The United States' Isolated
Struggle Against the ICC
by Irune Aguirrezabal Quijera
International Criminal Court
Monitor, September 2003
As part of the United States' campaign
to exclude its citizens and military personnel from the jurisdiction
of the ICC, the Bush administration has been approaching countries
around the world seeking to conclude Bilateral Impunity Agreements
(BIAs), or so called "Article 98" agreements. These
agreements prohibit the surrender to the ICC of a broad scope
of persons including current or former government officials, military
personnel, and US employees (including contractors) and nationals.
These agreements, which in some cases are reciprocal, do not include
an obligation by the US to subject those persons to investigation
and/or prosecution.
While these US-proposed bilateral agreements
are purportedly based on Art. 98.2 of the Rome Statute, they are,
in fact, a clear violation of the negotiators' intentions and
go far beyond the letter and spirit of that article. Drafters
of the Statute did not envisage situations of impunity, but sought
to create a system to end impunity for the gravest crimes, in
accordance with the principle of complementarity. As David Sheffer,
former US ambassador for war crimes and a chief negotiator at
the Rome Statute drafting conference, has written, "the original
intent of the Art. 98 agreements was to ensure that Status of
Forces Agreements (SOFAs) would not be compromised and that Americans
on official duty could be specially covered by agreements that
fit in the terms of the article".
Approximately 50 states have signed BIAs
with the US to date, but few states have ratified these accords.
Most of those states that have concluded an agreement have done
so under strong US pressure. In some instances, these bilateral
agreements have been linked to the American Servicemember s Protection
Act (ASPA), a US law which authorizes the withdrawal of US military
assistance from States Parties to the ICC that did not conclude
a BIA before 1 July 2003. NATO members, non-NATO allies (Egypt,
Jordan, Israel, Australia, Argentina, New Zealand, The Republic
of Korea, and Japan) and Taiwan are specifically exempt from this
legislation, which is targeted at States Parties to the Rome Statute.
Provisions in the ASPA also allow President Bush to issue waivers
to those countries for US national security interests.
However, the Bush administration has been
exercising unconscionable diplomatic tactics that go beyond the
provisions of the ASPA: threatening poor countries in all regions
of the world to violate their international obligations or otherwise
lose vital US financial and political support. US Assistant Secretary
of State Stephen Rademaker has reportedly threatened to deny benefits
of the New Horizons program, which includes funds for hurricane
relief and rural dentistry and veterinary efforts, to countries
in the Caribbean Community. According to a senior official in
the Niger Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the US has threatened to
suspend cooperative development projects if Niger does not sign
a BIA. US Ambassador to Bahamas Richard Blankenship has publicly
warned that if the Bahamas did not support the US position on
the ICC, a significant amount of aid would be withheld, including
aid for paving and lighting an airport runway. In the case of
Bulgaria, loss of military aid has been linked to NATO membership.
US Ambassador to Croatia Lawrence Rossin even published a letter
in the Zagreb press warning that Croatia would lose $l9 million
in aid unless they sign an immunity deal.
Despite this intense pressure, several
states have resisted signing a BIA, and on July 1, the Bush administration
announced its intention to impose its threat to cut off military
aid to 35 States Parties. Programs affected included foreign military
financing or international military education and training.
On the same day, President Bush issued
a White House memorandum in which 22 states were granted waivers
from ASPA for different periods of time, in order to allow countries
that have signed BIAs to ratify the agreements in Parliament.
A number of states received four or six-month waivers, and a select
group received a waiver for an indefinite period of time.
The Coalition lauds those states that
have resisted signing BIAs and urges states to continue to uphold
the integrity of the Rome Statute and international law. NGOs
and intergovernmental bodies have been denouncing these agreements
as unlawful and a violation of the Rome Statute and international
law, by permitting impunity for the worst crimes against humanity.
The European Union, for example, issued
the General Affairs Council Conclusions and "guiding principles"
stating that the US-proposed agreements were clearly inconsistent
with the Rome Statute as well as with obligations arising from
other international treaties; and setting benchmarks to which
all agreements (including agreements already concluded) should
comply. On 16 June 2003, the Council of the European Union approved
a new Common Position on the ICC, which called on EU member states
to prevent the conclusion of BIAs by committing to: "continue,
as appropriate, to draw the attention of third States to the Council
Conclusions of 30 September 2002 on the International Criminal
Court and to the EU Guiding Principles annexed thereto, with regard
to proposals for agreements or arrangements concerning conditions
for the surrender of persons to the Court." On June 25, the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe subsequently adopted
Resolution 1336, "Threats to the International Criminal Court,"
condemning the agreements as a violation of the Rome Statute and
international law and supporting those states that have resisted
US pressure to sign BIAs.
The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) has
also issued a statement on US-proposed bilateral accords, reaffirming
"their strong support for the principles and purposes of
the ICC" and condemning the US action to withhold military
assistance from the six CARICOM countries that are States Parties
to the ICC. In addition, several countries have also publicly
rejected signing BIAs including Brazil, Canada, Estonia, Peru,
South Africa, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Indeed, the United States is isolated
in its aggressive, disrespectful and unfair campaign aimed at
undermining the authority and effectiveness of the ICC. Victims
and the world community view the US as a hegemonic super power
that refuses to be under the rule of law, and yet imposes its
own order on other states and citizens. The US' intention to create
a two-tier justice system, one for the rest of the world and one
for Americans, is just unacceptable. The US cannot be above the
law. In a recent article in Foreign Affairs (May/June 2003), Michael
J. Glennon explains that James Madison was confronted with the
same dilemma when drafting the Constitution. "The question
was why the powerful should obey the law. Madison answer was that
the incentive lies in an assessment of future circumstances, in
the unnerving possibility that the strong may one day become weak
and then need the protection of the law... Hegemony thus sits
in tension with the principle of equality."
Irune Aguirrezabal Quijera is European
Coordinator for the Coalition for the ICC.
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