A
furious Biden insisted there was 'no moral equivalence' between Israel
and Hamas and hinted at sanctions against the court which could have
seen Clooney's wife deported from the US.
The Oscar winning actor vented his fury after being put through to Biden's senior counsellor Steve Ricchetti, the Washington Post reported, and his high-profile wife remains unrepentant about her role.
'I
do not accept that any conflict should be beyond the reach of the law,
nor that any perpetrator should be above the law,' she said in a
statement.
The A-list couple have long been among the President's biggest supporters and the actor donated more than $500,000 to Biden's 2020 election campaign.
He also co-hosted an online fundraiser that contributed $7 million to his 2020 war chest.
But
the row has cast doubt over whether he will take part in one of Biden's
biggest fundraising efforts of 2024 next Saturday when he was due to be
the star attraction at an LA gala alongside former president Barack Obama, TV host Jimmy Kimmel and actress Julia Roberts.
The
backlash to the court's unprecedented move continued this week when the
House passed a bill the would impose sanctions on the court.
But
the White House has rowed back on its initial fury claiming that
sanctions are 'not the right answer' to the court's 'overreach'.
It
said it would 'strongly oppose' a House bill it claims 'could require
sanctions against court staff, judges, witnesses, and US allies and
partners who provide even limited, targeted support to the court in a
range of aspects of its work'.
Congress last week gave Netanyahu an open invitation to address both houses and House Speaker Mike Johnson denounced Biden's backsliding.
'It's alarming that the Biden administration continues to undermine Israel and now, 155 House Democrats have voted to give the ICC a free pass to target our allies and undermine US national security interests,' he said.
Amal Clooney signed off a bid by
the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court last month to
seek the arrest of Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and the
country's defense minister Yoav Gallant, right, for war crimes in Gaza
Chief prosecutor Karim Khan, seen
on a 2022 visit to Ukraine, accused the pair of using 'starvation as a
method of warfare, together with other attacks and collective punishment
against the civilian population of Gaza
The row was sparked by the May 20 announcement that court prosecutor Karim Khan was seeking to charge Netanyahu
alongside Israeli defense minister Yoav Gallant, Hamas leader Yahya
Sinwar and two other Hamas leaders with war crimes and crimes against
humanity.
He accused the Israeli
government of using 'starvation as a method of warfare, together with
other attacks and collective punishment against the civilian population
of Gaza.
'They include malnutrition,
dehydration, profound suffering and an increasing number of deaths among
the Palestinian population, including babies, other children, and
women,' he added.
It soon emerged that Amal Clooney, a renowned human rights lawyer, was one of the six legal experts who helped the British prosecutor Karim Khan come to his decision.
'I
support the historic step that the Prosecutor of the International
Criminal Court has taken to bring justice to victims of atrocities in
Israel and Palestine,' she said in a statement issued by the couple's
Clooney Foundation.
'As a human rights
lawyer, I will never accept that one child's life has less value than
another's. I do not accept that any conflict should be beyond the reach
of the law, nor that any perpetrator should be above the law.'
The
actor and the President have known each other for years and the couple
visited the White House in December 2022 when he was awarded the Kennedy
Center Honors.
The actor and the politician,
pictured together in 2009, have been friends for years but the row has
cast doubt on Clooney's involvement in a star-studded fundraiser for
Biden's re-election that was due to take place in LA on Saturday
Months later Biden appointed him to the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Neither
Israel or the US recognize the court but, if the warrant is issued,
Netanyahu, Gallant and the Hamas leaders face arrest should they visit any of the 122 countries that do.
More than 36,000 people have been killed
by Israeli forces in Gaza since it invaded the Palestinian enclave in
response to the October 7 Hamas terror attack that claimed the lives of
1,200 people.
Israel has slammed the court's move as a 'baseless blood libel' against the country, while its President Isaac Herzog called the move 'outrageous,' insisting it 'cannot be accepted by anyone'.
'The
blood libel will not deter Israel from defending itself and
accomplishing all its just war objectives in Gaza,' an Israeli official
added.
Hamas too rejected the court's
move saying it 'strongly denounces the attempts of the Prosecutor of the
International Criminal Court to equate the victim with the
executioner'.
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