Curated News Summary

Trump administration launches effort to isolate International Criminal Court

Source: dawn.com Published Mon, 13 Jul 2026 21:47:31 +0500
Trump administration launches effort to isolate International Criminal Court

Why This Matters

The Trump administration's efforts to isolate the International Criminal Court (ICC) are significant because they reflect a broader challenge to the international rule of law and the accountability of powerful nations for their actions. This move also underscores the long-standing tensions between the US and the ICC, which has been a point of contention since the court's establishment in 2002. The US's actions may have far-reaching implications for global justice and the ability of the ICC to hold nations accountable for war crimes and human rights abuses.

The Trump administration is launching an effort to dismantle what it calls the threat to United States sovereignty by the International Criminal Court (ICC), a State Department official said on Monday. President Donald Trump and other US officials, such as former President George W. Bush, have long said the ICC should not have the authority to investigate and prosecute Americans, particularly members of the military. Reuters earlier this year found the Trump administration backed sanctions against ICC officials in part to head off any future attempts to hold him or his officials accountable for US military action overseas. The State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a wide range of options is under consideration to target the ICC, including travel bans, visa revocations, increased sanctions against the ICC and affiliated organisations, and diplomatic pressure on other nations to withdraw from the ICC. The ICC was established in 2002 by the international community to prosecute war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. It asserts jurisdiction only if a member state is unable or unwilling to prosecute atrocities itself. The US has never been a member of the court. Trump’s hostility toward the court goes back to his first term. It manifested again with a plan to punish ICC officials, an idea hatched in November 2024 when Trump was re-elected and the ICC issued an arrest warrant for his ally, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. Last month, three International Criminal Court judges sued Trump and his administration over sanctions imposed on them last year, arguing the measures were unlawful. The State Department official on Monday said Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other top US officials are pressuring other countries as part of a campaign “to diplomatically isolate the International Criminal Court and ensure it cannot target Americans”. In March 2020, ICC prosecutors opened an investigation in Afghanistan that included looking into possible crimes by US troops, but since 2021, it has deprioritised the role of the US and focused on alleged crimes committed by the Afghan government and Taliban forces. The official said nations that partner with US law enforcement, host a US military presence, or benefit from the broader US security umbrella “are being called upon to reject the ICCs purported authority to prosecute American officials and servicemen”. Nations that refuse to reject the ICC while relying on US assistance are likely to come under increased scrutiny, the official said. “We will watch with interest which nations join ranks with us against this threat to Americans who are willing to risk their lives to protect others,” the official said. Rubio, in a video on his official X account, accused the ICC of seeking to “become the unaccountable arbiter of a new global law — empowered to prosecute and arrest our citizens at will and existentially threaten American sovereignty”. He termed the court “far more radical and extreme” than it had initially promised to be, saying it was “staffed by unelected globalist bureaucrats who claim their power is almost unlimited”. “The American people never agreed to any of this,” he said. “And they never will.” The Hague Invasion Act The US enacted a federal law in 2002, named the American Service-Members’ Protection Act (ASPA), with the intention to “protect United States military personnel and other elected and appointed officials of the United States government against criminal prosecution by an international criminal court to which the United States is not party”. Also known as the Hague Invasion Act, the act authorises the US president to use “all means necessary and appropriate to bring about the release of any person … being detained or imprisoned by, on behalf of, or at the request of” the ICC. Alongside prohibiting cooperation with the court, the bill also prohibits participation by members of the US armed forces in certain operations of the United Nations, “unless the president certifies that US national interests justify such participation or that the members are not at risk of ICC prosecution”.

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