What is the International Criminal Court and why does it worry Israeli leaders?
Amid reports that UN court will issue arrest warrants for senior officials, Netanyahu has vowed Israel won’t accept ‘any attempt to undermine its inherent right of self-defense’
Israeli officials sound increasingly concerned that the International Criminal Court could issue arrest warrants for some of the country’s leaders nearly seven months into the war in Gaza, sparked by Hamas’s October 7 onslaught.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has written in general terms of his opposition to ICC action against officials and Israel Defense Forces troops, and the Foreign Ministry has said it is also tracking reports of pending action.
The ICC was established in 2002 as the permanent court of last resort to prosecute individuals responsible for the world’s most heinous atrocities – war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and the crime of aggression.
The Rome Statute creating the ICC was adopted in 1998 and entered into force when it got 60 ratifications on July 1, 2002. The UN General Assembly endorsed the ICC, but the court is independent.
Without a police force, the ICC relies on member states to arrest suspects, which has proven to be a major obstacle to prosecutions.
Netanyahu said Friday on the social platform X that Israel “will never accept any attempt by the ICC to undermine its inherent right of self-defense.”
“While the ICC will not affect Israel’s actions, it would set a dangerous precedent,” he wrote.
The Foreign Ministry said late Sunday that it had informed missions abroad of “rumors” that the court could order the arrest of senior political and military officials. The ministry did not give a source for the rumors.
Israeli and foreign officials reportedly believe the ICC is weighing arrest warrants for Hamas leaders as well.
In a statement emailed to The Associated Press, the court’s prosecution office declined to comment in detail.
What is the ICC?
The ICC’s 124 member states have signed on to the Rome Statute.
Dozens of countries did not sign and do not accept the court’s jurisdiction over war crimes, genocide and other crimes.
They include Israel, the United States, Russia and China.
The ICC becomes involved when nations are unable or unwilling to prosecute crimes on their territory. Israel argues that it has a functioning court system, and disputes over a nation’s ability or willingness to prosecute have fueled past disputes between the court and individual countries.
In 2020, then-US president Donald Trump slapped economic and travel sanctions on the ICC prosecutor and another senior prosecution office staffer. The ICC staff were looking into US and allies’ troops and intelligence officials for possible war crimes in Afghanistan.
US President Joe Biden, whose administration has provided Israel with crucial military and political support in its war against the Hamas terror group in Gaza, lifted the sanctions in 2021.
The ICC has 17 ongoing investigations, has issued a total of 42 arrest warrants and taken 21 suspects into custody. Its judges have convicted 10 suspects and acquitted four.
In its early years, the court was criticized for focusing on crimes in Africa — 10 of its investigations are in African nations — but now it has investigations in Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Latin America.
What is the ICC’s relationship to Israel, the West Bank and Gaza?
The UN General Assembly raised the Palestinian Authority’s status in 2012 from a UN observer to a non-member observer state. That opened the door for the PA to join international organizations, including the ICC.
The ICC accepted “The State of Palestine” as a member in 2015, a year after the Palestinians accepted the court’s jurisdiction.
The court’s chief prosecutor at the time, Fatouh Bensouda, announced in 2021 that she was opening an investigation into possible crimes in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. That investigation starts from June 13, 2014 — one day after Palestinian terrorists kidnapped and murdered three Israeli teenagers in the West Bank, meaning the ICC will not look into the crimes that sparked Israel’s Operation Protective Edge that summer.
Israel often levels accusations of bias at UN and international bodies, and Netanyahu slammed the decision to probe “fake war crimes” as hypocritical and antisemitic.
Current ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan visited Ramallah and Israel in December, meeting Palestinian Authority officials and families of Israelis killed or taken hostage by Hamas terrorists in the October 7 massacre, which saw some 3,000 terrorists burst across the border into Israel, killing some 1,200 people and seizing 253 hostages amid amid acts of brutality and sexual assault.
At the time, Khan called Hamas’s actions “some of the most serious international crimes that shock the conscience of humanity, crimes which the ICC was established to address,” and called for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages.
Khan said “international humanitarian law must still apply” in the Gaza war and “the Israeli military knows the law that must be applied.”
After the visit, Khan said an ICC investigation into possible crimes by Hamas terrorists and IDF forces “is a priority for my office.”
Who else has the ICC charged?
A year ago the court issued a warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin on charges of responsibility for the abductions of children from Ukraine. Russia responded by issuing its own arrest warrants for Khan and ICC judges.
Other high-profile leaders charged by the court include ousted Sudanese strongman Omar al-Bashir on allegations including genocide in his country’s Darfur region.
Former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was captured and killed by rebels shortly after the ICC issued a warrant for his arrest on charges linked to the brutal suppression of anti-government protests in 2011.
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