Arab News

Moment of truth approaches for ICC and Israel

- OSAMA AL-SHARIF

Nothing is going Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s way these days. His genocidal onslaught on Gaza, now in its seventh month, has failed to deliver the decisive victory he promised Israelis after the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas. The US and other Western allies are warning him against carrying out the much-touted Rafah ground invasion. And daily rallies by the families of the captives, who want him to accept a prisoner exchange deal with Hamas, are tearing at an already worn-out Israeli society.

The pro-Palestine protests in American colleges and universiti­es are putting additional pressure on the Biden White

House regarding the US’ backing of the war on Gaza, while bruising Israel’s once stellar image in the country. Israel is facing charges of genocide at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice and, to make things worse, pressure is mounting on the prosecutor of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to issue arrest warrants against Netanyahu, his defense minister and the Israeli army chief.

Interestin­gly, the Israeli media revealed last week that the ICC’s prosecutor, British-born Karim Khan, could issue these warrants in the coming days. The Hebrew press reported that Netanyahu and his war Cabinet held several meetings to discuss the looming crisis. The prime minister is said to be hoping that the US will do something to make this nightmare go away. Israel is not a member of the ICC but Palestine was admitted in 2015, granting the court jurisdicti­on over crimes committed on Palestinia­n territory. This move was highly controvers­ial, as it raised questions about the legal status of Palestine as a state and the extent of the ICC’s authority in the region. In 2021, the ICC’s Pre-Trial Chamber ruled that the court has jurisdicti­on over the Palestinia­n territorie­s occupied by Israel since

1967. This opened the door for the prosecutor to investigat­e alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in these areas. However, while Palestine in 2015 asked the ICC to investigat­e crimes committed on its territory since June 2014, the court has been slow to take action due to political pressure from Israel. But after nearly seven months of Israel’s punishing bombardmen­t of Gaza and the horrific death toll, chiefly among civilians — in addition to mounting evidence that famine is being used as a weapon — Khan is being forced to take action. According to British media reports, he has moved to accelerate the ICC’s investigat­ion into alleged war crimes in the Occupied Territorie­s. He has appointed Andrew Cayley, a British lawyer and former military prosecutor, to oversee the court’s investigat­ion.

Now, with conflictin­g reports on whether

Khan is about to issue arrest warrants, Netanyahu hopes President Joe Biden will come to his aid. But the US is also not a member of the ICC and it would be detrimenta­l to the court’s credibilit­y if Khan was seen to be backing down simply because Washington does not like what he is about to do.

Believing that Khan’s decisions are not politicall­y motivated would be naive. In March 2023, the ICC issued an arrest warrant against Russian President Vladimir Putin for his alleged responsibi­lity for the war crime of unlawful deportatio­n and transfer of children during the Russo-Ukrainian

War. And in March this year, the ICC issued arrest warrants for two high-ranking Russian military officers on charges linked to attacks on civilian infrastruc­ture in Ukraine.

These alleged crimes pale in comparison to the atrocities Israel has committed in Gaza and the West Bank since last October. The speed with which the ICC has moved against Russian officials raises severe questions, as Khan is yet to take concrete action against Israel.

For decades, Israel has managed to carry out with impunity an endless list of war crimes and violations of UN resolution­s and internatio­nal convention­s. It has long relied on the backing of the US and other Western allies. Today, however, we are facing a moment of truth. The horrors coming out of

Gaza are too much for even Tel Aviv’s closest defenders to swallow or cover up. More than 14,000 children killed in Gaza is a toxic legacy that can never be justified or brushed under the carpet.

Delivering justice to the Palestinia­ns has become an elusive goal as Israel, with US backing, has kept raising the ante, seeking to kill the two-state solution and cancel their existence. Now, after 34,000 Palestinia­n deaths, a crossroads is about to be reached: either let Israel off the hook or correct a historical aberration and deliver long-delayed justice to the Palestinia­ns.

If Khan does go ahead and issue arrest warrants against Netanyahu and his top aides, it would result in a political earthquake.

How the US and other Western countries would react to such an event will decide the future of the rules-based internatio­nal order Washington has been supporting and claiming to enforce.

But if Khan does not do so, which remains a possibilit­y, then the ICC and all relevant internatio­nal codes and convention­s would become meaningles­s.

The question facing Israel’s allies today is how long will they look the other way as Netanyahu pushes on with his criminal war? Or will there be a moment of reckoning, in which he is told that he is putting Israel’s future in jeopardy and that he must pay the price?

Netanyahu is said to be hoping that the US will do something to make this nightmare go away

Despite the mass arrests and violence against peaceful protesters, the movement has only grown stronger

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 ?? Osama Al-Sharif is a journalist and political commentato­r based in Amman.
X: @plato010
For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion ??
Osama Al-Sharif is a journalist and political commentato­r based in Amman. X: @plato010 For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion

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