US bludgeons nations to
reject war crimes court By Alan Boyd
SYDNEY - The United States has used its military
clout in Asia to reinforce an extraordinary campaign of
sabotage against the world's only permanent war crimes
tribunal - Washington says it has no right to try US
nationals - but the cost may be scars in bilateral
foreign relations in Asia, and elsewhere.
One
year after the first judges were sworn in for the
International Criminal Court (ICC), only five Asian
countries have accepted its authority, the lowest
representation of any region worldwide.
Yet 13
states in South and East Asia, and a further five
Central Asian republics, have signed a contrary
agreement with the US that seeks to undermine the
court's jurisdiction by withholding the right to try US
nationals. They signed under a threat of aid withdrawals
involving tens of millions of dollars in the defense
field, threats that are already being carried out
against both neutral states and wavering allies alike in
other regions.
The US contends that it is
safeguarding the interests of Americans engaged in
peacekeeping and humanitarian missions in more than 100
countries - protecting them against what the State
Department terms "politically motivated investigations
and prosecutions" by the ICC.
Such is the White
House's determination to nullify the court, in an
exercise of diplomatic browbeating almost unprecedented
for a global treaty, that senior State Department
officials have taken to describing the issue as
"macro-constitutional" for US interests.
US
denounces ICC as un-American "Subjecting US
persons to [the ICC] treaty, with its unaccountable
prosecutor and its unchecked judicial power, is clearly
inconsistent with American standards of
constitutionalism," John R Bolton, the under secretary
of state for arms control and international security,
said in a recent address.
"Specifically, the ICC
is an organization that runs contrary to fundamental
American precepts and basic constitutional principles of
popular sovereignty, checks and balances, and national
independence," he added.
President George W Bush
is so concerned that American values are being
compromised that he has launched a three-pronged
offensive against the ICC with the support of a powerful
conservative business lobby. In May 2002 he reneged on
his predecessor's acceptance of the treaty: in effect,
the US un-signed former president Bill Clinton's
endorsement, while declaring it was no longer bound by
the ICC provisions.
Bush had already won a
perfunctory United Nations Security Council resolution
removing US peacekeeping troops from the court's
jurisdiction, only to see the UN retract the offer for
US troops who were serving in East Timor.
Washington responded by vetoing an extension of
the UN peacekeeping operation in Bosnia-Herzegovina
until the Security Council agreed to a blanket exemption
for US peacekeepers everywhere. The UN eventually
relented, but granted only a one-year reprieve.
Worried that the Security Council's mandate was
being abused, European leaders persuaded the US to
negotiate bilateral impunity exemptions through Article
98 of the ICC treaty, which had been inserted as a
release clause for exceptional cases.
As extra
ballast, the US Congress approved an American
Servicemember's Protection Act last August, requiring
the president to cut off military aid to countries that
have ratified the 1998 Rome Statute establishing the
ICC, but have not signed an Article 98 agreement.
US law declares war on international court
"The act would be funny were it not so tragic
and sinister a piece of legislation. The act literally
declares war on the court and tells the rest of the
world to go to hell," said Professor Makau Mutua, a
former chairman of the American Society of International
Law, who is leading a campaign against the US
legislation.
"In a very bizarre clause, it
authorizes a US 'invasion of The Hague', the seat of the
court, to free US and certain other allied personnel
detained or imprisoned by the court. Here, the American
president is authorized to 'use all means necessary and
appropriate' to free US personnel. What will the US do?
Bomb The Hague?" Mutua asked.
Participation of
US personnel in peacekeeping operations is prohibited
under the act unless they are guaranteed immunity from
the court, though the president is permitted to waive
retaliation when this is deemed "in the national
interest".
Defining the "national interest" has
proved to be an interesting exercise and mighty provide
some pointers on Washington's emerging spheres of
influence.
South Korea, Japan and the
Philippines, all viewed as key military allies or
potential partners in the war against terrorism, have
been granted exemptions; Seoul got the nod even though
it had ratified the ICC treaty.
Tajikistan,
expected to play a leading role in the Pentagon's base
expansion in Central Asia, also signed the treaty, but
was given a permanent waiver from Article 98
retaliation. Afghanistan and Iraq gained partial waivers
due to their involvement in anti-terrorism operations.
Some nations get waivers from aid cuts, some
don't But Pakistan, which has provided much of
the logistical and intelligence support for the US
offensives in Afghanistan and Iraq, was denied a waiver.
So were India and Thailand, two other countries of
strategic interest to Washington.
In total,10
Asian countries signed the ICC treaty when it was
inaugurated in 1998 as a permanent tribunal to
investigate and prosecute individuals accused of war
crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. China and
Iraq were among seven dissenting votes.
With the
Bush administration mounting intense diplomatic
pressure, only Afghanistan, East Timor, Tajikistan,
Cambodia and South Korea fully ratified the court's
provisions. Five others, Bangladesh, the Philippines,
Thailand, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, dropped out.
Mutua claimed that the US had distorted the
intent of Article 98, envisaged originally as a
legitimate escape cause for individual states placed in
a compromising legal position, to advance a selective
foreign policies agenda.
"That article, which
provides that the court may not proceed with a request
for the surrender of a suspect that would require the
state to act inconsistently with its obligations under
international agreements, was included in the treaty to
facilitate an orderly and rational process for dealing
with suspects among states cooperating with the court,"
he said.
"The provision was not intended to
permit states - such as the US - which have refused to
sign or ratify the court treaty, to negotiate impunity
agreements to exempt their citizens from the court or to
undermine it."
Applying the treaty in Asia would
be fraught with difficulty, as the countries where
individuals are most likely to be targeted for
prosecution, including Indonesia, Myanmar, North Korea,
West Papua and Sri Lanka, are ambivalent to outside
intervention.
ICC cannot try Khmer
Rouge As its mandate is not retroactive, the ICC
cannot try former members of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge, or
the 1970s military dictators in East and Southeast Asia
- even if they could be apprehended.
Nevertheless, there is evidence that the US
approach has damaged Washington's standing in this
region, even though it has not exacted punitive measures
against any Asian states. Aid has been withdrawn from
about two dozen countries, but only in Europe, Latin
America and Africa.
The intensity of the White
House's opposition to the ICC has also bewildered some
close Western allies that have ratified the treaty,
especially as its objectives appear to be loosely
aligned with those of the court.
European
lawyers designed the ICC with the intention of avoiding
accusations of politically motivated investigations and
"victors' justice" that marred the post-World War II
Nuremberg trials, and the more recent Yugoslavia and
Rwanda tribunals.
By assigning individual
responsibility, it was hoped that courts would shy away
from the difficult concept of assigning collective
blame, and make judgments without the pressures of
ideology or diplomacy.
Already this approach has
been undermined in Iraq, where the fragility of
Washington's position has become increasingly apparent
because of an unfortunate juxtaposition of events.
With one hand, the Bush administration has
blocked efforts to have Saddam Hussein tried by the ICC.
With the other, it is fielding accusations of human
rights abuses by US occupying troops that will not now
be heard in an open courtroom.
"The
administration's approach has created the impression
worldwide of an aggressive and highly objectionable
effort to hold US citizens - as well as foreign
nationals working for the US government - above the
law," Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth
complained in a letter to Secretary of State Colin
Powell in December.
"The policy has been
implemented with a 'big stick' and little concern for
potential damage to respect for the rule of law,
national democratic processes, human rights standards
and even the US government's bilateral relations with
its closest allies.
"If the United States
government is unwilling to contribute to strengthening
the rule of law through the ICC, it should certainly not
be a counterweight to progress," Roth argued.
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Mar 16, 2004
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