Friday, 24 May 2024

National Review: End the ICC

End the ICC

International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan speaks during an interview with Reuters at The Hague, Netherlands, October 12, 2023. (Piroschka van de Wouw/Reuters)

The International Criminal Court just took, one hopes, a massive step toward its own demise by seeking warrants for the arrest of Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defense minister Yoav Gallant.

The team of ICC prosecutor Karim Khan alleges that Israel has “intentionally and systematically” deprived Palestinians of food, water, electricity, and other necessities during its campaign in Gaza and that it is carrying out a “widespread and systematic” attack on Palestinian civilians.

These are absurd assertions considering Israel’s consistent efforts to get aid into the territory and its painstaking work to minimize civilian harm — a regime so stringent that it likely exceeds what Washington has done in its own campaigns against ISIS and al-Qaeda.

It’s also morally abominable that Khan announced his intent to prosecute top Israeli officials alongside his announcement that he’s seeking the arrests of Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar, Hamas commander Mohammed Deif, and Hamas political bureau head Ismail Haniyeh. That decision supports the idea that Khan is seeking to create an equivalence between Israel and Hamas and that he’s being driven by political considerations.

Primarily, though, the application is a problem because the ICC has no right to insert itself into this matter.

It doesn’t have jurisdiction here. Israel is not party to the ICC’s Rome Statute. Khan’s petition concerns a fake case brought forward on the specious legal theory that “Palestine,” a fake country, can join the ICC — a fake global court.

Even by the court’s own standards, this application for arrest warrants is wrong. Under the court’s principle of complementarity, the ICC claims that it defers to the national authorities of the states that it investigates for possible crimes.

Moreover, Israel clearly has a competent, independent judiciary that is willing to investigate prospective war crimes. Whatever the merits of those cases, the Israeli courts have also demonstrated a willingness to go after the country’s leaders, including Netanyahu, on other matters. The ICC is intervening here without providing any explanation of why it believes that other avenues at the national level have been exhausted. It’s a transparently political move.

Already, Khan’s application has managed to turn the ICC into a rhetorical punching bag for the Biden administration, which, up until now, hasn’t found an international organization about which it can say a negative word. Yet Monday afternoon, President Biden called Khan’s equivalence of Hamas with top Israeli leaders “outrageous”; Secretary of State Antony Blinken referred to it as “shameful.”

Those statements were unusually strong (expectations were low). But as with other aspects of the White House’s handling of the U.S. alliance with Israel, solid rhetoric is unlikely to be matched with decisive action. Biden, after all, rolled back the Trump-era sanctions on Khan’s predecessor, which had also been imposed over various investigations into alleged war crimes carried out by Israel and the United States. Note that neither Blinken nor Biden promised any imminent action.

What they should do is immediately impose sanctions on Khan and senior ICC staffers connected with this case, banning them from the U.S. and freezing any assets they have here.

It’s revealing that the White House didn’t have these measures lined up ahead of Monday’s announcement; the court had been poised to do this for weeks. Clearly, the administration has little interest in protecting Israel from this lawfare campaign, so Congress needs to force its hand with any of the proposals Republican lawmakers have crafted in recent weeks. It should also pass legislation to force Biden to sanction financial institutions that work with the ICC.

Sanctioning the ICC is just the start. Khan might have signed a death sentence for his court. The next Republican president, whether that’s Trump in November or someone else down the line, is now almost certain to build out a comprehensive diplomatic campaign to end the ICC. This would start with pressuring U.S. allies who provide the bulk of the court’s funding to stop doing so. The goal should be to end the court.

Make no mistake, America should care about Khan’s case against Israel because an unaccountable international bureaucracy is waging a political campaign against one of its allies. But it’s even more worrying because this could be a dry run for a similar effort that unjustly and illegitimately targets Americans.


https://www.nationalreview.com/2024/05/end-the-international-criminal-court/


The chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court has said today he is seeking arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (pictured) and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant - as well as three Hamas leaders

The chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court is seeking arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (pictured) and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant

An arrest warrant is also being sought for Israel's Defence Minister Yoav Gallant (pictured)

Israel's Defence Minister Yoav Gallant

In an interview on Monday, Karim Khan (pictured in April) said the warrants are for war crimes and crimes against humanity over the terror group's deadly October 7 attack and Israel's subsequent war in the Gaza Strip

Muslim ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan, of Pakistani descent

British prosecutor Karim Khan announced on Monday that he is seeking warrants for Netanyahu, Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, as well as three Hamas leaders

Prosecutor Karim Khan

'There is no equivalence ¿ none ¿ between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security,' President Joe Biden said

'There is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security,' President Joe Biden said

Olaf Scholz (pictured) is under fire after a spokesperson confirmed Germany would arrest Benjamin Netanyahu if he entered the country

Germany will arrest Benjamin Netanyahu if he enters the country (Chancellor Olaf Scholz)

George Clooney and Amal Clooney pictured together in December 2023, the pair were roundly criticized over their human rights foundation's silence in the wake of October 7

"Glamorous" lawyer Amal Clooney (of Druze/Muslim descent) was behind the arrest charges

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the 'equivalence of Israel with Hamas' was 'shameful'. (Pictured: The Clooneys' $100 Lake Como mansion).

The Clooney's' $100 million Lake Como mansion

Mr Khan's panel included Labour peer Baroness Kennedy (pictured) and a barrister from Cherie Blair's former chambers.

Leftist Labour peer Baroness Kennedy advised Prosecutor Khan

Should Labour win power at the election, confused and erratic foreign policy will make the world a more dangerous place.

It's easy for puffed-up ICC lawyers to pronounce judgment, but they are not the ones Hamas wants to exterminate.

Labour foreign affairs spokesman David Lammy on a visit to the Ukrainian town of Bucha on May 13, 2024

Labour foreign affairs spokesman David Lammy supported the Arrest Warrants

Keir Starmer and Shadow Foreign Secretary David Lammy - who welcomed the ICC ruling - outside Berlin's Reichstag

Keir Starmer and Labour Foreign Secretary David Lammy - who welcomed the ICC ruling - outside Berlin's Reichstag 

Outside the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands

The International Criminal Court, in The Hague, Netherlands


No comments:

Post a Comment