30-01-2025
WASHINGTON: Democrats in the United States Senate have blocked the passage of a bill that would sanction the International Criminal Court (ICC) over its issuance of arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for alleged war crimes in Gaza.
The vote on Tuesday saw the bill gain 54 votes in favour and 45 opposed, falling short of the 60 votes needed to advance to a final vote.
United Nations experts, European officials, and the current and former presidents of the ICC’s management body have all come out against the bill, warning it would set a dangerous precedent at a time of increased importance for the international legal order but many of the Democrats who voted against the measure still accused the court of taking unfair actions against Israel by issuing warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant. The court simultaneously issued a warrant for Hamas commander Mohammed Deif for his role in the attack on October 7, 2023, against southern Israel.
The ICC has denied bias in its actions.
Speaking before the vote, Chuck Schumer, the Democratic Party leader in the Republican-controlled Senate, said the sanctions bill is “one I largely support and would like to see become law”.
“However, as much as I oppose the ICC bias against Israel, as much as I want to see that institution drastically reformed and reshaped, the bill before us is poorly drafted and deeply problematic,” he said, arguing the bill could hurt both US allies and businesses that deal with the court.
He called for Republicans to go back to the negotiating table to tweak the language in the legislation.
Speaking on the Senate floor in support of the bill, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a Republican, said the targeting of a “close US ally should concern all of us”.
“While the ICC is targeting Israelis today, it could easily set its sights on Americans,” he said.
Senator John Fetterman was the sole Democrat to vote in favour of the legislation. He swiftly earned praise from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the vastly influential pro-Israel lobby.
In a post on the social media platform X, the group thanked Fetterman for his “principled pro-Israel leadership and for standing with Israel against the ICC’s baseless attacks”.
In the past, President Donald Trump took a hard line against the ICC, imposing sanctions on its officials in 2020 over concerns that the court was probing US military actions abroad.
The administration of former President Joe Biden later revoked that order, but Trump reversed Biden’s decision upon taking office last week.
His move has so far been symbolic, as the reversal did not automatically re-impose the sanctions.
Neither the US nor Israel are parties to the Rome Statute, which established the ICC.
However, the court has argued that, because the alleged war crimes occurred in Gaza, Israeli officials could be held liable for their actions.
The court had used a similar argument in issuing arrest warrants for Russian officials for alleged abuses in Ukraine, a move hailed by US officials at the time. Russia is not a party to the ICC, but Ukraine is.
In issuing warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant, ICC prosecutors have argued that Israeli restrictions on aid to Gaza, including water and medicine, amounted to starvation as a method of warfare. (Int’l News Desk)