As if legal systems, and international
bodies like the United Nations, needed any assistance in further
damaging the public’s perception of them, the International Criminal
Court has sullied the name of the rule of law even more.
It’s really time for the United States to
withdraw its funding to kangaroo courts like the ICC and the
International Court of Justice. The names of these institutions are
laughable misnomers (“justice”?), not unlike the Human Rights Council of
the United Nations, which occasionally features humanitarians like Iran
and Syria as members in good standing.
The Senate should expedite passage of the
Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act. It already has bipartisan
congressional support. Under this measure, ICC officials, and their
outside experts, who abuse their authority by prosecuting leaders from
the United States and its democratic allies, would be unwelcome in
America.
George Clooney’s wife, Amal, for instance, would kindly be asked to leave. More about that later.
Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu learned that the ICC had issued a warrant for his arrest.
Yes, the prime minister of Israel, a U.S. ally, and his former defense
minister, Yoav Gallant, are now international outlaws. If this legal
farce can happen to them, it will most certainly happen to an American
leader sometime very soon.
What judicial wisdom was revealed by the
anti-Western, antisemitic haters from The Hague? Netanyahu and Gallant
are being charged with starvation as a method of warfare; crimes against
humanity; and “intentionally directing an attack against the civilian
population” of Gaza.
Each of these charges stem from Israel’s retaliation against Hamas for the Oct. 7 massacre.
Demonstrating the ICC’s balancing of the
scales of justice, one of Hamas’s former military leaders has also been
charged, but, unfortunately, he is already dead.
It doesn’t matter. What matters is that
the court is drawing a moral equivalence between terrorists who behead
Israeli babies, gang rape scores of Israeli teenagers and murder,
mutilate and torch 1,200 Israelis, and the undeniably just war Israel is
waging in self-defense.
This is the first time in the court’s
existence, dating back to 2002 with the Rome Statute, signed by 125
nations—the United States and Israel, for obvious reasons, are not
signatories—that a leader of a democratic nation has been charged.
Democratic governance is important,
because the ICC was supposed to prosecute leaders of nations that do not
have functioning, independent legal systems of their own. Israel most
certainly does, and several investigations of its wartime conduct are
already underway, directed by Israeli legal experts who are not known to
cut the Jewish state any breaks.
Because Israel never signed the Rome
Statute, the ICC has no jurisdiction or enforcement powers over
Netanyahu and Gallant, anyway. In its nearly 25 years of holding court,
the ICC doesn’t have much to show for itself. Take Omar al-Bashir, the
former head of state in Sudan responsible for the genocide in Darfur. He
has been at large since 2009, and it took six years for the ICC to even
obtain an enforceable arrest warrant.
Of course, as a matter of law and
procedure, this case against Netanyahu and Gallant is wholly deficient.
Factually, it is groundless. Starvation as warfare requires a proving of
intent that Netanyahu is fighting a war specifically to starve Gazans,
and that he is “willfully impeding relief.” But Israel is fighting
terrorists who steal the food that Israel is allowing into the enclave.
Under international law, and siege warfare, given that this aid is
ultimately feeding terrorists, Israel isn’t obligated to allow any
humanitarian assistance at all—and yet it has been doing so since the
war began.
The factual claim of starvation itself is
in dispute. Over the summer, an agency of the United Nations, the
Integrated Food Security Classification System, determined that
starvation in Gaza has simply not materialized, despite alarms sounding
to the contrary. The ICC knows there is no actual evidence that a single
Gazan has died of starvation as a result of Israel’s border policies.
And there is even less evidence that Israel is fighting this war to
intentionally inflict starvation on the Palestinian people.
The same specific intent requirement
applies to crimes against humanity. Even dishonest brokers assessing the
war in Gaza realize that Hamas started it. Israel is targeting
terrorists, not civilians. Casualties of war are not victims of
genocide, and the collateral damage in Gaza would be considerably less
if civilians were not being used as human shields, and other civilians,
of the true believer variety, wouldn’t so agreeably volunteer for
human-shield duty.
How could the ICC get this so wrong? Aside
from antisemitism, which is a default conclusion for many questions
involving Jews, the ICC recruited four legal consultants to evaluate the
case before proceeding with arrest warrants. The one thing they all
shared in common: years of prejudging Israel of war crimes. The
selection of the experts made the prosecution a forgone conclusion.
One is on record supporting BDS against
Israel. Another falsely accused Israel of shutting off Gaza’s water
supply. Israel controls less than 10% of Gaza’s water, and it has no
legal obligation to hydrate Hamas. Another “expert” needs to reread the
Law of War Manual, because it is not illegal to impose a siege on a
civilian population when they are embedded within a terrorist fighting
force. He had also already declared that Israel was committing war
crimes before he took on the ICC assignment.
George Clooney's wife Amal has a long history demonizing the Jewish state and urged the ICC to issue an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
And the last expert, Amal Clooney, has her own long history demonizing the Jewish state.
The ICC’s Code of Conduct states that the
prosecutor’s office should not “negatively affect confidence in [its]
independence,” and should “refrain from expressing an opinion” that
could taint its impartiality.
So much for that.
This case sets a dangerous precedent.
Urban warfare against terrorists where collateral damage is a natural
occurrence is being characterized as a crime against humanity. Donald
Trump could easily have been charged following the Battle of Mosul,
which eliminated Islamic State, but resulted in thousands of civilian
deaths.
For those dissatisfied that Trump largely
escaped all those prosecutions against him in the United States, the ICC
has just given you something new to root for.
Originally published by the Jewish Journal.
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