Throughline - War Crimes
Episode Date: May 22, 2025On today's episode, we travel from the battlefields of the U.S. Civil War, through the rubble of two world wars, to the hallways of the Hague, to see how the modern world has tried to define — and p...rosecute — war crimes. This episode originally aired at "The Rules of War" in 2024. To access bonus episodes and listen to Throughline sponsor-free, subscribe to Throughline+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/throughline.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, it's Rund. In the latest ThruLine Plus bonus episode, I'm sharing a deleted scene
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to find out more. In the beginning, there was only darkness.
Until one day, the breath of life proved ready.
And the Egyptian sun god, Ra, emerged and bathed the world in light.
But the days were not endless.
At sunset, Ra descended into the underworld,
where every night the giant serpent, Apep,
would attack Ra's heavenly barge,
intent on destroying all life
and plunging the world into darkness.
And every night, Ra would vanquish the serpent,
ensuring that the sun would rise at dawn.
Thereby in this action, or this act of slaying, Ra was able to create the cosmos.
This is Michael Bryant.
I'm a professor of history and legal studies at Bryant University in Smithfield, Rhode
Island.
The story of Ra's nightly battle created order in the world for ancient Egyptians,
including for the Pharaoh, Ra's avatar on Earth.
The enemies of the Pharaoh were likened to night and to disorder and chaos.
And of course, the Pharaoh and his army was then considered to be on the side of Ra.
Which meant that violence, loss, and death in times of war could be divinely justified.
But of course, this has very little to do with the humanitarian sort of motive that
guides our modern understanding of international law and of war crimes today.
Since the 1800s, there's been an international attempt to make sense of war and constrain its horrors by codifying the
rules of war and establishing boundaries over what is and isn't acceptable.
A war crime is a serious violation committed during a time of armed conflict.
This is David Bosco. He's the author of Rough Justice, the international criminal court in a world of power politics.
And it can involve a lot of different things, including, you know, abusing a prisoner of war,
attacking civilians, using certain types of weapons, torture, etc.
I think at the most basic level, the very concept of war crimes are violations which
are widely acknowledged as being abhorrent.
But what is abhorrent?
Who decides?
And who's legally held to account?
News from the International Criminal Court, which is a global human rights court in The
Hague and the Netherlands. It is announced it is seeking arrest warrants for leaders of both Hamas and Israel.
Dozens of countries have taken the floor at the United Nations top court in The Hague
to insist that Ukraine has the legal right to sue Russia for genocide.
Today the United Nations highest court ordered Israel to cease its offensive in the southern
Gaza city of Rafa.
President Trump has signed an executive order to impose sanctions on the International Criminal
Court whose jurisdiction it does not recognize.
International courts have made headlines a lot in recent years, including issuing and
requesting warrants in high-profile conflicts.
In 2023, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin, alleging
he committed the war crime of unlawful deportation and unlawful transfer of children from Ukraine to Russia.
In November 2024, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for senior Hamas official Mohammed
Diab Ibrahim al-Masri for alleged crimes including, quote, murder, taking hostages and torture.
That same month, the ICC also issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel's Minister of Defense,
for alleged crimes including starvation of civilians as a method of warfare,
and willfully causing great suffering. The allegations are all disputed,
and the jurisdiction of the ICC is disputed by Russia and Israel.
In February 2025, the Trump administration issued an executive order imposing sanctions
on the ICC, saying the court has engaged in illegitimate and baseless actions targeting
America and our close ally, Israel.
These cases signal a significant moment for the role of these international courts in
adjudicating claims of genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity.
It's the first time, for example, that they have targeted the leader of a close ally of
the U.S.
So what are these courts?
Where did they come from?
And how did they come to decide the rules of war?
I'm Ramtin Arab-Louis.
And I'm Randabd al-Fattah.
Today on Throughline from NPR, we're going to travel from the battlefields of the U.S. Civil War
to the rubble of two world wars to the hallways of the Hague
to trace modern attempts to define and prosecute
war crimes.
Hi, this is Pamela Chambers.
You're listening to Throughline on NPR.
These days, with all the information coming at you, it can be hard to know what's accurate,
what's not, and what's worth your time. Here to help you navigate it all is 1A. Five days a week,
the 1A podcast provides a forum for curious minds to explore different angles on the biggest
headlines and give you a more balanced take on what's happening. Listen to the 1A podcast from NPR and WAMU.
and WAMU. It's early morning in Lawrence, Kansas in 1863.
The U.S. Civil War is raging across the country, but at this moment, before the sun has come
up, the town is quiet and serene.
Until a group of roughly 400 Confederate guerrillas, led by William Quantrill, a horse thief and outlaw, begin to attack the town.
They kill civilians and set Lawrence, a known abolitionist stronghold in the Free State of Kansas, which bordered the slave state of Missouri on fire.
The attack was known as the Lawrence Massacre, or Quantrill's Raid.
When they reflect on the Civil War, I think a lot of people would think of the major battles,
you know, whether it's Shiloh or Gettysburg or the Battle of the Wilderness and so forth.
And certainly these were very violent affairs without a question.
But one of the most violent was along the border
with Missouri and Kansas.
You had the Union Army,
and you also had settlers living there,
but you also had groups of irregular forces.
Irregular forces, so people who took it upon themselves
to fight, not as part of an official uniformed
army. They were guerrilla fighters.
Who were fighting on behalf of the Confederates. And they were attacking not just the Union
armies as guerrilla fighters, but they were also attacking civilians.
The Civil War was the most violent war the U.S. had ever experienced. Neighbors turned on each other.
Brothers fought against brothers.
And now guerrilla fighters were going after civilians.
— And the Union Army had a conundrum.
Should they treat those fighters
the same way they would Confederate soldiers,
as prisoners of war?
Were guerrilla fighters soldiers or criminals?
— If they were treated as criminals then quite
frankly they had no rights really hardly at all at that time. They could simply execute them.
Even before the Lawrence Massacre, the Union army had been asking itself these tough questions.
So to get some much needed guidance, the Union turned to a law professor named Francis Lieber.
Born in Berlin in 1798, Lieber was a war veteran who'd been left for dead while fighting Napoleon
during the Waterloo campaign.
Scarred by this experience, Lieber thought war should be constrained somehow.
And even before the U.S. Civil War broke out, he'd been giving lectures in the U.S. on
how to make war more civilized.
Lieber comes up with an analysis,
which is still worth reading today,
and he distinguishes guerrillas
and what he calls irregular forces from partisans.
According to Lieber,
partisans who were part of a formal,
established army were protected,
but guerrillas, like those that led the attack
on Lawrence, were not.
The bottom line in his essay is that the guerrillas
and the non-uniform people who were kind of fighting
without a great deal of structure to their ranks
and didn't really have a recognized hierarchy,
were fighting outside the ordinary structure
of the military.
These could be treated as guerrillas.
Lieber's arguments were so convincing that the Union Army and the Lincoln administration
tapped him for an even bigger job, revised the rules of warfare for the entire Union
Army.
His kind of masterwork, his masterpiece, which was his code, General Orders, number 100.
— Lieber Code Article 155. All enemies in regular war are divided into two general classes,
that is to say, into combatants and non-combatants, or unarmed citizens.
— Also known as the Lieber Code. It was published and handed out to Union soldiers beginning in 1863.
Lieber Code Article 23. Private citizens are no longer murdered, enslaved, or carried off to distant parts.
By the late 1800s, technological advancements were changing war.
Cannons could shoot targets from farther distances.
Trains were expanding battlefields
and bringing war to people's doorsteps.
Civilians needed to be protected.
And as war became deadlier, many countries like the US
were increasingly seeking to use the law
to create more rational, moral, and civil societies.
The Libra Code met the needs of the times.
It was the first modern comprehensive legal framework
about what was and wasn't acceptable in times of war.
It was groundbreaking, but it had its limits.
The codes themselves were subject to interpretation.
Baked into the code was the ability
to sidestep its guidelines entirely in the name of military
necessity.
What that means is that if somebody puts their hands up, throws their weapons down, and you
take them captive as a prisoner of war, you then are not supposed to execute that person.
But that principle, according to Lieber, was very much subject to military necessity.
People are very surprised sometimes when they read the code and discover the links to which
he was willing to go to enable commanders in the field to commit what we today would
regard as war crimes.
It's sort of the beginning of the real codification of some kind of legal language around war crimes,
but also the beginning of who do you hold accountable
and what is the bar for calling something a war crime?
I think one of the reasons why Lieber was so insistent
on military necessity was because of the unique situation Lieber was so insistent on military necessity
was because of the unique situation that the United States was in at the time he wrote the
Lieber Code. It was a civil war and he was concerned that the Union might lose, right? And if the
Union loses, the Confederacy wins, it would have been a catastrophic development, obviously, from
the Northern perspective. And Lieber was not willing to leave that to chance.
He thought that preserving the country was the single most important thing that could be done.
Even though the Lieber Code was made specifically to address the US Civil War,
it would go on to influence the rest of the world as more and more countries,
particularly in Europe, sought to constrain the effects of war through law.
The reach of Libra's thought is really quite vast.
It would go on to influence all kinds of instruments
by the late 19th and early 20th century, including the Hague Conventions,
which was one of the major protections given to civilians during World Wars I and II.
About 40 years after the Libber Codes were published, dozens of countries, including
the United States, Russia, the UK, and Germany, came together for a series of peace conferences.
Tensions were rising in Europe.
World War I was on the horizon.
People were nervous.
So together, they came up with the Hague Conventions, a set of parameters for an international conduct of war.
Hague Convention Article 3. The armed forces of the belligerent parties may consist of
combatants and non-combatants. In case of capture by the enemy, both have a right to be treated as
prisoners of war. Sound familiar? That's because the Hague Conventions drew heavily from the Lieber Code.
— But not everyone thought this was the path forward.
— There was a lot of opposition from the great powers to having their freedom of action
restrained in some way by international conventions.
So the Germans at the Hague convention were very bumpshus.
They objected to virtually every article
that was proposed on the grounds
that it would conflict with military necessity.
And of course, that's reflected then in German behavior
during World War I.
Mass shootings of civilians, mass shooting of hostages,
the invasion of neutral countries,
the deportation of thousands of people to forced labor.
All of this was during World War I.
And war crimes were barely tried
in spite of the Hague conventions.
It went nowhere after World War I.
Coming up, war crimes go from lofty ideas
to prosecutable crimes in the horrific aftermath of World War II.
Hi, this is Kelly Mooring from Somerset, New Jersey, and you're listening to Three Line on NPR.
In the Palace of Justice in Nuremberg, the people of the world came together, for there sat the International Military Tribunal to judge the chief Nazi war criminals.
Treatment of prisoners was harsh, but any methodical physical abuse or maltreatment
was out of the question.
This is Rudolf Huss, a former Auschwitz commander, testifying at Nuremberg.
In the summer of 1941, the Fuhrer ordered the final solution of the Jewish question. The Nuremberg Trials began in 1945 in order to hold Nazi leadership accountable for crimes
against humanity, crimes against peace, and war crimes.
It was the first trial of its kind.
In all the centuries since Rome watched the rulers of its vanquished foes dragged in chains behind the chariots of their conquerors,
there has never been a more dramatic demonstration of the mutability of human fortunes than the trial of Nazi war criminals.
The New York Times, November 21st, 1945.
The horrors of the Holocaust and the extreme loss of life during World War II fueled a newfound urgency to enforce the vision of the Hay Conventions.
David Basco says it paved the way for actually creating an international court system.
The Nuremberg trials really gave a lot of momentum to the idea of trying to investigate and prosecute crimes committed during warfare at the international level.
It was a major turning point
in the history of international law.
But according to Michael Bryant, it almost didn't happen.
There was a major conference that is held in Moscow
where the allies get together and determine
that they're going to create a war crimes plan
for dealing with these crimes after the war.
It's called the Moscow Declaration.
It's really the earliest statement that we have
of what the allies are going to do.
They say that we're going to take the lower level people,
once the war is over,
we'll take the lower level people and send them back
to the countries in which they committed their crimes
for trial by national courts in these countries,
which is what they ultimately do in many cases.
But when it comes to the major war criminals, we haven't made our minds up yet.
We're going to issue a joint decision later on about what to do with them.
What's clear is that certainly Churchill and to a certain extent, even Franklin Roosevelt
were leaning towards summary execution.
What changes their mind?
I think there are a lot of different factors that feed into it. The Secretary of War of
the United States, Henry Stimson, really came forward and condemned the idea of just putting
the Germans against the wall and shooting them. And he said that, you know, this is simply going to look bad.
It looks like victor's justice.
It just looks like pure revenge.
What we need is a legal solution that looks fair, that is fair.
And so he said we really need to give the top-ranking Nazis,
who at that time included Hitler, he was still alive in 1944,
so the plan was to put him on trial
too, and to really give them their day in court, to give them a chance to defend themselves.
At least that was Stimson's thinking. And Truman really is the one who puts the United
States on the path to supporting an international trial in particular, so that by June 1945,
even Churchill has come around and he agrees to an international tribunal presided
over then by the four victorious powers of World War II, the Americans, the British,
the French and the Soviets.
But in between that, the US drops two atomic bombs on Japan.
So I guess there's this sort of like Hypocrisy starting to brew even at that stage where where the US and the Allied powers are sort of calling for
Justice as you say, right?
But it's like justice for who?
Right, of course when we talk about Nuremberg, we are perforce talking about Germans
It's hard to get around that because the Germans were the ones who were put on trial. The Allies were not put on trial at Nuremberg. Although the
German defendants tried to suggest that if you're gonna have a Nuremberg war
crimes trial targeting the Germans, you should have a war crimes trial targeting
the Americans or the British for bombing Hamburg, the bombing of
civilians, so-called morale bombing as it was called, to try to break the spirit
of the civilian population. Let's face it, I mean the Allies did attack civilians the bombing of civilians, so-called morale bombing, as it was called, to try to break the spirit
of the civilian population.
Let's face it, I mean, the Allies did attack civilians
during the war.
But there's a big difference between the winners
and the losers.
And the winners typically do not put themselves on trial.
They put the losers on trial.
And assuredly, the Nazis deserve to be prosecuted.
It was an imperfect process.
Not all war crimes were investigated.
The victors defined the terms.
But that didn't take away from the impact the Nuremberg trials had.
Nazis were held personally accountable as individual actors.
A measure of justice was met.
Three of the 22 Nazi defendants were acquitted,
12 were sentenced to death,
and the efficacy of the tribunal demonstrated
how an international court could help mitigate issues
between countries.
And the backdrop to all of this
was the beginnings of the United Nations
and the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
That's the atomic bomb exploding at Nagasaki.
Civilized people can only demand that such power be directed not towards their obliteration,
but to the benefit of mankind.
Widespread nuclear war was now a real possibility, which made the stakes of international conflict
more deadly and catastrophic than ever before.
So the need for some entity to enforce international treaties and conventions felt more and more
necessary.
And that's where the newly formed United Nations and the International Court of Justice, the
ICJ, also known as the
World Court, come in.
The ICJ is based on the idea that states are going to want to have a legal mechanism for
resolving disputes between them.
And so the majority, the great majority of cases that the ICJ handles are one country
versus another country
about some international law question.
But it's basically like a civil court
in the sense that what's happening
is one country is suing another
and there's not gonna be anyone going to prison.
It's not about putting people in jail.
It's not even about individual culpability.
It's about did some state or another violate international law.
Unlike the Nuremberg Trials, which had held individuals responsible for war crimes,
the ICJ allowed UN nations to hold one another accountable.
And it was also a permanent court.
The ICJ wasn't going anywhere.
It was part of a larger effort to lay out international rules of war. Rules that probably
sound familiar, says Michael Bryant. Things like the 1948 Genocide Convention, which promised
to prevent and punish genocide in times of war and peace, as well as the 1949 Geneva
Conventions.
Which really placed civilians at the very center of their concern.
And what exactly do the Geneva Conventions say?
Yeah, of course, they're quite long and quite detailed, but in essence, they try to
articulate standards for protected persons in particular.
They try to rein in attacking civilians, killing civilians,
committing sexual crimes on civilians,
destroying public and private property.
I mean, you're always going to have destruction
of property in warfare.
It's inevitable, right?
It's just war is a violent affair.
But it's that superfluous nature of warfare
that the conventions were concerned about.
Superfluous nature of warfare that the conventions were concerned about. Superfluous, meaning it results in an excessive, unnecessary loss of life.
And the world community has tried, oftentimes unsuccessfully, but nonetheless, there have
been efforts to try to protect civilians since that time because of the tens of millions
of civilians who lost their lives in World War II.
I guess I have to wonder, you know, the Geneva Conventions that are being established in
Ernie McChryles, how would that have looked to people outside of this small circle of
victors, you know, the US and these European powers who had come out on top?
How did the rest of the world see this?
One of the interesting historical facts
about the Geneva Conventions is that, of course,
they're finalized in 1949,
and so now there are subsequent protocols and et cetera.
But the bulk of the Geneva Conventions are put into place
and negotiated before the wave of decolonization that takes
place in the 50s, 1960s into the 70s.
And so one of the criticisms and one of the tensions that has sometimes existed is from
decolonized states who say we didn't gain independence, we weren't really part of these
international negotiations, we weren't part of the formation of this law, and that's problematic.
So, you know, a good chunk of what we have really happened before the era of decolonization,
and then it's been amended and tweaked as we've moved forward.
So while there was an international will to create these systems, not everyone was at
the planning table.
And while that's been
slowly changing over the past few decades, countries like the US, the UK, and Russia
still have an outsized influence. And it has real consequences.
Take the ICJ case brought by Nicaragua against the United States in 1984 for funding rebels,
called Contras, who were attacking the Nicaraguan government.
The ICJ ruled in favor of Nicaragua and asked the U.S. to pay reparations, but the U.S.
refused to acknowledge the ruling.
Undeterred, Nicaragua took it to the UN Security Council, but that too was a dead end. I mean, you have these five countries with an absolute veto power.
The US, the Soviet Union, now Russia, Great Britain, France, and China all have permanent
seats on the UN Security Council, as well as absolute veto power on enforcement of ICJ
rulings.
So, in the Nicaragua case, the US used its veto power.
They had the power to prevent UN initiatives from going
forward.
I mean, I think there's something here about sort of the
the aspiration versus the reality, right? Coming kind of
hitting up against reality. How does it actually impact
conflicts in the second part of the 20th century?
Yeah, I would say it's a pretty minimal impact
in terms of, at least in terms of formal
international processes, particularly in the context
of the emerging Cold War, where it was pretty clear
there was gonna be at least the possibility
of armed conflict, there was going to be civil uprisings, there was going to be the need from the Western
perspective to kind of fight Soviet communism.
And so at that point, it's really hard to say that international criminal law is making much impact in the post-World War II world.
Or if it's making an impact, it's through the influence of the Geneva Conventions, the
kind of precedent of Nuremberg, but not because of the expectation that anybody is going to
be put on trial at an international level.
Coming up, at the turn of the 21st century, a new international court seeks to prosecute individuals.
But not everyone is happy about it.
Hi, this is Nick Penning in Arlington, Virginia mud and water. I was laying down next to my dad was on my left-hand side and my uncle was on my right-hand
side.
And as I was laying down, they ordered us, all the women and children, to get up.
This is Elviden Pasic in 2012, recalling what happened to him and his family decades before,
in 1992, at the hands of Bosnian Serbs during the Bosnian War.
At first I didn't want to get up because I was afraid to separate from my dad.
And he told me to get up.
I told him, no, I don't want to go without you.
He says, get up.
And my uncle insisted, he says, get up, you will survive.
Elviden got up and was separated from his father and uncle.
He never saw his father again.
Elviden was one of the thousands of Bosniaks, Muslim Bosnians, that were caught up in the
ethnic and religious violence that erupted after the dissolution of the former of Bosniaks, Muslim Bosnians, that were caught up in the ethnic and religious
violence that erupted after the dissolution of the former Yugoslavia, which pitted Bosnian
Serbs, who were primarily Christian Orthodox, against Muslim Bosniaks.
From the beginning of the conflict, reports of genocide,
Here on these faces, these broken bodies, hard evidence of the previous day's Serb onslaught on Srebrenica.
And sexual violence were widespread.
The international community estimates that Serbs may have systematically raped
as many as 20,000 Muslim women as a weapon of war.
There were some famous images that came out of the war in Bosnia
of kind of emaciated prisoners behind
barbed wire.
There were, you know, there was ethnic cleansing, there was torture.
So there were some very significant crimes.
As the world watched in horror, David Bosco says there was a renewed effort to try to
legally hold perpetrators of these acts responsible.
And so the U.S., and this is during the Clinton administration mainly, really begins to push
for there to be some kind of international judicial response to the crimes that were
being witnessed in the Balkans.
The US approach was to really push for there to be an international tribunal that would address those crimes.
And the U.S. led the push for this at the U.N. Security Council.
With strong backing from the U.S. and other countries, the U.N. Security Council,
the very same entity whose veto power could hobble the UN's ICJ,
established the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in 1993.
Madeleine Albright, who was at the time the U.S. Ambassador to the UN, provided full-hearted
support for its creation.
The only victor that will prevail in this endeavor is the truth.
Truth is the cornerstone of the rule of law and it will point towards individuals, not
peoples as perpetrators of war crimes.
And it is only the truth that can cleanse the ethnic and religious hatreds and begin
the healing process.
The spirit of the Nuremberg trials was back, once again with the full support of the U.S.
And while it stumbled in the beginning, the tribunal started to make some gains.
Countries that have peacekeeping forces in Bosnia start to become more willing to arrest
people who are charged.
The economic pressure of the European Union on Serbia and other former Yugoslav countries
starts to take hold.
And it ends up being fairly close to a success story
in terms of the number of people who are arrested
and actually put on trial.
The International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia indicted 161 people
over the course of 24 years.
One of its final judgments was against the quote,
butcher of Bosnia or general Radko Emladić.
Elviden Pasic, who lost his father and uncle, was the first witness to testify against him.
In the end, Emladić was convicted for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide.
In 1994, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda was also created to prosecute violations
of humanitarian law in the aftermath of the genocide. The idea behind these tribunals was that by ending impunity and holding individuals responsible,
the atrocities might come to an end.
And it was an idea that began to pick up speed.
And that's where the momentum for creating an international criminal court really starts
to bubble up.
And so it's in the early to mid 1990s
that that pressure starts to get going,
which is really a repeat of the push
that there was to create a permanent Nuremberg Tribunal
right after World War II, which hadn't taken place.
Which countries are calling
for this permanent international court?
Was the US among them?
The US was interested in the process and it was in theory at least supportive of creating
a permanent court.
But it was going to be very careful about, it wanted to be very careful about what the
rules were going to be and what the jurisdiction of the court would be.
I would say the strongest pressure was there was a group of what they called themselves
the like-minded states. And this was a mix of largely European countries, some Latin American
countries, then some countries, a scattering of other countries around the world. But I would
say Europe and Latin America were kind of the places where the support for the court was strongest.
And so you start what's basically a treaty negotiation process to try to see if there
can be agreement reached on what will become the template then for a permanent court.
And that process really gets going is becoming increasingly nervous about the direction of
the negotiations because, remember, the Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and the Tribunal
for Rwanda, those were created by the UN Security Council, where the US has the veto power.
And that made the US very comfortable kind of championing international justice.
If it's basically in the hands of the UN Security Council,
that gives the US a lot of comfort that the process is not going to be turned against it.
The new permanent court, however, was not going to be created by the UN Security Council
or be subject to its veto powers.
The world's first permanent international war crimes tribunal
is one step closer to reality today, despite U.S. opposition.
The international momentum continued to mount
until the International Criminal Court, or ICC,
was officially established in 2002. All right, the ICC, was officially established in 2002.
Alright, the ICC, the ICJ, we know we're throwing a lot of different acronyms and courts
at you, so let's take a second to clarify.
The ICJ, or International Court of Justice, also known as the World Court, was created
in 1945 and is a civil court.
UN member nation states sue each other there
for all sorts of international law violations.
And any attempt at enforcement is subject to a veto
by one of the five permanent members
of the UN Security Council.
The ICC, or International Criminal Court,
on the other hand, is, as its name suggests,
a criminal court, which means individuals,
not nations, are tried, and guilty verdicts can result in prison sentences.
The ICC specifically tries cases dealing with the gravest international concerns.
War crimes, genocide, crimes against humanity, and the crime of aggression.
It has jurisdiction over all of the 124 member states.
The U.S. is not one of them.
And after 9-11 happened,
the U.S. became outright hostile to the ICC.
The International Criminal Court is troubling to the United States.
It's troubling to the administration,
obviously troubling to the United States Senate as well. From the administration, obviously trouble to the United States Senate as well.
From the U.S. perspective with the 9-11 attacks,
and then the invasion of Afghanistan,
and then ultimately, of course, the invasion of Iraq.
And as the U.S. is engaging in this multi-front
kind of war on terror, as it calls it,
it's using some techniques that it probably
wouldn't have used before.
We're talking about, as it's referred to,
enhanced interrogation, pretty clearly torture in some cases.
And the ICC is just coming into existence at that point.
And so that puts the United States in the position the ICC is just coming into existence at that point.
And so that puts the United States in the position of having to worry about an international court
potentially looking over its shoulder
as it's engaging in this multi-front conflict.
And one of the ways in which that plays out
in a kind of surprising way
is that the new government
of Afghanistan, the US-supported government, actually joins the ICC.
That means that, according to the ICC's jurisdictional rules, the ICC can investigate potential crimes
committed on the territory of Afghanistan, whoever they're committed by.
And so that starts to raise the question, well, what if there's, you know, torture going on in some CIA site, for example, in Afghanistan? Could that or what if there's, you know,
an attack on civilians by US forces? Could that be investigated by the ICC? The US wasn't having it.
In 2002, Congress passed the American Service Members Protection Act, or the Hague Invasion
Act as it was also known.
There's a lot of animosity to the ICC in Congress because it's seen as a potential threat to
US sovereignty.
And so you get what's called
the American Service Members Protection Act,
and then it kind of famously includes this provision.
Quote, the president is authorized
to use all means necessary and appropriate
to bring about the release of any person described
in subsection B who is being detained or imprisoned by on behalf of or at the request of
the International Criminal Court. Which you know some people saw as essentially a threat to use
armed force against the ICC if necessary. It feels like an incredibly important development
in terms of the story of war crimes and trying, right?
The story in the 20th and 21st century
is trying to essentially make war more humane.
I mean, that feels like a fundamental threat
to the whole project, the whole ideal
that the ICC represents.
Yeah, it's a very, but it's a complicated story,
looking at it through the prism of the US role,
because on the one hand, without the US,
there would have been no Nuremberg,
there would have been no Yugoslav Tribunal,
there probably would have been no Rwanda Tribunal.
So the whole process of having international criminal
justice at all is very much a US led story. But then the US has always had this deep aversion
to being scrutinized itself. And so you see those, both the legalistic impulse of the United States, the desire to use international law and address atrocities through international law.
You have that powerful instinct, but then you have the powerful self-protective instinct of the US and its desire to shield itself from international scrutiny.
And those two are essentially kind of playing out against each other in really complicated
ways.
And it gets to the point where, for example, when the ICC issued an arrest warrant or brought
charges against Russian President Vladimir Putin for activity in Ukraine, there was,
you know, in many parts of the US, including leading voices on Capitol Hill,
there was a lot of support for that.
There was the feeling that this is something that needs to happen and Putin is a war criminal
and he should be tried.
But then fast forward when we've got the situation in Gaza and the ICC might ultimately be issuing arrest warrants
for senior Israeli officials.
And that of course leads to howls of outrage.
Both presidents Biden and Trump strongly condemn the arrest warrants.
President Trump has said that the ICC has no jurisdiction over the US or Israel and
that both nations strictly adhere to the laws
of war.
In February 2025, the Trump administration imposed sanctions on the ICC, which include
blocking entry into the U.S. of ICC officials and threatening people or institutions with
fines and prison time if they provide financial, material, or technological support
into the investigations of Israel's leaders. ICC officials say that these sanctions have
halted their work. I think in the U.S. political policy world, they're still trying to come to
an understanding of what it means to actually have an independent
international judicial body. And that it's not going to be just something you can kind of turn
off and turn on and turn off whenever it suits your interest. It's going to be something that's
out there and that you're going to have to deal with. All of this feels like it is deeply political
all of this feels like it is deeply political in nature.
And I wonder then how effective the court can be
when these political realities exist. And when you have the most powerful countries in the world
attempting to weaken the jurisdiction
and the power of the court.
Yeah, or at least if not weaken it, try to direct it in certain ways and kind of push
it in a direction they want and away from things they don't want.
I mean, one of the real challenges for the ICC is that in contrast to those tribunals
set up for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. The ICC has a whole menu of different situations around the world that it might address.
And this is a real, real difficulty for it, is that the ICC has limited resources.
It needs to decide what situations am I going to prioritize, where am I going to put resources, which situations
are more severe than other situations.
Those are really hard determinations, just leaving alone the politics.
They're just super hard factual, ethical determinations.
Then you have to inject into it the whole political context, meaning that if the ICC
really does go and investigate Palestine and if they decide that Israeli forces have committed
some crimes and they decide to issue charges, that's going to create a huge backlash from
the United States and from some other countries as well.
If you go and investigate in Ukraine, Russia is obviously going to be very hostile.
Russia has already said that they don't recognize anything the ICC is doing in Ukraine.
That means that the best the ICC can do really is try to do its work legitimately, try to
do its work as transparently as possible, try to make sure its investigations are well conceived and well documented. Even then
it's very clear that among some in some capitals it's never going to be viewed
as legitimate. I mean there's no investigation of Russia that the Russian
leadership is going to say is is. To this day, the United States is still not part of the ICC.
Neither are China, India, Russia or Israel.
Yet in spite of the pushback against it, the ICC continues to function.
Since 2002, the ICC has heard 33 cases.
Six of those cases have resulted in reparations or imprisonment.
The scope of the court, however, has been narrow.
All but one of the cases have focused on African nations.
Begging the question, who is this court for?
I think the story of why the ICC started in Africa, almost exclusively in Africa,
is in part there were several very serious conflicts there
with some very high death tolls and significant atrocities.
So part of what was happening is that the ICC
was seeking environments where governments wanted them
to be there and thought they could
play a useful role. But I do think there's another element, which is there is a, for
sure, a geopolitical element. This court, just starting off, wanted to investigate in
places that weren't going to immediately put it in a fight with the United States or
a fight with Russia or a fight with China, et cetera.
I think there's no doubt that was an element as well.
In the first decade or so of the court's existence,
that it was pretty cautious about the investigations
that it wanted to initiate,
and it wanted to try to do so in a politically sensitive way.
— But David Bosco says that's beginning to change.
That is important to recognize that by the time we get to 2013, 2015, you know, the ICC is looking at the situation in Georgia, which involves Russia.
It's started to look seriously at the situation in Afghanistan.
It's looking at the Philippines.
It's looking at a variety of different places.
And right now, obviously, you have a Gaza investigation going on.
So it's clear that we're in a different phase of the court's existence,
where it is more willing, I would say, to take on investigations
that might entangle it with powerful countries.
But looking back, the results have been uneven.
Superpowers can skirt accountability.
War crimes are still happening.
So has the effort to put war into a legal container
to create laws and international courts
like the ICJ and ICC been worth it?
Is it still worth it?
Yeah, I think so.
But what's the alternative?
It's very easy to kind of throw your hands up and say,
well, there's all this hypocrisy, there are all these double standards,
look at all these ways in which it doesn't work.
And that's true.
We have to give ourselves a little space to recognize
that you're not going to set up these institutions to regulate something as
difficult as regulating war, which goes to like the core interests of states and
like their most, you know, their deepest interests. But I guess ultimately I see
us as being on this kind of long, slow
march toward having international law have more meaning. And it's going to be ugly and
there are going to be a lot of setbacks along the way.
Principles of power, power politics will always bedevil that effort to hold political leaders and
military leaders accountable.
But think of the amount of progress that's been made just in the past hundred years.
The term genocide did not even exist a hundred years ago.
The ICC didn't exist.
There was no such thing as the Nuremberg war crimes trials or any of its successor institutions.
So my feeling is that the future is going to belong to legality and to human rights
and hold countries
accountable, perhaps making war itself more humane, is being shaped as we speak. That's it for this week's show.
I'm Randabdil Fattah.
I'm Ramtin Arablui, and you've been listening to Throughline from NPR.
This episode was produced by me.
And me and.
Lawrence Wu.
Julie Kane.
Anya Steinberg.
Casey Minor. Christina Kim. Devina Steinberg. Casey Miner.
Christina Kim.
Devin Kadiyama.
Nick Neves.
Irene Noguchi.
Fact-checking for this episode was done by Kevin Voelkel.
This episode was mixed by Gilly Moon.
Thanks to Johannes Durgi, Nick Spicer, Tony Kavan, Edith Chapin, and Colin Campbell.
And special thank you to Laurence Wu, Nick Neves,
Anya Steinberg, and Johannes Durgi
for their voiceover work.
Music for this episode was composed by Ramtin
and his band, Drop Electric, which includes.
Navid Marvi.
Sho Fujiwara.
Anya Mizani. We would love to hear from you.
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