The United States has commented on several pending matters at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC) relating to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Participating in advisory proceedings at the ICJ, the United States has urged the court not to issue an opinion that would interfere with the political resolution of the dispute between Israel and the Palestinians through the negotiating framework endorsed by the Security Council and the General Assembly.Footnote 1 In a statement regarding a contentious case at the ICJ, the United States categorically repudiated South Africa's claims that Israel violated the Genocide Convention.Footnote 2 And responding to the news that the ICC prosecutor had applied to the court for arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant,Footnote 3 the United States “fundamentally reject[ed] the announcement,”Footnote 4 and the House of Representatives passed a bill that would impose sanctions on foreign persons engaged in or aiding the investigation and prosecution and that would also rescind U.S. funding for the ICC.Footnote 5 The U.S. stance in these matters stood in contrast to its strong support for the cases brought at the ICJ and ICC against Russia and Russian President Vladimir Putin.Footnote 6
In the ICJ advisory proceedings, the General Assembly asked the court for an opinion on two questions regarding the “legal consequences arising from the . . . policies and practices of Israel . . . in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem.”Footnote 7 The United States argued that the court should “exercise its discretion to address the referral questions within [the] established negotiating framework” for the resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.Footnote 8 That “land for peace” frameworkFootnote 9 “has its roots in Security Council resolutions 242 and 338 and was further defined and memorialized in the bilateral agreements between the Israelis and Palestinians.”Footnote 10 The U.S. statement explained the continued commitment of the Security Council and the General Assembly to a negotiated solution through this framework, detailed the parties’ recent efforts within the framework, and noted how the General Assembly's resolution requesting the advisory opinion also endorsed the negotiating framework.Footnote 11 It urged the court to “avoid disturbing the established negotiating framework” and consequently not “address issues that form the very subject matter of the dispute and address matters the Security Council and General Assembly have repeatedly recognized must be resolved through direct negotiations between the parties,” including “permanent status issues at the heart of their dispute such as borders and security arrangement.”Footnote 12 The court's advisory opinion on Construction of a Wall, the United States argued, properly avoided “prejudg[ing] or interfer[ing] with the existing framework for negotiations and its ‘land for peace’ principle.”Footnote 13 The United States cautioned that, “[i]f the Court strays from this approach, there is substantial risk that . . . the Court's advice could prejudge or inadvertently suggest to the parties that there is no utility to negotiations on the interdependent elements of the land for peace principle that the Security Council and General Assembly have so long endorsed and encouraged.”Footnote 14 Consequently, “[w]hatever the Court's opinion on the legal consequences of particular violations of international law,” it should not “issue an opinion that calls for a unilateral, immediate and unconditional withdrawal by Israel” because that “would be contrary to the established framework” that is “structured around the two interdependent and inseparable elements . . . [of] withdrawal . . . [and] peace and security.”Footnote 15
The United States also took aim at the premise of the second question that the General Assembly referred to the court, which asked how Israeli “policies and practices,” such as “prolonged occupation [and] settlement and annexation of the Palestinian territory,” “affect the legal status of the occupation.”Footnote 16 The premise was faulty, according to the United States, because “the legal status of the occupation under international humanitarian law results from the fact of occupation alone.”Footnote 17 Under international humanitarian law, a belligerent occupation's legal status “does not change if the occupation is prolonged or if alleged violations of international humanitarian law or other international law have been committed by the Occupying Power.”Footnote 18 Consequently, the United States concluded, “to the extent the second question could be construed as asking the Court to declare that the Israeli occupation has been rendered unlawful or void, the Court should decline that invitation on the basis that such an assessment is not supported by international law.”Footnote 19
The United States emphasized how the court should exercise its advisory function in the context of the questions posed by the General Assembly. In particular, the court should “reinforce the existing negotiating framework and emphasize the need for the parties to engage constructively.”Footnote 20 Therefore, the court should not follow the calls of those that “advocate for extensive and granular legal findings, including on matters that would go directly to the permanent status issues . . . and that would strike at the foundation of the ‘land for peace’ principle.”Footnote 21 Any “[a]dvice that prejudices permanent status issues reserved for direct negotiation, such as the status of the territory, borders, and security arrangements, would not advance the objectives of the established negotiating framework, help develop the conditions for a negotiated peace, or ultimately serve the interests and functions of the United Nations.”Footnote 22 The events of October 7, 2023, the United States argued, reinforced the need for bolstering, not undercutting, the negotiating framework, and so heightened the importance of the court taking the proper approach to answering the questions posed to it.Footnote 23
In contrast to its measured participation in the ICJ proceedings, the United States stridently rejected the ICC's prosecutor's application for arrest warrants against Prime Minister Netanyahu and Minister Gallant. President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. released a curt, but direct, statement describing the application as “outrageous.”Footnote 24 Disclaiming the applications’ implication (his characterization) that there is an equivalence between Israel and Hamas, the president stressed that “there is no equivalence—none—between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security.”Footnote 25 Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken similarly described the prosecutor's action as “shameful,” referring, as the president did, to the implied equivalence of Israel's and Hamas's actions.Footnote 26
Secretary Blinken also disclaimed that the court had jurisdiction over the matter.Footnote 27 “The ICC was established by its state parties as a court of limited jurisdiction,” he said, and “[t]hose limits are rooted in principles of complementarity.”Footnote 28 Asserting that, “[i]n other situations, the Prosecutor deferred to national investigations and worked with states to allow them time to investigate,” Secretary Blinken claimed that this practice “do[es] not appear to have been applied here” despite Israel's “ongoing investigations into allegations against its personnel.”Footnote 29 The prosecutor, Secretary Blinken asserted, “rush[ed] to seek these arrest warrants rather than allowing the Israeli legal system a full and timely opportunity to proceed.”Footnote 30 Secretary Blinken concluded that “[t]hese and other circumstances call into question the legitimacy and credibility of this investigation.”Footnote 31 He also stated that the applications for arrest warrants “do[] nothing to help, and could jeopardize, ongoing efforts to reach a ceasefire agreement that would get hostages out and surge humanitarian assistance in, which are the goals the United States continues to pursue relentlessly.”Footnote 32
Members of Congress threatened legislative action against the ICC in anticipation of and then in response to the applications for arrest warrants.Footnote 33 In early June 2024, the House of Representatives passed a bill “to impose sanctions with respect to the International Criminal Court engaged in any effort to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any protected person of the United States and its allies.”Footnote 34 The White House issued a statement of administration position “strongly oppos[ing]” the bill.Footnote 35 That statement concluded that “[t]here are more effective ways to defend Israel, preserve U.S. positions on the ICC, and promote international justice and accountability” than sanctions.Footnote 36 Early in his term, President Biden had revoked President Donald J. Trump's executive order imposing sanctions on persons connected with the ICC and lifted the sanctions imposed on then-ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and Phakiso Mochochoko, the Head of the Jurisdiction, Complementarity and Cooperation Division of the Office of the Prosecutor.Footnote 37 The House bill is now pending in the Senate.