By Philip Giraldi
June 05, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - There is apparently no
limit to what the United States and Israel can get
away with without any consequences. The United
States has been waging devastating economic warfare
against Iran and Venezuela while also blaming China
for a global health crisis that it is unwilling to
help address
due to its withdrawal from the World Health
Organization. Israel meanwhile is planning on
illegally annexing significant parts of the
Palestinian West Bank in July, with a green light
from the Trump Administration, and no one in Europe
or elsewhere is even interested in initiating
serious sanctions that might lead to the postponing
of that decision. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has even stated flatly that the remaining
Palestinians who would be annexed will not become
Israeli citizens – they will instead be “subjects”
of the Jewish state with no guaranteed rights or
privileges.
The American Establishment is totally committed
to the principle that the United States and Israel
should have a “free hand” in dealing with other
countries in their respective spheres of influence.
That effectively means controlling the narrative so
that the U.S. and the Jewish state always appear to
be victims of other nations’ unprincipled behavior
and also creating an environment where there can be
no effective legal challenges to aggressive action.
Indeed, the one organization that was
specifically set up to deal with issues like
aggressive wars and ethnic cleansing, the
International Criminal Court (ICC) at the Hague, has
been specifically targeted by both Washington and
Jerusalem to deny it any jurisdiction in situations
where either country is involved. Neither Israel nor
the United States has recognized the ICC for the
obvious reason that they are primary sources of
egregious human rights and international law
violations. Israel is particularly concerned over
its numerous war crimes, to include its violation of
the Fourth Geneva Convention which forbids “the
transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying
Power of parts of its own civilian population into
the territory it occupies, or the deportation or
transfer of all or parts of the population of the
occupied territory within or outside this
territory.”
The ICC has, in fact,
been targeted recently by both the Trump
Administration and Congress. Two weeks ago, a
bipartisan group of 69 United States senators
submitted to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo a letter condemning
the “dangerous politicization of the court” that
“unfairly targets Israel.” The Senators urged Pompeo
to continue his “vigorous support of Israel as it
faces the growing possibility of investigations and
prosecutions by the International Criminal Court.”
The letter included the claim that “actions
currently underway could lead to the prosecution of
Israeli nationals…” even though “the ICC does not
enjoy legitimate jurisdiction in this case.”
The assertion that the ICC does not have
jurisdiction is questionable at best as the
“Palestinian State” has observer status and is a
member of international bodies at the United
Nations. It is also a signatory to the
Rome Statute that established the ICC. The
Senate letter itself was predictably written by
Ester Kurz, the legislative director of the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which is
the leading Israel advocacy group in the United
States. A similar letter was
also circulated in the House of Representatives,
which added an “American issue” by criticizing the
ICC’s intention to investigate United States war
crimes in Afghanistan. It received 262 signatures.
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Anticipating the threat to Israeli
interests, the U.S. Congress has long made
security and other assistance to the
Palestinian Authority conditional,
suspending all support if “the Palestinians
initiate an International Criminal Court
(ICC) judicially authorized investigation,
or actively support such an investigation,
that subjects Israeli nationals to an
investigation for alleged crimes against
Palestinians.” As Donald Trump has de facto
cut off virtually all assistance, including
the humanitarian aid given to refugees, the
punishment for going to the ICC is
essentially moot and the Palestinians have
consequently moved ahead with their
complaint in an attempt to upset the
timetable for Israeli annexation.
The Senators’ letter surfaced at the same time as
a warning was issued by Pompeo to the ICC that
focused on Israel but was clearly intended to derail
any attempts to look at
American war crimes in Afghanistan. He claimed
that the ICC is a political body, not a legitimate
judicial institution, and accused chief prosecutor
Fatou Bensouda of maliciously investigating “Israeli
war crimes in Gaza, the West Bank and East
Jerusalem.” His complaint paralleled the Senatorial
letter, which is perhaps no coincidence, in claiming
that the court has no jurisdiction and the
Palestinians are not “sovereign” and therefore have
no standing to go to the court in the first place.
And Pompeo concluded with a threat: “A court that
attempts to exercise its power outside its
jurisdiction is a political tool that makes a
mockery of the law and due process. If the ICC
continues down its current course, we will exact
consequences.”
Israel has also claimed, as does the United
States, that it is not subject to ICC “trial”
because it has a functioning court system that is
capable of punishing war criminals. Of course, the
fact is that Israel does not do so and the U.S. only
does so when embarrassed. The most recent American
war criminal was convicted by military courts and
then pardoned by President Donald Trump. He was even
feted at the White House.
Bensouda announced in November 2017 that she
would proceed with an investigation of alleged U.S.
war crimes in Afghanistan. The Trump Administration
expressed its anger by criticizing her in tweets,
canceling her visa to the United States, and
threatening legal action against her, her staff and
even ICC judges. The White House warned that if the
ICC even dares to detain an American citizen the
United States would use military force to release
him or her. President Trump, Pompeo, and John Bolton
all called the ICC “political, corrupt,
irresponsible, unaccountable, and lacking
transparency, and therefore illegitimate.” The
critique sounded oddly enough like an accurate
description of the Trump Administration itself.
Bensouda, who has been
timid about confronting Israel in the past, is
now reportedly proceeding with the Palestinian
complaint. She has also been authorized to proceed
with her investigation of American crimes in
Afghanistan. If there is to be an actual trial,
high-level politicians, officials, and military
officers from both Israel and the U.S. could be
summoned for questioning. If the summonses are
ignored, which is probable, the prosecutor could
then issue international arrest warrants, meaning
that they could be arrested and extradited to the
Court if they were to travel to any of the 123
countries that are parties to the Rome Statute.
So, one can expect both the United States and
Israel to continue their defamation of the ICC, to
include the threats of armed response coming from
Washington. An attack on The Hague might be
unimaginable in the real world, but the past three
years have demonstrated that Donald Trump is capable
of almost anything. Until then, one hopes that
Bensouda will continue her work to expose the crimes
that continue to be committed in both Palestine and
Afghanistan. Embarrassing the United States and
Israel in a very visible and highly respected public
forum might be the only way to wake up the citizens
of those two countries to the terrible things that
have been and continue to be done in their names.