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Israel’s massacre on the tent camp in Rafah is just the latest. For decades now, Tel Aviv – like Washington – has defied any attempt to apply international humanitarian law to its actions.
Ana Segovia, Mexico, “Huapango Torero” or “Huapango Bullfighter,” 2019. (Via Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research)
By Vijay PrashadTricontinental: Institute for Social Research
The skin is the largest organ of the human body. It covers our entire surface, at some points only as thin as a piece of paper and at other points about half as thick as a credit card.
The skin, which protects us from all manner of germs and other harmful elements, is fragile and unable to defend humans from the dangerous weapons we have made over time. The ancient blunt axe will break the skin with a heavy blow, while a 2,000-pound MK-84 “dumb bomb” made by General Dynamics will not only obliterate the skin, but the entire human body.
Despite a May 24 order from the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the Israeli military continues to bomb the southern part of Gaza, particularly the city of Rafah. In blatant disregard of the ICJ’s order, on May 27 Israel struck a tent city in Rafah and murdered 45 civilians.
U.S. President Joe Biden said on March 9 that an Israeli attack on Rafah would be his “red line,” but – even after the tent massacre – the Biden administration has insisted that no such line has been violated.
At a press conference on May 28, communications adviser to the U.S. National Security Agency, John Kirby, was asked how the U.S. would respond if a strike by the U.S. armed forces killed 45 civilians and injured 200 others.
Kirby responded:
“We have conducted airstrikes in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, where tragically we caused civilian casualties. We did the same thing.”
To defend Israel’s latest massacre, Washington has chosen to make a startling admission. Given that the ICJ has ruled that it is “plausible” that Israel is conducting a genocide in Gaza, could it be said that the U.S. is guilty of the same in Iraq and Afghanistan?
Ficre Ghebreyesus, Eritrea, “Map/Quilt,” 1999. (Via Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research)
In 2006, the International Criminal Court (ICC) began to assess the possibility of war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, and then, in 2014 and 2017, respectively, opened formal investigations into crimes committed in both countries.
Neither Israel nor the United States are signatories to the 2002 Rome Statute, which established the ICC. Rather than sign the statute, the U.S. Congress passed the American Service-Members’ Protection Act — known informally as the “Hague Invasion Act” — which legally authorises the U.S. government to “use all means necessary” to protect its troops from ICC prosecutors.
Since Article 98 of the Rome Statute does not require states to turn over wanted personnel to a third party if they have signed an immunity agreement with that party, the U.S. government has encouraged states to sign “Article 98 agreements” to give its troops immunity from prosecution.
Still, this did not deter ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda (who held the post from 2012–2021) from studying evidence and issuing a preliminary report in 2016 on war crimes in Afghanistan.
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Afghanistan joined the ICC in 2003, giving the ICC and Bensouda jurisdiction to conduct their investigation. Even though it signed an Article 98 agreement with Afghanistan in 2002, the U.S. government fervently attacked the ICC’s investigation and warned Bensouda and her family that they would face personal repercussions if she continued with the investigation.
In April 2019, the U.S. revoked Bensouda’s entry visa. Days later, a panel of ICC judges ruled against Bensouda’s request to proceed with a war crimes investigation in Afghanistan, stating that such an investigation would “not serve the interests of justice.”
Staff at the ICC were dismayed by the court’s decision and eager to challenge it but could not get support from the justices. In June 2019, Bensouda filed a request to appeal the ICC’s decision not to pursue the investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan.
Bensouda’s appeal was joined by various groups from Afghanistan, including the Afghan Victims’ Families Association and the Afghanistan Forensic Science Organisation. In September 2019, the Pre-Trial Chamber of the ICC ruled that the appeal could go forward.
Dawn Okoro, Nigeria, “Doing It,” 2017.
The U.S. government was enraged. On June 11, 2020, President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 13928, which authorised his government to freeze ICC officials’ assets and ban them and their families from entering the United States.
In September 2020, the U.S. imposed sanctions on Bensouda, a national of Gambia, and senior ICC diplomat Phakiso Mochochoko, a national of Lesotho. The American Bar Association condemned these sanctions, but they were not revoked.
The U.S. government eventually repealed the sanctions in April 2021, after Bensouda left her post and was replaced by the British lawyer Karim Khan in February 2021.
In September 2021, ICC Prosecutor Khan said that while his office would continue to investigate war crimes by the Taliban and the Islamic State in Afghanistan, it would “deprioritise other aspects of this investigation.”
This awkward phrasing simply meant that the ICC would no longer investigate war crimes committed by the United States and its allies from the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. The ICC had been sufficiently brought to heel.
Alexander Nikolaev, also known as Usto Mumin, Soviet Union, “Friendship, Love, Eternity,” 1928. (Via Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research)
Prosecutor Khan again demonstrated his partial application of justice and fealty to the Global North ruling elites when he rushed into the conflict in Ukraine and began an investigation into war crimes by Russia just four days after its invasion in February 2022.
Within a year, Khan would apply for warrants for the arrest of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Commissioner for Children’s Rights Maria Lvova-Belova, which were issued in March 2023. Specifically, they were charged with colluding to abduct children from Ukrainian orphanages and children’s care homes and take them to Russia, where – it was alleged – these children were “given for adoption.”
Ukraine, Khan said, “is a crime scene.”
Khan would use no such words when it came to Israel’s murderous assault on Palestinians in Gaza. Even after more than 15,000 Palestinian children had been killed (rather than “adopted” from a war zone), Khan failed to pursue warrants for the arrest of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his military subordinates.
When Khan visited Israel in November–December 2023, he warned about “excesses” but suggested that since “Israel has trained lawyers who advise commanders,” they could prevent any horrendous violations of international humanitarian law.
Ayoub Emdadian, Iran, “The Sapling of Liberty: 1973. (Via Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research)
By May 2024, the sheer scale of Israel’s brutality in Gaza finally forced the ICC to take up the issue. The orders from the ICJ, the outrage expressed by numerous governments of the Global South, and the cascading protests in country after country together motivated the ICC to act.
On May 20, Khan held a press conference where he said that he filed applications for the arrest of Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Diab Ibrahim al-Masri and Ismail Haniyeh and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his head of military, Yoav Gallant.
Israel’s Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara said that the ICC accusations against Netanyahu and Gallant are “baseless” and that Israel will not comply with any ICC warrant.
For decades now, Israel – like the United States – has rejected any attempt to apply international humanitarian law to its actions.
The “rules-based international order” has always provided immunity for the United States and its close allies, an immunity whose hypocrisy has increasingly been revealed. It is this double-standard that has provoked the collapse of the U.S.-driven world order.
Buried within Khan’s press statement is an interesting fragment:
“I insist that all attempts to impede, intimidate, or improperly influence the officials of this Court must cease immediately.”
Eight days later, on May 28, The Guardian – in collaboration with other periodicals – published an investigation that revealed Israel’s use of “intelligence agencies to surveil, hack, pressure, smear, and allegedly threaten senior ICC staff in an effort to derail the court’s inquiries.”
Yossi Cohen, the former head of Israel’s spy agency, Mossad, personally harassed and threatened Bensouda (Khan’s predecessor), warning her, “You don’t want to be getting into things that could compromise your security or that of your family.”
Furthermore, The Guardian noted that, “Between 2019 and 2020, the Mossad had been actively seeking compromising information on the prosecutor and took an interest in her family members.”
“Took an interest” is a euphemistic way of saying gathered information on her family — including through a sting operation against her husband Philip Bensouda — to blackmail and frighten her. These are clichéd mafia tactics.
Hamed Abdalla, Egypt, “Conscience du Sol” 1956. (Via Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research)
As I followed these stories of the blood and law, I read the poems of Chechnya-born Jazra Khaleed, writing in Greek in Athens. His poem “Black Lips” stopped me in my tracks, the last stanzas powerful and bleak:
Come let me make you human,you, Your Honor, who wipe guilt from your beardyou, esteemed journalist, who tout deathyou, philanthropic lady, who pat children’s heads without bending downand you who read this poem, licking your finger—To all of you I offer my body for genuflectionBelieve meone day you will adore me like Christ
But I’m sorry for you sir—I do not negotiate with chartered accountants of wordswith art critics who eat from my handYou may, if you desire, wash my feetDon’t take it personally
Why do I need bullets if there are so many wordsprepared to die for me?
Which words are slowly dying? Justice, perhaps, or even humanitarianism? So many words are thrown about to assuage the guilty and to confuse the innocent. But these words cannot muffle other words, words that describe horrors and that demand redress.
Words are important. So are people, such as Gustavo Cortiñas, who was arrested by the Argentinian military dictatorship on April 15, 1977, never to be seen again. He became one of the 30,000 people whom the military killed between 1976 and 1983.
On April 30, two weeks after Gustavo was arrested, his mother, Nora Cortiñas (or Norita, as she was lovingly known), joined other mothers of the disappeared to protest in front of the government house Casa Rosada, at the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires, the first in what became a regular feature.
Norita was a co-founder of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, which courageously shattered the wall of misleading words that tumbled out of the mouths of the military Junta. Though her son was never found, Norita found her voice looking for him — a voice that was heard at every protest for justice and spoke with great feeling about the pain in the world until the weeks leading up to her death on 31 May.
“We say no to the annexation of Palestine,” she said in a video message in 2020. “We oppose any measure that tends to erase the identity and existence of the Palestinian people.”
Norita leaves us with her precious words:
“Many years from now, I would like to be remembered as a woman who gave her all so that we could have a more dignified life… I would like to be remembered with that cry that I always say and that means everything I feel inside me, that means the hope that someday that other possible world will exist. A world for everyone. So, I would like to be remembered with a smile and for shouting loudly: “venceremos, venceremos, venceremos! We will win, we will win, we will win!”
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. He is an editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He is a senior non-resident fellow at Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China. He has written more than 20 books, including The Darker Nations and The Poorer Nations. His latest books are Struggle Makes Us Human: Learning from Movements for Socialism and, with Noam Chomsky, The Withdrawal: Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan and the Fragility of U.S. Power.
This article is from Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.
Views expressed in this article may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.
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