INTERNATIONAL LAW UNCANCELED
The Biden administration lifted sanctions against the International
Criminal Court. It's not enough.
By John Feffer | April 7, 2021
When the loony right gathered at the Conservative
Political Action Conference back in February, the theme of the Trump-heavy
gathering was “America Uncanceled.” Speaker after speaker railed against “political correctness” in American
culture, from “woke mobs” to “censorship” in the mainstream news media.
Incredibly, they tried to transform so-called cancel culture into the single
greatest problem facing a United States still reeling from COVID-19 and its
economic sucker punch.
And yet, time and again, it has been the loony right
that has been so eager to hit the delete button.
These supposed defenders of everyone’s right to voice
opinions attempted to cancel an entire presidential election because it failed
to produce their preferred result. They’ve spent decades trying to cancel
voting rights (not to mention a wide variety of other rights). They’ve directed
huge amounts of time and money to canceling social benefits for the least
fortunate Americans. Throughout history, they’ve mounted campaigns to cancel
specific individuals from Colin Kaepernick and Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) to the
black lists of the McCarthy era. They’re also not above canceling entire groups
of people, from the transgender community all the way back to the original sin
of this country, namely the mass cancelation of Native Americans.
Then there’s foreign policy. The Trump administration
never met an international agreement or institution—the Paris Climate accord,
the Iran nuclear deal, the World Health Organization—that it didn’t want to
cover with “cancel” stamps.
One institution that has elicited particular ire from
the far right has been the International Criminal Court. Last week, the Biden
administration took a step toward mending the rift between the United States
and the ICC.
It didn’t go far enough.
Blocking the Court
In 2000, the Clinton administration signed the Rome
Statute that established the International Criminal Court, which has focused on
bringing to international justice the perpetrators of war crimes, genocide,
crimes against humanity, and (beginning in 2017) crimes of aggression. In 2002,
the Bush administration effectively unsigned the agreement, and Congress pushed
to shield all U.S. military personnel from ICC prosecution. Although the Obama
administration cooperated with the Court, it was still worried about
possible investigations into the U.S. “war on terrorism.”
Ambivalence turned to outright hostility during the
Trump years. National Security Advisor John Bolton made it his special mission to
attack the ICC as “ineffective, unaccountable, and indeed, outright dangerous.”
Among Bolton’s many spurious arguments about the Court, he claimed that the
body constitutes an assault on U.S. sovereignty and the constitution in particular,
a favorite hobbyhorse of the loony right. But the “supremacy clause” of the
U.S. constitution (Article VI, clause 2)
already establishes the primacy of federal law over treaty
obligations. So, can someone please get those supposed legal scholars to
actually read the pocket constitutions they carry around so reverently?
Bolton’s off-base analysis came with a threat. “We
will respond against the ICC and its personnel to the extent permitted by U.S.
law,” he warned. “We will ban its judges and prosecutors from entering
the United States. We will sanction their funds in the U.S. financial system,
and, we will prosecute them in the U.S. criminal system. We will do the same
for any company or state that assists an ICC investigation of Americans.”
In 2020, the Trump administration began to implement
Bolton’s attack plan by imposing sanctions against
ICC officials. Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and senior prosecution official
Phakiso Mochochoko were placed under travel restrictions and an asset freeze
because they were investigating possible U.S. war crimes in Afghanistan. This
blacklisting of ICC investigators sent a chilling signal that the United States
would attempt, much like a rogue authoritarian country, to obstruct justice at
an international level.
An equally vexing issue involves a war crimes
investigation in the occupied Palestinian territories. Although the ICC
investigators looked at atrocities committed by Israelis and Palestinians, both
Israel and the United States condemned the investigation, arguing that Israel
isn’t an ICC member and so the international body lacks jurisdiction. The
United States has made the same argument about the investigation into the
conduct of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan, since the United States is not a party
to the ICC.
But the ICC’s jurisdiction is quite clear: it extends to crimes “committed by a State Party
national, or in the territory of a State Party, or in a State that has accepted
the jurisdiction of the Court.” Palestine, an ICC member since 2015, requested
the investigation. And Afghanistan is also an ICC member.
Biden’s Response
Last week, Biden lifted the Trump administration’s sanctions. European
allies in particular were enthusiastic about this additional sign that the
United States is rejoining the international community. “This important step
underlines the US’s commitment to the international rules-based system,” said EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.
But the administration’s move comes with an important
caveat. In his statement on the lifting of the sanctions, Secretary of State
Antony Blinken noted that “we continue to disagree strongly with the
ICC’s actions relating to the Afghanistan and Palestinian situations. We
maintain our longstanding objection to the Court’s efforts to assert
jurisdiction over personnel of non-States Parties such as the United States and
Israel.”
When it comes to the ICC, then, a disturbing
bipartisan consensus has emerged on its supposed encroachment upon U.S.
sovereignty. It’s okay for the ICC to prosecute the actions of countries in the
Global South, but hand’s off the big boys, a status the United States
generously extends to Israel. In the Senate, Ben Cardin (D-MD) and Rob Portman
(R-OH) put out a letter last
month criticizing the ICC’s investigation in Palestine, which attracted the
support of 55 of their colleagues (down from 67 for a similar letter last
year). Together with Israel, the United States continues to abide by an
exceptionalism when it comes to international law that it shares with several
dozen states, including quite a few that the United States generally doesn’t
like to be associated with, such as North Korea, Myanmar, Russia, China, Egypt,
Belarus, and Nicaragua.
Of course, it hasn’t just been John Bolton and a few
outlaw states that have criticized the ICC. African countries in particular
have accused the institution of bias. The Court has indeed opened
investigations in a disproportionate number of African states: the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Cote d’Ivoire, the Central African Republic, Sudan, Kenya,
Libya, and Uganda. Preliminary investigations also took place in Gabon, Guinea,
and Nigeria and were slated to start in Burundi. All of the 46 individuals facing charges before the Court are
African.
In response to this perceived bias, the African Union
in 2017 called for a mass withdrawal of its members from the ICC.
Burundi left the Court that year,
the first country in the world to do so (other countries, like the United
States and Russia, “withdrew” but hadn’t actually ratified the treaty in the
first place). Two other countries that seemed on the verge of withdrawal, South
Africa and The Gambia, ultimately changed their minds.
Bias or Backbone?
The ICC was supposed to put an end to the era of
imperial justice by which the winners determine who is guilty of war crimes, a
bias that pervaded the Nuremburg trials. It has appointed judges and
investigators from the Global South: Fatou Bensouda is Gambian, for instance,
while Phakiso Mochochoko is from Lesotho.
Still, the preponderance of investigations in Africa
should give pause. The ICC has obviously had some difficulty making a
transition to this new era.
But let’s point out some obvious counter-arguments.
First, the ICC doesn’t have an anti-African bias. It
discriminates against African dictators and warlords. If anything, the Court
has a pro-African bias by standing up for the
victims of violence in Africa. Other continents should be so
lucky to have the ICC looking out for them.
Second, the ICC has more recently begun to challenge major
powers, including Russia for its actions in Georgia and Ukraine. It
has also investigated the actions of Israel and the United States. These moves
come with considerable risks, as the Trump sanctions painfully revealed.
Third, the ICC has considerable jurisdictional
restrictions. It can’t investigate crimes against humanity in North Korea since
the latter isn’t a member. The same applies to China and its actions in
Xinjiang.
Instead of complaining about the ICC’s blind spots and
shortcomings, the United States should get on board and put pressure on other
countries to do likewise. Americans can’t pretend to support the rule of law,
to loudly promote it around the world, and then turn around and say, “Oh, well,
it doesn’t apply to us.” If the American justice system can prosecute
perpetrators in blue like Derek Chauvin, the United States can permit an
international justice system to prosecute perpetrators in khaki who have killed
civilians on a larger scale.
So, Biden deserves praise for reversing the Trump
administration’s brazen and embarrassing attack on the ICC. But that doesn’t
constitute actual support for international law. It’s time for the United
States to uncancel the International Criminal Court.
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