Trudeau government must stand up against Trump's escalating attacks on International Criminal Court - Action News
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Opinion

Trudeau government must stand up against Trump's escalating attacks on International Criminal Court

Latest sanctions by U.S. against International Criminal Court staff involved in Afghanistan probe, including Canadians, are an irresponsible escalation that warrants a strong response from the Liberal government, writes Mark Kersten.

U.S. actions against ICC staff involved in Afghanistan probe, including Canadians, are irresponsible

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, has yet to address sanctions leveled by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration against International Criminal Court staff over the investigation of war crime allegations in Afghanistan. (Patrick Doyle/Reuters, Patrick Semansky/The Associated Press)

This column is an opinionby Mark Kersten, a senior consultant at theWayamo Foundationand a senior researcher at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy.For more information about CBC's Opinion section, please see theFAQ.

Now, it's personal.

Washington has long opposed its citizens being investigated for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity by international tribunals. But the decision of President Donald Trump to issue anexecutive orderauthorizing economic sanctions against staff at the International Criminal Court (ICC) is a reckless and irresponsible escalation that deserves a strong response.

This is no longer just a political tiff between Washington and The Hague-based Court. Canadians are being targeted with coercive measures in an act of outright hostility towards civil servants and diplomats.

The Canadian government must stand up to defend them.

Since the ICC's creation, its relationship with the U.S. has beentumultuous. President Bill Clinton signed the Rome Statute of the ICC, but his successor George Bush "unsigned" it. The U.S. has never come close to becoming an ICC member state.

No American administration has ever accepted that the Court should be an independent institution, free from the political prerogatives of powerful states and the United Nations Security Council. This position has often translated intoactive hostilitytowards the ICC, with pressure exerted on states not to cooperate with the Court.

Even during the most productive years in the ICC-U.S. relationship, those under former President Barack Obama, the U.S. did not accept that the ICC could have jurisdiction over American citizens, and its support for the Court waspiecemeal.

The relationship has reached new levels of toxicity under Trump.

U.S. President Donald Trump, seen here during a roundtable discussion in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington on June 15, has issued an executive order authorizing economic sanctions against staff at the International Criminal Court. (Leah Millis/Reuters)

In response to the ICC's courage in standing up to U.S. bullying and investigating the alleged crimes of powerful states, Trump rolled out notoriously anti-ICC firebrand John Bolton in September2018 todeclarethat the ICC was "dead" to the United States.

In April 2019, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo threatened sanctions against ICC staff, including chief Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda whose U.S. visa herevoked. He addedCanadian Sam Sasan Shoamanesh, Chef de Cabinet to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, as a possible target this past April.

Now Washington has taken issue, to put it lightly, with the ICC's recent decisionto open an investigation into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Afghanistan, including by American armed forces and the Central Intelligence Agency. For the first time in history, accusations of atrocities committed by U.S. citizens abroad are being investigated by an international tribunal.

In response, the Trump administration has reacted bombastically, with Pompeo last weekcallingthe ICC a "kangaroo court," among other pejorative terms.

Aggravating Washington further has been the potential opening of an ICC investigation into allegations of international crimes committed in the Palestinian territoriesby Hamas as well as Israeli forces. On May 15, the Trump administration ominouslythreatened"consequences" if the Court proceeded with an official investigation.

Now Trump has put his money where his mouth is.On June 11, Pompeo singled out ICC staff members andtheir familieswith the threat of sanctions.

The result is unprecedented: along with their international colleagues, Canadians will face sanctions asset freezes and travel bans for their efforts to bring justice and accountabilityby investigating allegations ofatrocities.

Think about that: sanctions, a tool designed to punish human rights violators, will now beusedto thwart the work of human rights advocates.

Several dozen Canadiansworkat the ICC, many holding esteemed positions. Targets of U.S. sanctions may include, among others, ICC Deputy Prosecutor James Stewart who worked for more than 30 years as a former Crown Counsel, and Kimberly Prost, a current judge at the Court who was a member of the Appeals Chamber thatauthorizedan investigation into crimes committed in Afghanistan.

Sanctions could alsoaffect Canadian lawyers and activists who work on or support the investigation, as well as victims and survivors of torture in Afghanistan who provide testimony.

James Stewart, deputy prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, seen during a news conference on July 18, 2019. He is one of the Canadians who could become a target of U.S. sanctions for involvement in investigations of U.S. actions in Afghanistan. (Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters)

Member-states of the ICC, especially those in Europe, have periodically responded to the Trump administration's anti-ICC tantrums with public statements of support for the Court. A number havespoken upin recent days.

Fearing for its interests and economic relationship with Washington, Ottawa has been far more muted. Despiteencouragementby senior political figures to speak up and defend the Court and its personnel,the Canadian government has declined to admonish the U.S. administration's disparaging rhetoric and threats towards the Court and its staff.

Nobody who is committed to the indiscriminate pursuit of international justice accountability that does not curry favour among the powerful and target the weak can legitimately argue that victims of atrocities don't deserve justice. And the Trump administration's vitriolic anti-ICC rants do little butadd credenceto those who believe the Court is doing the right thing by investigating.

But let it be clear: one does not have to support the ICC's actions to know that the threat and issuance of sanctions against Canadian civil servants crosses the line. The Canadian government must stand up for them.

Anything less would be a demonstration of cowardice.

The government, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in particular, have gone to great lengths to avoid criticizing President Trump. However, they also regularly tout their commitment and contribution to human rights, and to a principled foreign policy. That means precisely nothing if the government won't stand up for its own citizens and for a court that ithelped establish.