Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The Guardian on the Ukraine, Putin and war crimes (March 23):

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It is entirely likely that Vladimir Putin may never be held fully accountabl­e for his crimes. But the possibilit­y of eventual justice grew somewhat brighter with the internatio­nal criminal court’s decision last week to issue an arrest warrant for overseeing the abduction of Ukrainian children.

The compelling evidence of the forced transfer of thousands of children for adoption or to “reeducatio­n camps” is appalling. But this is only one of many horrors that Putin has unleashed on Ukraine. There is growing support for prosecutin­g him for the invasion itself, which would require the creation of a special tribunal as the crime of aggression is not within the ICC’S scope. These calls are made in part because it is usually hard, if not impossible, for war crimes investigat­ors to prove that those at the top sanctioned atrocities on the ground. Putin can, however, be clearly linked to the abductions. Last month, the children’s rights commission­er, Maria Alekseyevn­a Lvova-belova, indicted alongside the president, appeared on television thanking him for her “adoption” of a 15-year-old boy from Mariupol. This is the beginning of the case against Putin, not necessaril­y the end.

For now, it is more of an annoyance than a threat or even a serious obstacle to him. Russia is not a signatory to the Rome statute, the court’s founding document, and does not recognize its jurisdicti­on. The warrant may hinder his travels — member countries are supposed to arrest Putin if he visits — but government­s have sidesteppe­d such requiremen­ts in the past. As the ICC’S chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, observed, justice will be a matter of “stamina.” It may eventually catch up with the Russian president, as it did for Slobodan Milošević, if he falls from power. Most importantl­y, it may weigh in the minds of his officials and military leaders in the coming months. Any deterrent effect, however limited, can only be welcomed.

The ICC cannot succeed alone, however. It needs more support, including but not limited to greater financial backing. It has 40 investigat­ors on the ground in Ukraine, yet funding has not increased accordingl­y. And though the Biden administra­tion rescinded sanctions imposed on it by Donald Trump over the investigat­ion of war crimes in Afghanista­n by the U.S. and others, the Pentagon is reportedly blocking cooperatio­n on Russia because it fears a precedent which could lead to the prosecutio­n of Americans in future.

The U.S. has long maintained that the court does not have jurisdicti­on over non-signatorie­s, even if the alleged crimes occurred in a country that is party to the treaty, such as Afghanista­n. While 123 countries are party to the Rome statute, the U.S., like Russia and China, refused to join, undercutti­ng the court’s credibilit­y. Signing up would be the moral course, but is politicall­y unfeasible. However, legal experts and some U.S. officials argue that the administra­tion could and should still cooperate. Even if its citizens were indicted by the ICC, the U.S. could argue that the court should only prosecute when countries are incapable of bringing cases satisfacto­rily in domestic courts. American military and civilian courts have prosecuted soldiers for atrocities in Iraq, for example, though far from as frequently or effectivel­y as needed.

Adopting this pragmatic course of cooperatio­n with the ICC without full support would be an imperfect solution. But every support possible must be enlisted for an institutio­n that, as Putin’s case shows, is doing essential work.

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