By Uzay Yasar AysevJuly 31, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - On June 11, President
Donald Trump issued an
executive order (E.O.) authorizing the imposition of
sanctions in the form of visa/travel restrictions and
asset freezes targeting International Criminal Court
(ICC) officials as well as other persons that contribute
to the Court’s investigations against the United States
and its allies. During the announcement of the sanctions
regime, Attorney General William Barr
indicated that the U.S. Department of Justice
initiated domestic investigations into officials at the
ICC’s Office of the Prosecutor for corruption and
malfeasance.
This is the Trump administration’s latest salvo in
its war against the ICC, which can be traced back to a
September 2018
speech given by then-National Security Advisor John
Bolton in response to the ICC Prosecutor’s
request to initiate an investigation into U.S.
conduct in Afghanistan. In his speech, Bolton outlined a
number of measures aimed at shielding U.S. nationals as
well as the nationals of U.S. allies (presumably
Israelis), from investigation or prosecution by the ICC.
These measures included prohibiting ICC officials from
entering the United States, sanctioning their property
located within the United States, and prosecuting them
in the U.S. criminal system. This plan’s rollout was
initiated in March 2019, when Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo announced that the United States
would restrict visas for ICC staff members,
including the
Prosecutor herself, who were involved in the Court’s
investigation into the nationals of the United States or
its allies. The newly announced sanctions regime
represents the second step in the implementation of this
plan, reacting to the ICC Appeals Chamber’s March 2020
authorization of an investigation into the situation
in Afghanistan.
This article assesses the possible effects of the
U.S. sanctions regime on the ICC investigations in
Afghanistan and
Palestine with a view to ascertain whether the Trump
administration officials who are responsible for its
instatement could be prosecuted for contempt before the
ICC. In doing so, the article builds upon the
analysis of Sergey Vasiliev, which was published on
Just Security in September 2018 following
Bolton’s speech.
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Offenses Against Court Officials
In his article, Vasiliev argued that Bolton’s threats
against the ICC constitute contempt of court under
article 70(1)(d) of the
Rome Statute since they “could impede, intimidate,
or corruptly influence ICC judges in relation to their
determination of whether to authorize the Prosecutor to
investigate in Afghanistan … [or] dissuade the ICC
Prosecutor from making progress in the investigation
against U.S. service members.” Additionally, Vasiliev
warned that if the Trump administration actually adopts
the measures outlined in Bolton’s speech, it would
“amount to retaliation against ICC officials on account
of performance of their duties in relation to the
situation in Afghanistan” and constitute an offense
under Article 70(1)(e) of the Statute.
This concern appears to have now materialized with
the issuance of Trump’s E.O. Section 1(a)(i)(A)-(B) of
the order allows the imposition of sanctions on any
foreign person who has “directly engaged in any effort
by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute
United States personnel … [or] any personnel of a
country that is an ally of the United States without the
consent of that country’s government.” The latter part
of the provision presumably refers to Israel.
There is no doubt that the primary target of this
provision is the Court officials, including judges, who
play a role in advancing the ICC investigations and
prosecutions carried out against U.S. and Israeli
personnel in the Afghanistan and Palestine situations.
The opening text of the E.O. itself refers to the
situation in Afghanistan, and complaints from U.S.
officials about the work of the Court often refer to
both situations.
The E.O. also extends the sanctions to anyone who
“materially assist[s], sponsor[s], or provide[s]
financial, material, or technological support for, or
goods or services to or in support of” those whose
property is blocked (see Section 1(a)(i)(C)).
Accordingly, U.S. officials may target any non-U.S.
individual or entity who enters into any sort of
commercial transaction with the ICC officials who are
placed on the U.S. sanctions list. In order to not face
sanctions themselves, individuals or other entities may
avoid engaging in any commercial transactions with the
sanctioned Court officials, which may have serious
implications on their personal and professional lives.
Additionally, the announced initiation of criminal
investigations against the Court officials for the
simple reason that they are carrying out their functions
under the Statute may cause serious risks to their
liberty and personal security considering the global
reach and influence of the U.S. authorities.
These measures have clearly been designed to impede,
intimidate, or influence ICC officials involved in the
Afghanistan and Palestine investigations with a view to
stop them from performing their duties or to retaliate
against them in the event they do perform those duties.
The Court itself appears to be convinced of this since
it
characterized the U.S. sanctions as “an escalation
and an unacceptable attempt to interfere with
the rule of law and the Court’s judicial proceedings …
with the declared aim of influencing the actions
of ICC officials in the context of the Court’s
independent and objective investigations and impartial
judicial proceedings,” (emphasis added). The Prosecutor
reiterated these remarks by characterizing the U.S.
measures as “naked attempts to interfere with the
court’s judicial and prosecutorial independence to meet
political objectives.”
Such conduct is criminalized under Article 70(1)(d)
and (e) of the Statute. These offenses could be proven
without a need to demonstrate the targeted Court
officials were in fact affected by the acts of the
perpetrator. As the Commentary on the Law of the
International Criminal Court
lays out, carrying out the prohibited conduct in
itself is sufficient, meaning that the U.S. officials
who are implicated in instating the sanctions regime
have already incurred liability under these provisions.
Interference with the Witnesses and Evidence
Collection Process
The potential targets of the sanctions regime is not
limited to the Court officials. As noted above, Section
1(a)(i)(A) allows sanctioning of anyone who “directly
engages” with the ICC investigation into Afghanistan and
Israel. What constitutes “direct engagement,” however,
is not clarified within the order.
The use of such wide an imprecise language allows
U.S. authorities to sanction anyone who provides any
support to the ICC Prosecutor’s investigations into U.S.
and Israeli nationals. This, arguably, includes
witnesses providing information to the Court on the
alleged crimes committed by U.S. or Israeli personnel in
Afghanistan and Palestine respectively. As a result,
fearing possible U.S. sanctions, potential witnesses may
be unwilling to come forward and give testimony to the
Court. Those who have already done so, on the other
hand, may face sanctions for their engagement with the
Court.
These acts by the United States may incur liability
under Article 70(1)(c) of the Statute, which
criminalizes “obstructing or interfering with the
attendance or testimony of a witness, [and] retaliating
against a witness for giving testimony.” The Court’s
decisions in the
case against Jean-Pierre Bemba, in which the
politician and former warlord was convicted with others
of corruptly influencing witnesses, confirm this. The
Trial Court’s judgment
verified that it is prohibited to directly or
indirectly threaten, pressure, or intimidate the
physical wellbeing or property of witnesses in order to
deter them from providing full and truthful information
to the Court or punishing them for doing so ex post
facto (para. 45; see also the confirmation of
charges
decision, para. 30). That judgment also
found that there is no need to prove that the
witness actually felt intimidated or was deterred by the
perpetrator’s conduct (para. 48). (As the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has
indicated, however, the relevant conduct must be of
sufficient gravity to likely intimidate or deter the
witness from giving evidence (para. 18).) Finally, the
Appeal Chamber
elaborated that the term “witness” in this context
includes not only actual witnesses but also potential
witnesses and, more generally, anyone who knows, or is
believed to know, something of relevance to the
investigations or judicial proceedings before the ICC
(para. 720).
The E.O.’s provision for sanctioning non-U.S.
individuals and entities who materially support those
involved in ICC investigations into U.S. and Israeli
personnel may constitute further criminal interference
with the Prosecutor’s collection of evidence in the
Afghanistan and Palestine investigations under article
70(1)(c). The wide range of actors who may be implicated
under the E.O.’s section 1(a)(i)(C) includes States
Parties to the Rome Statute, NGOs or international
organizations that provide information or assistance to
the Prosecutor, and any company or individual whose
services are procured by the Court in relation these
investigations may be implicated under this provision.
The possibility of finding themselves on the crosshairs
of a superpower with vast capabilities, influence, and
reach may very well intimidate and dissuade such actors
from interacting with the Court.
Could the ICC Initiate Contempt Proceedings
Against U.S. Authorities?
There do not appear to be any jurisdictional
impediments to the ICC initiating contempt proceedings
against the U.S. officials implicated in the creation
and implementation of the sanctions regime. As discussed
above, the conduct of the U.S. authorities appears to
constitute at least three of the types of conduct
criminalized under Article 70 — that is, conduct
described in 70(1)(c), (d), and (e). Further, Article 70
of the Statute provides the ICC with jurisdiction over
offenses against its administration of justice
irrespective of the nationality of the perpetrator or
the territory in which the act was committed (see
ICC Rules of Procedures and Evidence, Rule 163).
The main impediment that the Court will likely face
in carrying out contempt proceedings against U.S.
authorities is related to enforcement. While a number of
States Parties have voiced serious concerns regarding
the U.S. sanctions towards the ICC — for example,
France, the
U.K., the
Netherlands, and the
European Union, which is comprised of many States
Parties — it is unlikely that any of them would be
willing or able to enforce an arrest warrant issued by
the Court against U.S. officials. This is for the simple
reason that doing so would amount to political suicide
under current circumstances, and indeed could put these
individuals and entities at risk of physical harm.
Furthermore, as Vasiliev has rightly pointed out,
Part IX of the Statute, which otherwise requires States
Parties to cooperate with ICC investigations and
prosecutions, does not apply to the Court’s exercise of
jurisdiction in offenses against the administration of
justice. Rather, pursuant to Article 70(2) of the
Statute, these cooperation issues are governed by the
domestic laws of the State whose cooperation is
requested. States Parties may rely on this provision in
justifying their refusal to cooperate with the Court in
bringing the indicted U.S. officials before the Court.
It should be remembered, however, that the ICC has
not shied away from investigating situations and
indicting suspects where the prospects for arrest were
very low in the past — for instance, the situations in
Sudan and
Myanmar. As the ex-Sudanese president
Omar Al-Bashir’s recent ousting from power and
possible transfer to the ICC has shown us, the political
context may change, and with it the prospects for arrest
and surrender. Considering Trump’s
unprecedented lack of popularity worldwide and
rapidly
diminishing chances of being re-elected, it is not
inconceivable that a similar situation may materialize
for some U.S. officials at some point in the future.
One concern Vasiliev raises in connection to this
point seems to have been resolved by the ICC Appeals
Chamber since the publication of his article. It is now
settled that that the heads of states and other
high-ranking officials of non-State Parties do not enjoy
immunity from arrest and surrender to the ICC before the
domestic courts of the States Parties to the Statute
where the Court is properly exercising its jurisdiction
(paras. 1-5). This is a valuable piece of jurisprudence
for national authorities of certain States Parties who
may be willing to take a stand and enforce the ICC’s
decisions against any U.S. officials indicted for
contempt. While this finding was made in the context of
a prosecution involving Article 5 crimes (war crimes,
genocide, and crimes against humanity), there is no
reason why the Court’s reasoning should not equally
apply to its exercise of jurisdiction over offenses
under Article 70. There would be no basis for the Court
to adopt different standards on immunities in relation
to various crimes under the Statute. Indeed, if this
were the case, the high-ranking officials of non-States
Parties pursued by the Court could freely commit any of
the offenses listed under article 70 to impede the
proceedings against them with impunity.
Conclusion
There is a plausible case to be made for the Court to
initiate contempt proceedings against the officials of
the Trump administration. As discussed, the
jurisdictional requirements are met. What ICC officials
need now is to muster the judicial courage to stand up
to an administration that time and again has
demonstrated it does not consider itself bound by the
rule of law, internationally or domestically, and to
strike back with the powers that are vested in them by
the Statute.
This surely is a perilous step to take since it will
further escalate the tension between the United States
and the ICC. Taking on a global superpower is not an
easy task for an international tribunal. The only
alternatives to fighting back, however, are either
inaction or appeasement — that is, halting
investigations against U.S. and Israeli personnel. Some
may say that the ICC should take this path for
self-preservation. Others realize that neither of these
options are any good in the long run.
Inaction will allow the U.S. attacks against the ICC
to further escalate as the Afghanistan and Palestine
investigations move forward. Appeasement, on the other
hand, will only damage the Court’s reputation and
credibility, and open it up to further accusations of
pro-Western bias. The Court must fight back. Not only
this will send a strong message to those who believe
that they can bully the ICC into submission but it will
also bolster the Court’s status in the eyes of the
international community.
Uzay Yasar Aysev is a legal
consultant at Global Rights Compliance LLP,
specialising in international criminal law,
international humanitarian law and international
human rights law. Uzay holds an LLM degree on public
international law from Leiden University and
previously worked in a number of international
organisations including the International Criminal
Court, the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, UNHCR and
the International Bar Association. -
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The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.