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'International justice works' -- but maybe not that well

(CNN) -- In recent days, President Barack Obama has applauded efforts to bring 
former Serb Gen. Ratko Mladic and Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi before 
international courts.

It's another indication his administration is more willing than its 
predecessors to promote the role of international justice in prosecuting those 
accused of gross human rights abuses. But don't expect the U.S. to sign up to 
the International Criminal Court anytime soon.

The ICC prosecutes individuals accused of crimes against humanity, war crimes, 
crimes of aggression and genocide. It was set up at an international conference 
in 1998 and came into being in 2002. Since then, 115 states have ratified the 
treaty -- though the United States, Russia, China and Israel are not among them.

Its very existence has long been a combustible issue in the United States. 
President Clinton signed the treaty establishing the ICC on January 3, 2000 -- 
the last day it was open for signature. But at the same time he said he would 
"not recommend that my successor submit the treaty to the Senate" -- saying 
"the United States should have the chance to observe and assess the functioning 
of the court before choosing to become subject to its jurisdiction."

Conservatives have long loathed the ICC. Sen. Jesse Helms fulminated against it 
as "an unprecedented assault on American sovereignty." President George W. Bush 
"unsigned" the treaty, concerned that U.S. troops and policy-makers alike could 
face action from a politically-motivated prosecutor.

As then-White House spokesman Ari Fleischer put it, "The president (George W. 
Bush) thinks the ICC is fundamentally flawed because it puts American 
servicemen and women at fundamental risk of being tried by an entity that is 
beyond America's reach, beyond America's laws and can subject American 
civilians and military to arbitrary standards of justice."

However, the Bush administration did accept the role of the ICC to bring to 
justice the perpetrators of what it described as genocide in Darfur, Sudan. In 
2005, the U.S. abstained rather than veto a Security Council resolution 
referring allegations of war crimes in Darfur to the ICC.

Within the current administration, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appears 
the most enthusiastic about joining the ICC. Two years ago, at an event in 
Nairobi, CNN's Fareed Zakharia asked Clinton whether it was more difficult to 
pursue human rights issues so long as the US was not a signatory.

"That is a great regret, but it is a fact that we are not yet a signatory," she 
said. "But we have supported the work of the court and will continue to do so 
under the Obama administration."

On Thursday Clinton was effusive about the capture of Mladic. "Mladic's arrest 
serves as a statement to those around the world who would break the law and 
target innocent civilians: International justice works," she said pointedly.

Mladic will actually be prosecuted by the International Criminal Tribunal for 
the Former Yugoslavia, but the sentiment is clear and Obama echoed her view. 
"From Nuremberg to the present, the United States has long viewed justice for 
war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide as both a moral imperative 
and an essential element of stability and peace," he said in a statement issued 
at the G8 summit.

While not expending political capital at home on a battle to ratify the Rome 
Treaty that established the court, Obama backed the ICC's decision in 2009 to 
issue an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir in connection 
with the killings in Darfur.

The Obama administration also supports the involvement of the International 
Criminal Court in Libya. In February, the United States voted for U.N. Security 
Council Resolution 1970 that referred the situation in Libya to the ICC, 
stating that "widespread and systematic attacks currently taking place against 
the civilian population may amount to crimes against humanity." The ICC's chief 
prosecutor has since issued arrest warrants for Moammar Gadhafi, his son Saif 
al-Arab Gadhafi and Libyan intelligence chief Abdullah Sanussi.

Those who want the United States to lend its full weight to the court say fears 
that U.S. officials and soldiers would find themselves in the dock are 
overdone. The ICC is designed as a court of last resort, to take action when 
the host country is unable or unwilling to prosecute individuals accused of 
grave crimes. They also argue that the Bush administration's refusal to sign up 
reinforced perceptions overseas that it was "unilateralist."

In a column for the Los Angeles Times this week, Lt. Col. Butch Bracknell, a 
serving Marine and senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, recalled a 
conversation he had on a recent training trip to Iraq: "One Iraqi officer asked 
me, 'If the United States believes in accountability over impunity, why are you 
not a party to the International Criminal Court?' I did not have a satisfactory 
answer."

But Iraq and most other Arab states have also turned their back on the court -- 
for one reason: Israel.

Qatar's attorney general, Al Bin Fetais al Marri, said this week: "Between the 
Arab world and the court there is a big problem of misunderstanding," saying 
the court was selective in its investigations. Some African commentators point 
to the fact that the great majority of arrest warrants issued so far have been 
for Africans. After the arrest warrant was issued for Sudanese leader Omar 
al-Bashir, a Sudanese official dismissed the court as "one of the tools of the 
new colonization."

So despite modest progress (though as yet no convictions) the ICC is far from 
establishing itself as a universally respected institution. Justice -- like 
beauty -- is in the eye of the beholder.
 
 
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