JULY 3, 2020
https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/07/03/when-rogue-states-sanction-the-international-criminal-court/
Even
Orwell would be at a loss to make sense of some of the recent antics of leading
governments. We would expect Orwell to be out-satirized by the American actions
to impose penalties and sanctions on officials of
the International Criminal
Court, not because they are accused of acting improperly or
seem guilty of some kind of corruption or malfeasance, but because they were
doing their appointed jobs carefully, yet fearlessly.
Their supposed wrongdoing was to accept the request for an investigation
into allegations of war crimes committed in Afghanistan by military personnel
and intelligence experts of the U.S. armed forces, the Taliban, and the Afghan
military. It seemed beyond a reasonable doubt that frequent war crimes and crimes
against humanity have occurred in Afghanistan ever since the U.S.-led the regime-changing attack in 2002, followed by many years of occupation and
continuous combat amid a hostile population.
It should be
noted that Israel is equally infuriated with that the ICC should have affirmed
the authority of its Prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, to
investigate allegations by Palestine of war crimes and crimes against humanity
committed in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) of the West Bank, East
Jerusalem, and Gaza. These allegations include the unlawful transfer of Israeli
civilians to establish settlements in the OPT as well as administrative
structures and practices that constitute violations of the criminal prohibition
on apartheid.
Netanyahu, like
his Washington sibling has called for the ICC to be subject to sanctions for
staging this ‘full-frontal attack’ on Israeli democracy and somehow on ‘the
Jewish people’s right to live in Israel.’ The Israeli Prime Minister contends
that Israel as a sovereign state has the right to defend itself as it wishes,
and should not be impeded by any obligation to respect the international criminal
law. Such a claim, and the abusive practices and policies that have followed
over many years, amounts to a crass affirmation of what I have elsewhere called ‘gangster
geopolitics.’
Of course, Israel or the United States would be given broad latitude to
make arguments in support of their innocence, but that is not what these U.S.
and Israel object to the very idea of legal accountability and refuse to
accept even the authority of the ICC to determine whether or not it has
jurisdiction to consider the criminal charges.
This kind of repudiation of an international institution that has been
acting responsibly according to its mandate represents an unprecedented and extreme expression of anti-internationalism.
The angry
American pushback did not bother contesting the substantive allegations, but
questioned the jurisdictional authority of the ICC, and attacked the audacity
of this international entity for supposing that it could investigate, much less
prosecute and punish the representatives of such a mighty state that should in
no way be held internationally accountable.
When the ICC was investigating and indicting, only African leaders few
Western eyebrows were raised, but recently when the Court dared ever so
gingerly to treat equals equally in accord with its own legal framework—the
Rome Statute of 2000—it had in Washington’s and Tel Aviv’s eyes so overstepped
its unspoken limits as to itself become a wrongdoer and by this outlandish
logic, making the institution and its official's legitimate targets for
sanctions. What this kind of unprecedented punitive pushback amounts to is a
notable rejection of the global rule of law when it comes to international
crime and a crude effort to remind international institutions that ‘impunity’
and ‘double standards’ remain an operational principal norm of world order.
Speaking for the U.S. Government the response of the American Secretary
of State, Mike Pompeo stunningly exhibited the hubris that became the American
global brand well before Donald Trump disgraced the country and harmed the
peoples of the world during his tenure as president. Pompeo’s reaction to the
unanimous approval of the Prosecutor’s request to investigate war crimes in
Afghanistan was little other than seizing the occasion to insult the ICC by
describing it as “little more than a political tool employed by unaccountable
international elites.”
Such a statement crosses the borders of absurdity given the abundant
documentation of numerous U.S. crimes in Afghanistan (the subject-matter of
Chelsea Manning’s WikiLeaks 2010 disclosures that landed her in jail) and in
view of the several ‘black sites’ in European countries where foreign suspects
are routinely tortured, and subject to rape.
Contra Pompeo, it is not the ‘international elites’ that are
unaccountable but the national elites running the U.S. and Israeli governments.
The Pompeo dismissal was a prelude to the issuance by Trump on June 11th of an Executive Order that
extended the prior denial of a U.S. visa to Bensouda, and threatened a variety
of sanctioning moves directed at anyone connected with the ICC and its undertakings,
including freezing assets and withholding visas, not only of individuals, but
also of their families, on the laughable pretext that the prospective ICC investigation was creating a ‘national emergency’ in the form of an “unusual
and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”
Even before the present crisis, Trump had told the UN in a 2018 speech
at the General Assembly that “…the ICC has no jurisdiction, no legitimacy, and
no authority…We will never surrender America’s sovereignty to an unelected,
unaccountable, global bureaucracy.”
As crude as are
the words and deeds of the Trump crowd, there were almost equally defiant
precursors, especially during the presidency of George W. Bush, an anti-ICC campaign led by none other than John Bolton who was to become Trump’s notorious
National Security Advisor, and has suddenly become his antagonist-in-chief due
to his book depicting Trump’s array of impeachable offenses.
Remember that it was Bush who ‘un-signed’ the Rome Statute that Bill
Clinton had signed on behalf of the U.S. on the last day of his presidency, but
even he did so with the proviso that the treaty should not be submitted to the
Senate for ratification and hence not be applicable until the ICC had proved
itself a responsible actor in Washington’s judgmental eyes.
Congress and the
State Department stepped in to make sure that American military personnel would
not be charged with international crimes both by threatening preventive action
and entering into over 100 agreements with other countries to ensure immunity
of American soldiers and officials from ICC jurisdiction, coupled with a threat
to withhold aid if a government refused to agree to such a law-defying
arrangement.
Hillary Clinton also put her oar in the bloody water some years ago,
insisting that since the U.S. was more of a global presence than other
countries, it was important to be sure that its military personnel would never
be brought before the ICC, no matter what their alleged offenses.
The global military reach of the U.S. by way of hundreds of overseas
bases, special forces covert operations, and naval patrols around the globe
should enjoy immunity on an individual level, as impunity on a collective level
of state responsibility.
In other words,
non-accountability and double standards have deeper political roots in the
bipartisan soil of American security politics than the extreme
anti-internationalism of Trump. These tactics of self-exemption from legal
accountability can be usefully traced back at least as far as the ‘victors’
justice’ approach to war crimes during the Second World War where only the
crimes of the defeated were subjected to accountability at Nuremberg and Tokyo,
a step hailed in the West as a great advance despite its flaws.
It was deeply flawed considering that arguably the most horrifying act
during the four years of hostilities were the atomic bombs dropped on Japanese
cities.
Is there any serious doubt that if Germany or Japan had struck cities of
the Allies with the bomb, and yet lost the war, those responsible for the
decisions would have been held accountable, and punished in a harsh manner?
In some ways as bad from a law angle was the U.S. orchestrated trial of
Saddam Hussein and his closest advisors for their state crimes, although the
2003 Iraq War arose from acts of aggression by the United States and the UK, and
subsequent crimes during the prolonged occupation of Iraq.
In other words,
the idea of unconditional impunity for the crimes of the United States is complemented
by self-righteous accountability for those leaders of countries defeated in war
by the United States. Such ‘exceptionalism’ affront the conscience of anyone
who shares the view that ideas of fairness and equality should be affirmed as
core values in the application of international criminal law.
As might be
expected, mainstream NGOs and liberal Democrats are not happy with such an
insulting and gratuitous slap in the face of international institutions that
have proved mainly useful in going after the wrongdoing of non-Western leaders,
especially in Africa. It should be remembered that African countries and their
leaders were the almost exclusive targets of ICC initiatives during its first
ten years, and it was from Africa that one formerly heard complaints and
threats of withdrawal from the treaty, but I doubt that ideas of sanctioning
the ICC ever entered the imaginary of understandable African displeasure at an implicit ethos of ‘white crimes don’t matter’!
David Sheffer, the American diplomat who headed the U.S. delegation that negotiated the Rome Statute on behalf
of the Clinton presidency, but who was careful to preserve American
geopolitical interests in the process expressed the liberal opposition to
Trump’s arrogant style of pushback with these words: “The [Trump] Executive
Order will go down in history as a shameful act of fear and retreat from the
rule of law.”
There is an element of hypocrisy present in such a denunciation due to
withholding the pre-Trump record of the one-sided imposition of international
criminal law.
True enough, it
was the prior Republican president that had locked horns with the ICC some
years ago, but the ambivalence of Congress and the Clintons is part of a
consistent American insistence of what I would label as ‘negative
exceptionalism,’ that is, the right to act
internationally without accountability while taking a hard line on holding
others accountable; impunity for the powerful, accountability for the weak.
It used to be
that American
exceptionalism was associated with a commitment
to decency, human rights, the rule of law, and a visionary approach to the world order that was missing elsewhere, and could serve as a catalyst for peace and
justice in the world.
Such self-glorification has long since been forfeited at the altar of
global geopolitics, whose players make up the rules as they go along while
showing contempt for the legal constraints that are deemed suitable for the
regulation of adversaries.
Finally, it should be appreciated that while geopolitical actors can get
away with murder, their rogue behavior is a precedent for all states, and weakens
what procedures exist to uphold the most basic norms of international law.
Richard Falk is Albert G.
Milbank Professor Emeritus of International Law at Princeton University and
Visiting Distinguished Professor in Global and International Studies at the
University of California, Santa Barbara.
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