By Marco Carnelos
July 02, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Iran has issued an
arrest warrant for US President Donald Trump and dozens
of others it believes carried out the drone strike that
killed Iranian General Qassem Soleimani in
January.
The Iranian prosecutor was reported as saying that
Iran requested an Interpol “red notice” be put out for
Trump and 36 others, which represents the highest-level
arrest request issued by Interpol.
The move will no doubt be dismissed in Washington,
despite the fact that the actions by the US in January
on Iraqi soil had all the appearance of an extrajudicial
assassination of a senior government official.
Beacon of the free world?
In the course of history, there have been nations and
people who have been exceptional. Switzerland has never
bothered any other nation, nor lectured anyone about
policies that should be pursued; it has constantly
minded its own business, creating a highly admired and
envied society.
In view of the disasters that certain other nations
have inflicted on humankind, Switzerland fully deserves
such a title. According to global perception, however,
the truly exceptional nation on earth is not
Switzerland, but the United States of America.
During the 20th century, the US became the beacon of
the free world, providing an outstanding contribution
towards defeating Nazi-fascist totalitarianism and an
indispensable one in making the Soviet communist regime
collapse. It has created and enforced the rules of the
current international order, offering an irresistible
model of an open and free society shaped by the market
economy, aimed at growth and progress.
Just three decades ago, after the Berlin Wall and the
Soviet Union fell, American success seemed so widespread
that a political theorist even suggested that “history
had ended”. But unfortunately, since the end of the
Cold War, US soft power - the country’s ability to
inspire by example - has lost much of its original
appeal.
The protests now raging after the killing of
George Floyd show that - civil war notwithstanding -
the country has not fully reckoned with one of its
original sins: racial discrimination
The decline had already begun with former President
Bill Clinton, who subscribed to a selective
multilateralism led unilaterally by Washington, as shown
in the bloody Balkan crisis, the failed Middle East
peace process, the Rwanda genocide and the illegal war
in Kosovo. Clinton also encouraged financial
deregulation, which later produced economic disaster and
widespread inequality.
Former President George W Bush took an even more
unilateral approach, built on a post-9/11 “with us or
against us” policy, paving the way for bloody and
endless wars in the greater Middle East. Under his
watch, the much-vaunted American neoliberal economic
model crashed with the 2008 financial crisis.
His successor, Barack Obama, tried to smooth some
angles, to recover some lost soft power - but US policy
changed more in words than deeds, and endless wars
continued, adding the Libya disaster to those in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
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The Obama administration signed the nuclear deal
with Iran, but running counter to the UN, did not
abolish sanctions, crippling the landmark agreement
from the start.
Massive protests
Since 2017, US President Donald Trump has pursued
Bush’s policies on steroids, putting the US at odds with
the rest of the international community and the
rule-based world order. While he has been engaged in
“making America great again”, the country’s internal
contradictions, unreformed economic model and cultural
polarisations have
exploded, due mainly - but not only - to a
disastrously managed
coronavirus pandemic.
The protests now raging after the killing of George
Floyd show that - its civil war and civil rights
movement notwithstanding - the country has not fully
reckoned with one of its original sins: racial
discrimination.
There is a widespread feeling that the US is no
longer the greatest nation in the world, and it is
doubtful that its “exceptionalism” is still
justified. But the Trump administration seems not to
have any doubt that it still stands above all other
nations.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) recently
opened an inquiry into alleged war crimes committed
in Afghanistan since 2003. The US reaction was an
executive order, issued on 11 June, determining that
any attempt by the ICC to prosecute US personnel without
US consent, or the personnel of allied countries
(presumably Israel), “constitutes an unusual and
extraordinary threat to the national security and
foreign policy of the United States”. The order provides
for sanctions against any individual involved in the ICC
inquiry.
The US
accusation that the ICC probe was politically
motivated, and the claim that by not being part of the
ICC the US cannot be subject to its jurisdiction, are
both weak arguments. The probe is aimed not only at
alleged US troops’ misbehaviour, but also that of the
Taliban and Afghan security forces.
Furthermore, the ICC’s statute authorises the
prosecution of crimes committed by citizens of states
that are not signatories if they occur on the territory
of a state that recognises the court’s jurisdiction.
Double standard
The political reasoning that has led the beacon of
the free world, democracy and rule of law to consider an
international tribunal charged with investigating
certain ugly crimes as a threat to its national security
is beyond any rational understanding.
The more depressing aspect is that this view has an
incredible bipartisan consensus in Washington - an
attitude similar to a soccer game where the referee’s
decisions must be followed by only one of the two teams.
With hundreds of thousands of soldiers spread around
the world, the US argument might appear more
understandable if the US government did not claim a
double standard, asking that its jurisdiction have
universal application.
Washington pretends that its unilateral sanctions
against Iran require global compliance, and for this
purpose, it is implementing secondary sanctions against
anyone who breaks that expectation - a position
incompatible with international law. One of the most
striking examples was the 2018
arrest in Canada of Chinese national Meng Wanzhou,
the daughter of Huawei’s founder, for allegedly
violating US sanctions against Iran.
If the US dislikes Iran and its policy, it has every
right to take measures against it, but it cannot dictate
that all other states must follow the US line or else
incur sanctions.
Moral leadership
The ICC’s statute has been signed by 123 states,
two-thirds of the international community. The court has
the commendable purpose, mandated by the UN, to
prosecute horrors such as genocide, war crimes and
crimes against humanity.
Is the US really so exceptional, so error-free,
that it cannot tolerate any criticism of its conduct
and policies?
It is difficult to understand why a great democracy
like the US should be concerned by the court’s activity
and decide to sanction it. When will US political elites
understand that such behaviour can only further damage
their decreasing soft power and fuel resentment against
their nation?
Is the US really so exceptional, so error-free, that
it cannot tolerate any criticism of its conduct and
policies? Any nation that claims to hold moral
leadership, and feels confident about its credentials,
should not threaten its allies and partners into
supporting its case.
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