The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Tuesday, May 28, 2024
Episode Date: May 28, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 18:03)A Second “International” Court Rules Against Israel: The Ruling Reveals the False Promis...e of Global Justice and False Confidence in Politicized InstitutionsPart II (18:03 - 19:36)This Is About Lawsuits, Not Serious Law: European High Court of Human Rights Hands Down Decision on Climate ChangePart III (19:36 - 24:38)The Politics of Show: The Major Issues Behind the Recognition of a Palestinian State by Spain, Norway, and IrelandMiddle East Crisis: Spain, Norway and Ireland Recognize a Palestinian State, a Blow to Israel by The New York TimesPart IV (24:38 - 26:06)International Tribunals: When You Need Them, They Aren’t There — But When They Are There, Watch OutSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Tuesday, May 28, 2024. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Once again, we have to begin this week in the international scene, and once again, we have to turn to Israel in its battle against the terrorist group Hamas.
Once again, we're talking about the action of what is called an international criminal court, but we're going to have to once again look at this very carefully.
Just a matter of a few days ago, we considered the fact that the body known as the international criminal court.
Criminal Court located in the Hague, the chief prosecutor had indicated that he would be seeking
indictments, criminal indictments against both the Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu,
and the nation's defense minister. Now, we talked at the time about the fact that the United
States and Israel are not members of the International Criminal Court, nor signatories to
the treaty that produced it. So in one sense, that particular action threatened and perhaps now
undertaken by the International Criminal Court is more of a bark than a bite, at least when it comes
to the understanding of both the United States and Israel when it comes to that body, the
International Criminal Court. But the big mischief here is the fact that there is a certain
credibility attached in the modern world to anything called the International Criminal Court.
And furthermore, many nations are signatories to the statute that produced it. And so we are
looking at the fact that there is a moral challenge presented here. But it tells you something that
neither the United States nor Israel has signed the treaty nor will either recognize the actions of
the International Criminal Court. But now we're talking about the International Court of Justice.
Now here's what gets really complicated. On Friday, the International Court of Justice indicated that
it would order Israel to stop military actions in Gaza against Tamas if those actions could not be
undertaken without major risk to the loss of life there among the Palestinian people.
Now, the international media reported it basically as an unconditional order by the International
Court of Justice, also located in the Hague, by the way, there in the Netherlands.
It was presented as an absolute order.
The New York Times headline, UN court orders Israel to halt some military operations in Rafa.
Rafa, of course, that city, which is the subject right now of Israel's action, because it is the last
major area there in Gaza where Hamas is deeply embedded. Israel has indicated consistently that it will
not stop this military action until it eliminates Hamas as a military threat to Israel. So as Christians
think about this, there are so many big issues we have to consider it once. For one thing, we have
the alphabet soup of these international organizations, the international criminal court, the
International Court of Justice, it was the ICC that threatened the action of prosecution,
which would have consequences, just a matter of days ago. On Friday this past week, it was the
International Court of Justice. The action there against Israel was instigated by the nation
of South Africa, and Israel has plenty of enemies to line up in the International Court of
Justice demanding this action or another. But there are other giant worldview issues here.
What exactly are these criminal courts? Where do they gain their authority?
What is their jurisdiction? How do they operate? Well, this raises some massive issues of worldview
significance. For one thing, after the experience of the 20th century, we should have the understanding
as Christians that when you look at the global picture, the one thing you really cannot
believe with any credibility is that there can be an international government or an international
regime of justice. To put it another way, looking at the 20th century honestly through
Christian eyes, it is easy to understand why there might be people who would want an
international court of justice or an international criminal court, but given the experience
of the 20th century, it's hard to see how people could honestly say that they believe it could
be achieved, either one. But let's be clear, we are talking about two different courts,
and the international criminal court does not count the United States or Israel as
members and signes signatories to the treaty or the declaration. But when it comes to the
international criminal court, that's something different because the international criminal court
is actually an arm of the United Nations. And the United States and Israel are both parts of the
United Nations, with the United Nations existing, at least largely because of the leadership
of the United States after the end of World War II. And the International Court of Justice
located there in the Netherlands at the Hague is the only
major branch of the United Nations that is not headquartered in New York City. And yet at the same time,
there are vast worldview implications to how this court came into existence, what came before it,
why that court came into existence, and why its failure underlined something absolutely basic.
So first of all, the International Court of Justice is the official court, which is a part of the
United Nations. So date the International Court of Justice to 1945.
and actually to 1946 when it began operations.
Justices on this court serve for nine-year terms.
There is a president of the court.
It is supposed to operate at the global level
with the authority of the United Nations
to settle certain kinds of legal and criminal questions.
But there was a precursor court,
and this really does get interesting.
The impetus behind the creation of a worldwide court of justice
goes back to the 19th century,
where nations, including Russia, clamored for some kind of international tribunal to help settle disputes among nations.
And also there was the idea that there may be certain forces such as terrorist forces, anarchist forces, that might cause damage in one country and seek refuge in another.
There ought to be some world court.
And of course, behind that, there would have to be some world police system that would prevent that from happening.
Bad people from leaving one country going to another, finding safety in one country in order to continue.
to threaten yet another. We can understand why there would be a hunger for a certain kind of
international justice. But then came World War I, and after the horrors of World War I,
there was a clamoring for an international court of justice. Who would hold the belligerent
nations that started this world conflagration to account? Who would prosecute war crimes, for
example, the use of poison gas on the battlefield? Well, at the end of World War I, the body, which
became known as the League of Nations. And remember, the American president, Woodrow Wilson,
was a globalist himself with a big leadership role in creating the League of Nations. The problem
was the United States Senate did not pass the treaty that would have brought the United States
into the League of Nations, a major embarrassment to Woodrow Wilson, of course. But that body did
create what was known as the Permanent Court of International Justice. So listen to the words,
permanent court of international justice. Only the word of survived the experiences of the rest of the
20th century. As for permanent court international justice, not so much. First of all, the permanent part.
For one thing, the League of Nations ceased to exist. And after the Second World War, the United States
did put its national energy behind the creation of the United Nations. And there was, after,
of course, Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, there was a great,
desire for there to be some achievement of justice. Now, of course, there were war tribunals in both
theaters undertaken by the United States and allies, but there was the hope, the institutional
hope, that there might be put together some kind of permanent court of justice. After the
creation of the United Nations, what had been the permanent court of international justice
became the International Court of Justice. But let's think for just a moment about how this works.
For one thing, if you do have an international court of justice, which is a part of an organization like the United Nations,
well, you might judge that it couldn't be any more effective than the United Nations.
So let's ask the question.
How effective has the United Nations as an organization been in preventing, say, the Cold War in the 20th century?
Absolutely ineffective.
How effective has the United Nations been in avoiding war all over the world?
fairly ineffective. When you have a nation that is determined to do what breaks a treaty or international
law, what withholding power does the United Nations have? What threat does it have? Now, it's not nothing,
but as you look at the history of the United Nations, it has often been action undertaken by the
United Nations that centers in conflicts in discrete areas. And one thing that tends to make sense,
as you look at the involvement of the United Nations and those who are more,
mobilized in order to achieve the ends of the United Nations, most of those nations are pretty small.
You don't have United Nations action, for instance, undertaken against, say, Russia, or Germany, China,
or the United States of America. Not going to happen. It is, in particular, not going to happen
when a nation has a seat, much less a permanent seat, in the United Nations Security Council.
And that means, for example, nations such as Britain, Germany, Russia, China, China,
the United States of America, I think you get the theme by now.
So while we're thinking about the relative effectiveness or ineffectiveness of, say, the United Nations,
much less its International Court of Justice, just consider the fact that there has been no
major action taken against Russia after its offensive invasion of Ukraine that broke any number
of international laws. So so long as your name is Russia, your country is not going to be the focus
of concerted United Nations effort.
And furthermore, you're going to just rebuff any authority of the United Nations to tell you what to do anyway.
And we need to be honest.
The same thing would be true of the United States of America if we believed that our own national security or national interest were at stake.
If you are the president of the United States and you're presented with the choice,
do you defend the national security interest of the United States of America,
or do you obey some order taken by the United Nations or any body thereof, your choice is going to be clear.
You're going to tell the United Nations to take a hike. You might not say that out loud,
but by your actions, that's exactly what you would do. Now, I am certainly not drawing a moral
equivalence between Russia's invasion of Ukraine and any action undertaken by the United States.
Or for that matter, the action now undertaken by Hamas against Israel. It is doing what is absolutely necessary to counter a
murderous terrorist threat. But the United Nations looks at the world quite differently,
which is why, to be honest, most of us, I think, understand that the United Nations, or for that
matter, the International Court of Justice might have begun with what we might call
understandable historical considerations and a hunger for some way to avoid many of the horrors
of the 20th century. The problem is, of course, those same bodies have been relatively ineffectual,
if not totally ineffectual in avoiding the horrors of the 21st century.
And the lesson has been learned.
But just to show you Israel's predicament in the current situation,
let me just mention that the current president of the International Criminal Court
is a justice named Nawaf Salam.
Here's what you need to know.
Nawaf Salam is a citizen of Lebanon.
Here's what you need to remember.
Lebanon does not recognize the legal existence of Israel.
So here you have a court led by a president who is a member of a nation that doesn't even recognize the nationhood of Israel,
and he is the president of the court that has now issued this order against Israel.
And you should just know that Israel is going to completely ignore the order.
The United States would as well.
And major European nations would as well.
Russia would, China would.
You can pretty much fill out the list yourself.
Furthermore, when it comes to the International Court of Justice, it takes actions primarily against
nations. And Hamas is not a nation. Hamas is a terrorist, a murderous terrorist organization.
Israel has not only the right, it has the responsibility to defeat Hamas as a threat to its own
national existence and the lives of its citizens. Just say to yourself, October 7, 2023.
But you'll notice that it's not just that Hamas is not.
not recognized within the jurisdiction of this court. And by the way, what moral credibility would a
terrorist group give to such a court in the first place? But the president of the court himself
represents a nation, and I realize there are people going to say that the justices don't represent.
But when you put a picture of the flag of the nation beside the name, frankly, that's a very hard
argument to make with any credibility. And that nation does not recognize Israel at all. And this president
and has actually posted on social media statements that deny the legal existence of Israel.
Why should Israel pay him and the court he leads any heed?
Now, even as I say that, Israel is now accepting the fact that it undertook a military effort
against Tamas there in Gaza near the city of Rafa that led to civilian casualties.
It says that it was responsible.
It takes responsibility.
It is going to seek to avoid civilian casualties.
But remember, that Hamas is.
not a nation. It has not been dragged before the United Nations. It can't because it is a terrorist
organization. It doesn't recognize any legal jurisdiction over it. And frankly, it only exists by
breaking the laws, not by keeping them. It is Hamas that has embedded the civilians among its
own armed personnel in order to require massive civilian casualties of Israel prosecutes an effort
against it. Hamas is absolutely committed to the extinction of Israel, and Israel knows it. And even as we're
looking at mistakes made by Israel and to its credit, it is accepting the responsibility for those
mistakes. That's not something a terrorist organization does. We do understand that war is never
undertaken with clean hands. But at times, the moral imperative is that it must be undertaken.
And quite frankly, Israel is not going to pause what it sees.
as a necessary effort against an existential threat in order to placate some kind of international
tribunal, which, by the way, is toothless, at least when it comes to helping Israel to prosecute its
cause against the terrorist threat of Hamas. Where is the United Nations in that sense when you need
them? Now, from a Christian perspective, I just want to remind us that our affirmation of what is
called subsidiarity, that is the principle that the most basic unit of creation,
has the greatest moral authority. That begins in Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 with marriage and the family.
We're just reminded of the fact that inevitably anything that claims to be international,
whether it's an international criminal court or an international court of justice or, for that matter,
the United Nations, it is an abstraction. It is a place for political debate. It is a place for
political intrigue. There might be some good things in terms of humanitarian efforts that can be
undertaken, but there is no such reality as a global government, at least not yet.
There is no competence for a global government, and a global government would be, by definition,
a form of tyranny. God has put within us a hunger for what we would call perhaps even international
justice, but he has not given us the means to achieve anything like international justice.
and when you do have the existence of a body such as what would call itself the
International Criminal Court or the International Court of Justice, there's the implication that
it can achieve justice.
And by the way, it's not to say that everything such a court would do would be wrong in
moral terms, but it is to say that the jurisdiction for the current conflict that Israel
must prosecute against Tamas, that jurisdiction is not something Israel is going to recognize
when the existence of the nation is under threat, and that's exactly what is the case.
Nor would any of the major European nations now beating up on Israel act differently if they were
the recipient of the same terrorist threat, nor would the United States. Let's just be clear.
And that doesn't even begin to state the obvious, which is that the autocratic communist and
totalitarian states, which are already living in abject denial of any kind of international
system of justice, they're not going to be swayed by the name United Nations, the United Nations
Security Council, the International Court of Justice, or the International Criminal Court.
None of that in the end is going to keep a malevolent nation or a malevolent force from doing
the evil that it intends.
By the way, just to document one social media posting undertaken by the president of the
International Court of Justice, and remember that is, Nawaf Salam of Lebanon,
On the 48th anniversary of Israel's independence, he tweeted, quote,
unhappy birthday to you, 48 years of occupation, end quote.
So, let's just put it this way, so much for the claim of unbiased justice.
But all right, honestly, I can't leave this without one more egregious example.
This one not quite so serious, at least at this point, as matters of life and death.
World Magazine reported just recently, quote, in a landmark decision,
the European High Court of Human Rights ruled April 9th that nations have a duty to protect
their citizens from the effects of climate change, end quote.
So here you have a body known as the European High Court of Human Rights that ruled, remember,
ruled the nations have a responsibility to protect citizens from the effects of climate change.
Let me just ask the obvious question.
How's that working out?
Then what follows is this, quote, the case was brought by senior women for climate protection,
a group of 2,400 Swiss women whose average age is 74.
Quote, they argued that because older women are more likely to die in heat waves,
Switzerland has a responsibility to help stop global warming
by implementing emissions targets listed in the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement.
Well, we're told that the court had rejected a similar case from Portugal,
but the Swiss case, quote, sets a legal precedent in the European Court
and likely will open the door to similar legal challenges in the 46 nations
that belong to the Council of Europe.
End quote.
So just imagine what this really means.
This is opening the door,
not for a major advance in nations fighting,
so-called climate change,
and I'm not denying that climate change is real.
But what this really opens the door to
is a flood of lawsuits.
And as is so often the case,
that's what this is really all about.
But at this point,
we also need to recognize
another development last week related to Israel,
as the New York Times reported,
Spain, Norway, and Ireland on Wednesday announced that they would recognize an independent
Palestinian state. As the Times said, this is, quote, a rebuke to Israel that, the largely
symbolic, reflected dwindling international patience with its military offensive in Gaza
and its decades of occupation of Palestinian territories. End quote. Well, we need to at least
take a look at this. What does it mean that these three European nations, and by the way,
they're hardly insignificant, Spain, Norway, and Ireland,
what does it mean that they have recognized the legal existence of a Palestinian state?
Let me just point out something fundamentally important.
This does not create a Palestinian state.
You can say that you recognize it, but that does not mean that it exists.
There's the Palestinian authority, but it has a tenuous grasp upon the West Bank.
It was voted out in a vote that took place many years ago now.
In favor of Hamas, the terrorist or terrorist or
organization there in Gaza. The terrorist organization Hamas has stated emphatically that it will not
accept a two-state solution. It doesn't want a Palestinian state alongside Israel. It demands the
elimination, the eradication of Israel. And so what we're looking at here is just Western liberal
politics. That's all it is. It's the politics of show. You have Spain, Ireland, and Norway
creating a show which is intended to embarrass Israel, but is not going to deter Israel in the
the slightest from defending its national self-existence against Hamas.
And when you look at this, you recognize that even though these nations are likely to say,
I can't say with absolute assurance, but they would be likely to say that they would oppose the
efforts undertaken by Hamas, you also have the fact that some of these European nations,
they've been playing both sides of this game. And one of the nations that's been doing that for
much of the 20th century is Ireland. Remember that Ireland did not even side with the allies,
against Nazi Germany in World War II.
That's one interesting place to begin.
It's also important for us just to ask the question,
what is a state?
How does a state exist when it didn't exist before?
Well, you look at the state of Israel,
and it was decided action undertaken by the Jewish people
advocating for a national Jewish state.
That was eventually recognized,
partly because of the horror of the Holocaust in World War II,
by the United Nations in adopting a plan for the existence of Israel.
But one of the reasons Israel exists is because Israel had to win a war of independence
against hostile Arab nations.
The United Nations had proposed a two-state solution,
but the Arabs would not accept the existence of Israel.
And so Israel's been on the defensive ever since it was created in 1948 and 1949.
And at the same time, you recognize that one of the reasons Israel exists as a state
is because Harry Truin, the president of the United States, granted Israel almost immediate diplomatic recognition by the United States of America.
And you look at that in its context.
That was a decisive action.
That's not to say that Israel exists only because of the United Nations, although you can't take the United Nations out of it.
You can't say that Israel survived only because of the recognition of the United States.
That would be to overclaim, but neither of those actions was insignificant.
But Israel has operated as a legitimate state ever since then. It had to prove itself to be competent as a state.
And quite frankly, it has had to defend itself in unusually hostile territory. And under unusual
constant threats, it's had to defend its own self-existence. It is a state. There is no parallel
structure on the other side in terms of the Palestinian controversy. That is not to say that the
Palestinians should have no rights. It's not to say that a,
two-state solution is absolutely insane. It is to say that there is no conceivable situation in which
a two-state solution is a reasonable answer to the current predicament there in the Middle East.
And even as there are those in the United States government who say they'll only be satisfied
with a two-state solution, and even as you have European nations and others demanding this now,
and perhaps convincing themselves that they're making a contribution to that end by a
recognizing, they say, the existence of a Palestinian state, let's just state the obvious,
that does not create a legitimate state. That does not create a legitimate government. That does
not create a national entity with recognizable and rational borders. It certainly does not
create a state alongside Israel. Israel knows that. Hamas knows that. This is certainly a conversation
that will continue, but at the very least, we need to demand that it is a conversation.
that is honest. I'll also end by affirming in a very different way the importance of that
Christian principle of subsidiarity. I remember a cartoon years ago. It was published showing a little boy
who was being carted off by an angry parent. And the little boy, likely facing some kind of
deserved punishment, was simply crying out that he wanted to appeal his case to the United Nations.
It was funny because you look at that and say, well, kid, good.
luck with that, if you know what I mean. But that's exactly how we should look at much of the
conversation about the United Nations or the International Criminal Court or the International
Court of Justice or the European Court, the High Court of Human Rights. When you look at it,
it is like that little boy. You can cry out for rescue by one of these global bodies. But as is
so often the case, when you need them, they're not there. And when they're there, you don't need
them. Thanks for listening to the brief.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmohler.com.
You can follow me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsketech.edu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to Boiscollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
