Posted by Eric Posner:
Will former Bush administration officials be prosecuted in foreign countries?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_01_25-2009_01_31.shtml#1233117457


   Phillipe Sands says yes, [1]here and [2]here. He might be right, but
   there are grounds for skepticism.

   First, some background. International law carves the world into
   states; within each state, the national government takes primary
   responsibility for enforcing the criminal law when crimes occur on its
   territory. States also claim jurisdiction when nationals commit crimes
   in foreign countries and sometimes when nationals are victims in
   foreign countries�leading to overlapping jurisdiction that is sorted
   out in various ways. States typically do not exercise jurisdiction
   over foreigner-against-foreigner crimes that occur in foreign
   territory. If a Russian murders another Russian in Russia, then
   travels to the United States, American authorities will not prosecute
   him, no matter how horrible the crime.

   There is an exception to this rule�the principal of universal
   jurisdiction, which applies to certain international crimes. In the
   old days, the rule applied to piracy, which took place outside the
   territory of any state, and hence did not naturally fall within any
   state�s jurisdiction. Today, many international lawyers claim that
   universal jurisdiction applies to a poorly defined group of crimes
   that includes genocide and probably torture. Thus, in principle, Spain
   could exercise jurisdiction over certain international crimes
   committed by Americans against Afghans in Guantanamo Bay. A former
   Bush administration official or soldier or CIA agent who travels to
   Madrid in order to take in the splendors of the Prado could
   conceivably find himself staring at a cell wall.

   I write with more hesitation than most international lawyers would.
   They have been persuaded by the Pinochet case that universal
   jurisdiction is now an accepted part of international law. In 1998,
   Pinochet, the then-former, now-dead, Chilean dictator, traveled to
   Britain for medical treatment, where he was detained on account of an
   extradition request filed by the Spanish judge, Baltasar Garzón. The
   British high court ruled that the extradition request was valid,
   rejecting the argument that Spain�s assertion of universal
   jurisdiction violated international law. Riots ensued in Chile, where
   a fragile democracy existed thanks to a tenuous amnesty program that
   protected Pinochet and his supporters (many in the army), who had
   killed and tortured thousands during Pinochet�s regime. Despite the
   high court�s ruling, the British government sent Pinochet home,
   claiming that he was too ill to stand trial. Pinochet would linger on
   for another six years after his release in 2000.

   The denouement was a disappointment but the precedent had been set,
   and it is on this basis�plus the existence of laws in various
   countries that claim universal jurisdiction, and a handful of
   treaties�that the principle of universal jurisdiction rests.

   It doesn�t count, as far as the international lawyer is concerned,
   that the British government engineered Pinochet�s escape and hence
   that he was never tried. Nor does it count that Spanish courts
   refrained from relying on universal jurisdiction when reviewing
   Garzón�s legal moves. It doesn�t count that when Garzón turned his
   sights on Spain itself, and sought to scare up Franco�s ghost, which
   had been so carefully laid to rest in Spain�s transition, the Spanish
   government showed as much enthusiasm for this inquiry as the Chilean
   rioters showed for Garzón�s earlier effort, and squelched it. It is
   all very well to prosecute a traveling foreigner from a developing
   country whose political system rests on a fragile compromise between
   authoritarians and democrats, but when it comes time to investigate
   our (much worse) crimes, well, forget about it!

   Nor does it count that the various statutes that assert universal
   jurisdiction are, by design, limited, to say the least. The Belgian
   parliament emasculated its statute when Donald Rumsfeld pointed out
   that western governments would not want to hold NATO meetings in a
   place where government officials might be indicted�at the time, Ariel
   Sharon was under investigation, and (possibly frivolous) complaints
   had been filed against American generals and President George H.W.
   Bush, on account of the first Gulf War. Other countries, like Germany,
   ensure that complaints can�t lead to investigations without the
   consent of government authorities, in a departure from civil law
   criminal procedure. Amnesty International claims that most countries
   recognize universal jurisdiction in domestic statutes, but the number
   of successful prosecutions based on that principle is extremely low.
   The political risks of prosecuting foreigners for their crimes against
   foreigners on foreign soil are usually just too high.

   All of this suggests that the hoped-for foreign trials of former Bush
   administration officials will not happen anytime soon. But this is not
   to say that such trials are impossible. Pinochet�s lawyers did not
   expect his apprehension in Britain. European countries have
   independent judiciaries, and they are capable of acting in ways that
   their governments�which, for reasons I explained in my last [3]post,
   have no interest in prosecuting former Bush administration
   officials�disapprove. Still, the short, undistinguished history of
   universal jurisdiction so far might give pause even to crusaders like
   Garzón.

References

   1. 
http://www.amazon.com/Torture-Team-Rumsfelds-Betrayal-American/dp/0230603904/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1233117084&sr=1-1
   2. http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/05/guantanamo200805
   3. http://volokh.com/posts/1232725847.shtml

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