirected to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and ⌠likely to incite or produce such action.â Brandenburg, 395 U. S., at 447. The Governmentâs âlegitimatingâ theory would seem to apply to these cases with equal justifying force; and, if recognized, it would have led this Court to conclusions other than those it reached.
Nor can the Government overcome these considerations simply by narrowing the covered activities to those that involve coordinated, rather than independent, advocacy. Conversations, discussions, or logistical arrangements might well prove necessary to carry out the speech-related activities here at issue (just as conversations and discussions are a necessary part of membership in any organization). The Government does not distinguish this kind of âcoordinationâ from any other. I am not aware of any form of words that might be used to describe âcoordinationâ that would not, at a minimum, seriously chill not only the kind of activities the plaintiffs raise before us, but also the âindependent advocacyâ the Government purports to permit. And, as for the Governmentâs willingness to distinguish independent advocacy from coordinated advocacy, the former is more likely, not less likely, to confer legitimacy than the latter. Thus, other things being equal, the distinction âcoordinationâ makes is arbitrary in respect to furthering the statuteâs purposes. And a rule of law that finds the âlegitimacyâ argument adequate in respect to the latter would have a hard time distinguishing a statute that sought to attack the former.
Consider the majorityâs development of the Governmentâs themes. First, the majority discusses the plaintiffsâ proposal to â âtrain members of [the] PKK on how to use humanitarian and international law to peacefully resolve disputes.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;Ante, at 31â32 (quoting 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1). The majority justifies the criminalization of this activity in significant part on the ground that âpeaceful negotiation[s]â might just âbu[y] time ⌠, lulling opponents into complacency.â Ante, at 32. And the PKK might use its new information about âthe structures of the international legal system ⌠to threaten, manipulate, and disrupt.â Ibid.
What is one to say about these argumentsâarguments that would deny First Amendment protection to the peaceful teaching of international human rights law on the ground that a little knowledge about âthe international legal systemâ is too dangerous a thing; that an opponentâs subsequent willingness to negotiate might be faked, so letâs not teach him how to try? What might be said of these claims by those who live, as we do, in a Nation committed to the resolution of disputes through âdeliberative forcesâ? Whitney v. California, 274 U. S. 357, 375 (1927) (Brandeis, J., concurring).
In my own view, the majorityâs arguments stretch the concept of âfungibilityâ beyond constitutional limits. Neither Congress nor the Government advanced these particular hypothetical claims. I am not aware of any case in this Courtânot Gitlow v. New York, 268 U. S. 652 (1925), not Schenck v. United States, 249 U. S. 47 (1919), not Abrams, 250 U. S. 616, not the later Communist Party cases decided during the heat of the Cold Warâin which the Court accepted anything like a claim that speech or teaching might be criminalized lest it, e.g., buy negotiating time for an opponent who would put that time to bad use.
Moreover, the risk that those who are taught will put otherwise innocent speech or knowledge to bad use is omnipresent, at least where that risk rests on little more than (even informed) speculation. Hence to accept this kind of argument without more and to apply it to the teaching of a subject such as international human rights law is to adopt a rule of law that, contrary to the Constitutionâs text and First Amendment precedent, would automatically forbid the teaching of any subject in a case where national security interests conflict with the First Amendment. The Constitution does not allow all such conflicts to be decided in the Governmentâs favor.
The majority, as I have said, cannot limit the scope of its arguments through its claim that the plaintiffs remain free to engage in the protected activity as long as it is not âcoordinated.â That is because there is no practical way to organize classes for a group (say, wishing to learn about human rights law) without âcoordination.â Nor can the majority limit the scope of its argument by pointing to some special limiting circumstance present here. That is because the only evidence the majority offers to support its general claim consists of a single reference to a book about terrorism, which the Government did not mention, and which apparently says no more than that at one time the PKK suspended its armed struggle and then returned to it.
Second, the majority discusses the plaintiffsâ proposal to â âteach PKK members how to petition various representative bodies such as the United Nations for relief.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;Ante, at 32 (quoting 552 F. 3d, at 921, n. 1; emphasis added). The majorityâs only argument with respect to this proposal is that the relief obtained âcould readily include monetary aid,â which the PKK might use to buy guns. Ante, at 32. The majority misunderstands the word ârelief.â In this context, as the record makes clear, the word âreliefâ does not refer to âmoney.â It refers to recognition under the Geneva Conventions. See App. 57â58 (2003 Complaint); id., at 79â80 (1998 Complaint); id., at 113 (Fertig Declaration); see also Tr. of Oral Arg. 63 (plaintiffsâ counsel denying that plaintiffs seek to teach about obtaining relief in the form of money).
Throughout, the majority emphasizes that it would defer strongly to Congressâ âinformed judgment.â See, e.g., ante, at 30. But here, there is no evidence that Congress has made such a judgment regarding the specific activities at issue in these cases. See infra, at 20â21. In any event, âwhenever the fundamental rights of free speech and assembly are alleged to have been invaded, it must remain open [for judicial determination] whether there actually did exist at the time a clear danger; whether the danger, if any, was imminent; and whether the evil apprehended was one so substantial as to justify the stringent restriction interposed by the legislature.â Whitney, supra, at 378â379 (Brandeis, J., concurring). In such circumstances, the âjudicial function commands analysis of whether the specific conduct charged falls within the reach of the statute and if so whether the legislation is consonant with the Constitution.â Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia, 435 U. S. 829, 844 (1978). Hence, a legislative declaration âdoes not preclude enquiry into the question whether, at the time and under the circumstances, the conditions existed which are essential to validity under the Federal Constitution.â Whitney, supra, at 378; see also Landmark, supra, at 843 (âDeference to a legislative finding cannot limit judicial inquiry when First Amendment rights are at stakeâ).
I concede that the Governmentâs expertise in foreign affairs may warrant deference in respect to many matters, e.g., our relations with Turkey. Cf. ante, at 27â28. But it remains for this Court to decide whether the Government has shown that such an interest justifies criminalizing speech activity otherwise protected by the First Amendment. And the fact that other nations may like us less for granting that protection cannot in and of itself carry the day.
Finally, I would reemphasize that neither the Government nor the majority points to any specific facts that show that the speech-related activities before us are fungible in some special way or confer some special legitimacy upon the PKK. Rather, their arguments in this respect are general and speculative. Those arguments would apply to virtually all speech-related support for a dual-purpose groupâs peaceful activities (irrespective of whether the speech-related activity is coordinated). Both First Amendment logic and First Amendment case law prevent us from âsacrific[ing] First Amendment protections for so speculative a gain.â Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Democratic National Committee, 412 U. S. 94, 127 (1973); see also Consolidated Edison Co., 447 U. S., at 543 (rejecting proffered state interest not supported in record because â[m]ere speculation of harm does not constitute a compelling state interestâ).
II
For the reasons I have set forth, I believe application of the statute as the Government interprets it would gravely and without adequate justification injure interests of the kind the First Amendment protects. Thus, there is âa serious doubtâ as to the statuteâs constitutionality. Crowell, 285 U. S., at 62. And where that is so, we must âascertain whether a construction of the statute is fairly possible by which the question may be avoided.â Ibid.; see also Ashwander, 297 U. S., at 346â348 (Brandeis, J., concurring); Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U. S. 678, 689 (2001); United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc., 513 U. S. 64, 78 (1994); United States v. Jin Fuey Moy, 241 U. S. 394, 401 (1916).
I believe that a construction that would avoid the constitutional problem is âfairly possible.â In particular, I would read the statute as criminalizing First-Amendment-protected pure speech and association only when the defendant knows or intends that those activities will assist the organizationâs unlawful terrorist actions. Under this reading, the Government would have to show, at a minimum, that such defendants provided support that they knew was significantly likely to help the organization pursue its unlawful terrorist aims.
A person acts with the requisite knowledge if he is aware of (or willfully blinds himself to) a significant likelihood that his or her conduct will materially support the organizationâs terrorist ends. See Allen v. United States, 164 U. S. 492, 496 (1896); cf. ALI, Model Penal Code §2.02(2)(b)(ii) (1962). See also United States v. Santos, 553 U. S. 507, 521 (2008) (plurality opinion); cf. Model Penal Code §2.02(7) (willful blindness); S. Rep. No. 95â605, pt. 1, pp. 59â60 (1977). A person also acts with the requisite intent if it is his âconscious objectiveâ (or purpose) to further those same terrorist ends. See United States v. Bailey, 444 U. S. 394, 408 (1980); Model Penal Code §§2.02(2)(a) and 2.02(5) (âWhen acting knowingly suffices to establish an element, such element also is established if a person acts purposelyâ). On the other hand, for the reasons I have set out, see supra, at 9â12, knowledge or intent that this assistance (aimed at lawful activities) could or would help further terrorism simply by helping to legitimate the organization is not sufficient.
This reading of the statute protects those who engage in pure speech and association ordinarily protected by the First Amendment. But it does not protect that activity where a defendant purposefully intends it to help terrorism or where a defendant knows (or willfully blinds himself to the fact) that the activity is significantly likely to assist terrorism. Where the activity fits into these categories of purposefully or knowingly supporting terrorist ends, the act of providing material support to a known terrorist organization bears a close enough relation to terrorist acts that, in my view, it likely can be prohibited notwithstanding any First Amendment interest. Cf. Brandenburg, 395 U. S. 444. At the same time, this reading does not require the Government to undertake the difficult task of proving which, as between peaceful and nonpeaceful purposes, a defendant specifically preferred; knowledge is enough. See Bailey, supra, at 405 (defining specific intent).
This reading is consistent with the statuteâs text. The statute prohibits âknowingly provid[ing] material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization.â §2339B(a)(1) (emphasis added). Normally we read a criminal statute as applying a mens rea requirement to all of the subsequently listed elements of the crime. See Flores-Figueroa v. United States, 556 U. S. ___, ___ (2009) (slip op., at 6â7). So read, the defendant would have to know or intend (1) that he is providing support or resources, (2) that he is providing that support to a foreign terrorist organization, and (3) that he is providing support that is material, meaning (4) that his support bears a significant likelihood of furthering the organizationâs terrorist ends.
This fourth requirement flows directly from the statuteâs use of the word âmaterial.â That word can mean being of a physical or worldly nature, but it also can mean âbeing of real importance or great consequence.â Websterâs Third New International Dictionary 1392 (1961). Here, it must mean the latter, for otherwise the statute, applying only to physical aid, would not apply to speech at all. See also §2339A(b)(1) (defining â âmaterial support or resourcesâ â as âany property, tangible or intangibleâ (emphasis added)). And if the statute applies only to support that would likely be of real importance or great consequence, it must have importance or consequence in respect to the organizationâs terrorist activities. That is because support that is not significantly likely to help terrorist activities, for purposes of this statute, neither has âimportanceâ nor is of âgreat consequence.â
The statutory definition of âmaterial supportâ poses no problem. The statute defines âmaterial supportâ through reference to a list of terms, including those at issue hereââtraining,â âexpert advice or assistance,â âpersonnel,â and âservice.â §2339B(g)(4); §2339A(b)(1). Since these latter terms all fall under the definition of the term âmaterial support,â these activities fall within the statuteâs scope only when they too are âmaterial.â Cf. Stevens, 559 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 12) (citing Leocal v. Ashcroft, 543 U. S. 1, 11 (2004) (definitional phrase may take meaning from the term to be defined)).
Thus, textually speaking, a statutory requirement that the defendant knew the support was material can be read to require the Government to show that the defendant knew that the consequences of his acts had a significant likelihood of furthering the organizationâs terrorist, not just its lawful, aims.
I need not decide whether this is the only possible reading of the statute in cases where âmaterial supportâ takes the form of âcurrency,â âproperty,â âmonetary instruments,â âfinancial securities,â âfinancial services,â âlodging,â âsafehouses,â âfalse documentation or identification,â âweapons,â âlethal substances,â or âexplosives,â and the like. §2339A(b)(1). Those kinds of aid are inherently more likely to help an organizationâs terrorist activities, either directly or because they are fungible in nature. Thus, to show that an individual has provided support of those kinds will normally prove sufficient for conviction (assuming the statuteâs other requirements are met). But where support consists of pure speech or association, I would indulge in no such presumption. Rather, the Government would have to prove that the defendant knew he was providing support significantly likely to help the organization pursue its unlawful terrorist aims (or, alternatively, that the defendant intended the support to be so used).
The statuteâs history strongly supports this reading. That history makes clear that Congress primarily sought to end assistance that takes the form of fungible donations of money or goods. See, e.g., H. R. Rep. No. 104â383, at 38, 43â45, 81; supra, at 8â9. It shows that Congress, when referring to âexpert services and assistanceâ for example, had in mind training that was sufficiently fungible to further terrorism directly, such as an aviation expertâs giving âadviceâ that âfacilitat[es] an aircraft hijackingâ or an accountantâs giving âadviceâ that will âfacilitate the concealment of funds used to support terrorist activities.â Hearing on Administrationâs Draft Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001 before the House Committee on the Judiciary, 107th Cong., 1st Sess., 61 (2001).
And the Chairman of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, when reporting the relevant bill from Committee, told the Senate:
âThis bill also includes provisions making it a crime to knowingly provide material support to the terrorist functions of foreign groups designated by a Presidential finding to be engaged in terrorist activities.â 142 Cong. Rec. S3354 (1996) (statement of Sen. Hatch) (emphasis added).
He then added:
âI am convinced we have crafted a narrow but effective designation provision which meets these obligations while safeguarding the freedom to associate, which none of us would willingly give up.â Id., at S3360.
Consistent with this view, the statute itself says:
âNothing in this section shall be construed or applied so as to abridge the exercise of rights guaranteed under the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.â §2339B(i).
In any event, the principle of constitutional avoidance demands this interpretation. As Part II makes clear, there is a âseriousâ doubtâindeed, a âgraveâ doubtâabout the constitutionality of the statute insofar as it is read to criminalize the activities before us. Crowell, 285 U. S., at 62; see also Ashwander, 297 U. S., at 346â348 (Brandeis, J., concurring); Jin Fuey Moy, 241 U. S., at 401. We therefore must âread the statute to eliminateâ that constitutional âdoub[t] so long as such a reading is not plainly contrary to the intent of Congress.â X-Citement Video, Inc., 513 U. S., at 78.
For this reason, the majorityâs statutory claim that Congress did not use the word âknowinglyâ as I would use it, ante, at 12â13, and n. 3, is beside the point. Our consequent reading is consistent with the statuteâs text; it is consistent with Congressâ basic intent; it interprets but does not significantly add to what the statute otherwise contains. Cf. e.g., United States v. Thirty-seven Photographs, 402 U. S. 363, 373â374 (1971) (constitutionally compelled to add requirement that âforfeiture proceedings be commenced within 14 days and completed within 60 daysâ despite absence of any statutory time limits); NLRB v. Catholic Bishop of Chicago, 440 U. S. 490, 507 (1979) (constitutionally compelled to interpret âemployerâ as implicitly excluding âchurch-operated schoolsâ despite silence and eight other different but explicit exceptions). We should adopt it.
III
Having interpreted the statute to impose the mens rea requirement just described, I would remand the cases so that the lower courts could consider more specifically the precise activities in which the plaintiffs still wish to engage and determine whether and to what extent a grant of declaratory and injunctive relief were warranted. I do not see why the majority does not also remand the cases for consideration of the plaintiffsâ activities relating to âadvocatingâ for the organizationsâ peaceful causes. See ante, at 19â20, 32â33.
The majority does not remand, apparently because it believes the plaintiffs lose automatically in that these âadvocacyâ claims are too general. It adds that the plaintiffs did not âsuggest what exactly their âadvocacyâ would consist of.â Ante, at 33. But the majority is wrong about the lack of specificity. The record contains complaints and affidavits, which describe in detail the forms of advocacy these groups have previously engaged in and in which they would like to continue to engage. See App. 56â63, 78â87, 95â99, 110â123.
Moreover, the majority properly rejects the Governmentâs argument that the plaintiffsâ speech-related activities amount to âconductâ and should be reviewed as such. Government Brief 44â57. Hence, I should think the majority would wish the lower courts to reconsider this aspect of the cases, applying a proper standard of review. See, e.g., Philip Morris USA v. Williams, 549 U. S. 346, 357â358 (2007); Johnson v. California 543 U. S. 499, 515 (2005); cf. Ricci v. DeStefano, 557 U. S. ___, ___ (2009) (slip op., at 25) (Ginsburg, J., dissenting) (âWhen this Court formulates a new legal rule, the ordinary course is to remand and allow the lower courts to apply the rule in the first instanceâ).
IV
In sum, these cases require us to consider how to apply the First Amendment where national security interests are at stake. When deciding such cases, courts are aware and must respect the fact that the Constitution entrusts to the Executive and Legislative Branches the power to provide for the national defense, and that it grants particular authority to the President in matters of foreign affairs. Nonetheless, this Court has also made clear that authority and expertise in these matters do not automatically trump the Courtâs own obligation to secure the protection that the Constitution grants to individuals. Cf. Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 542 U. S. 507, 536 (2004) (âWe have long since made clear that a state of war is not a blank check ⌠when it comes to the rights of th[is] Nationâs citizensâ). In these cases, for the reasons I have stated, I believe the Court has failed to examine the Governmentâs justifications with sufficient care. It has failed to insist upon specific evidence, rather than general assertion. It has failed to require tailoring of means to fit compelling ends. And ultimately it deprives the individuals before us of the protection that the First Amendment demands.
That is why, with respect, I dissent.