Wednesday, May 01, 2024

Netanyahu: ICC Arrest Warrants Against Israeli Leaders

The International Criminal Court is being warned by members of Congress in both parties that arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials will be met with U.S. retaliation — and legislation to that effect is already in the works, Axios has learned.

Apr 29, 2024 -
Politics & Policy

Scoop: Congress threatens ICC over Israeli arrest warrants

House Speaker Mike Johnson, wearing a blue suit, white shirt and blue tie, walking through the Capitol rotunda.

House Speaker Mike Johnson. Photo: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images.

The International Criminal Court is being warned by members of Congress in both parties that arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials will be met with U.S. retaliation — and legislation to that effect is already in the works, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has gone so far as to urge President Biden to intervene to help prevent the warrants, Axios' Barak Ravid reported.

  • The ICC has been investigating allegations of war crimes against both the Israeli military and Palestinian militia groups dating back to 2014.
  • The White House declined to comment on Netanyahu's call with Biden but said "the ICC has no jurisdiction in this situation and we do not support its investigation."

Driving the news: House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) issued a statement on Monday calling the reported warrants "disgraceful" and "lawless."

  • "If unchallenged by the Biden administration, the ICC could create and assume unprecedented power to issue arrest warrants against American political leaders, American diplomats, and American military personnel," Johnson said.
  • Johnson called for the Biden administration to "immediately and unequivocally demand that the ICC stand down" and "use every available tool to prevent such an abomination."
  • The speaker joins several Republican lawmakers who have harshly criticized the ICC in recent days.

What we're hearing: One Republican House member told Axios there is already legislation being drafted to respond to any warrants.

  • House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Michael McCaul (R-Texas) told Axios he expects a House version of Sen. Tom Cotton's (R-Ark.) bill to sanction ICC officials involved in investigating the U.S. and its allies, but added: "We hope it doesn't come to that."
  • Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) said the U.S. should "think of whether we stay a signatory" to the Rome Statute — the treaty that established the ICC.
  • "We have to think about talking to some of the countries that have ratified [the treaty] as to whether they want to support the organization," he added.

Zoom in: It's not just Republicans lashing out and warning the ICC that warrants could be met with a legislative response.

  • Staunchly pro-Israel Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.) and Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) have both criticized the reported warrants, with Torres calling for "strong consequences from both Congress and the President."
  • "I know Congress will ensure consequences for such an absurd decision," Sherman said in a post on X.
  • An ICC spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The other side: "The ICC is an independent body, and it needs to proceed with what they need to do," said Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), a vocal critic of Israel.

  • Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wisc.), another progressive Israel critic, said "it's not a matter for Congress to be telling them what to be doing."

Between the lines: Several Democratic lawmakers who have been critical of Israel said they believe it's premature to weigh in on the potential warrants before they are unveiled.

  • "Why don't we see what happens, and then we can evaluate based on whatever comes out," Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) told Axios.
  • Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) said he has "concerns about the prosecution of the war" but "it's always a good idea to get the facts before making a judgment."

Editor's note: This article has been updated with more reporting.

Netanyahu: ICC arrest warrants would be antisemitic hate crime, distortion  of justice | The Times of Israel
Netanyahu: ICC Arrest Warrants Against Israeli Leaders Would Be  'Antisemitic Hate Crime' - Israel News - Haaretz.com
US Congress threatens ICC over Israel arrest warrants — RT World News

30 Apr, 2024 12:23

Netanyahu asked Biden to block International Criminal Court – Axios
Media reports suggest the court could charge the Israeli prime minister with war crimes
Netanyahu asked Biden to block International Criminal Court – Axios











Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked US President Joe Biden to stop the International Criminal Court (ICC) from pursuing him and several other top-ranking Israeli officials, news publisher Axios has claimed. Several media outlets reported last week that the court could charge the Israeli leadership with war crimes over the ongoing military campaign against Hamas in Gaza.
Israel launched its massive offensive following the deadly October 7 incursion by the radical group’s militants, which claimed the lives of an estimated 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians.
  • In recent months, the severe response by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in the densely populated Palestinian enclave have come under increasing scrutiny and have been broadly criticized – even by the country’s US and European allies.
According to Gaza authorities, Israeli strikes have killed more than 34,000 people, mostly civilians. 
In January, the United Nation’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a ruling, saying it was “plausible” that Israeli forces had committed acts of genocide in the enclave.
In its article on Monday, Axios, citing two anonymous Israeli officials, claimed that Netanyahu had phoned Biden on Sunday, asking him to wield Washington’s clout and prevent the ICC from issuing arrest warrants.

NBC News, citing an unnamed Israeli official, also claimed on Monday that the ICC could charge Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and unnamed senior military officers, along with the prime minister.

The US network quoted its source as saying that “Israel is working through diplomatic channels to try to stop the warrants being issued.” The ICC did not confirm or deny the report, telling reporters that it “has an ongoing independent investigation in relation to the situation in the State of Palestine.”
Prime Minister Netanyahu insisted on Friday that Israel “will never accept any attempt by the ICC to undermine its inherent right of self-defense.” “The threat to seize the soldiers and officials of the Middle East’s only democracy and the world’s only Jewish state is outrageous. We will not bow to it,” he wrote on X (formerly Twitter).
Launched in 2021, the ICC’s investigation focuses on alleged war crimes committed by the Israeli military and Palestinian militant groups in the West Bank and Gaza since 2014, when Israel fought a month-long war against Hamas.
Israel is not a party to the Rome Statute and does not recognize the ICC’s jurisdiction. However, should a warrant in Netanyahu’s name be issued, his travel could be restricted, as the 124 countries that recognize the court may consider themselves obliged to arrest him.
Netanyahu: ICC Arrest Warrants Against Israeli Leaders Would Be  'Antisemitic Hate Crime' - Israel News - Haaretz.com
Israel-Gaza war live: US politicians threaten ICC over warrants for Israeli  officials

¿Qué es Pressenza y qué hacemos?

May Day

 Pressenza


(U) Review of the Kyiv Transit Platform | department of State OIG

 United States Department of State Office of Inspector General

04/30/2024 10:30 AM EDT

(U) Summary of Review

(SBU) Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, [redacted]. 

In June 2023, Embassy Kyiv and Mission Poland1 concluded a memorandum of understanding (MOU)2 that described the functions of the jointly administered temporary support platform and the respective roles and responsibilities of Embassy Kyiv and Mission Poland in providing operational and management support to Embassy Kyiv in Poland. In August 2023, the platform, now called the Kyiv Transit Platform (KTP), moved from Rzeszow to Consulate General Krakow.

(U) The Office of Inspector General (OIG) examined the KTP’s operational effectiveness, assessed security and accountability issues, and reviewed the coordination between Embassy Kyiv and Mission Poland as outlined in the June 2023 MOU. This report includes a classified annex that discusses security and accountability issues related to the KTP. Concurrent with this review, OIG also inspected Mission Poland.3 

(U) With respect to operational effectiveness, OIG found the KTP generally operated in accordance with Department of State (Department) standards, with a few exceptions. 

  • The KTP lacked a standard operating procedure that documented the KTP’s roles and responsibilities, including transit logistics. This reduced the KTP’s efficiency and created risks that critical responsibilities such as managing the safe transit of staff to Ukraine would not be carried out effectively. 
  • Furthermore, the KTP’s position descriptions for two recently filled locally employed (LE) staff positions did not accurately reflect their responsibilities or list the correct supervisory chain of command. 
  • Inaccurate position descriptions can directly affect LE staff’s level of compensation. 
  • The KTP also did not dispose and archive its records as required by Department standards. 
  • The KTP began to address the deficiencies related to standard operating procedures and records management during the review.


(SBU) In the area of security and accountability, OIG found [redacted].

(U) Finally, regarding coordination, OIG found the Department, Embassy Kyiv, Embassy Warsaw, Consulate General Krakow, and the KTP had established constructive working relationships to further joint goals related to the transit of U.S. government official visitors and staff to Ukraine
  • However, the June 2023 MOU between Embassy Kyiv and Mission Poland was outdated and did not reflect the current operating environment of the KTP. 
  • After OIG identified the issue, Embassy Kyiv and Mission Poland in January 2024 amended the MOU to reflect the current operating environment. 

(U) This report contains two recommendations. In its comments on the draft report, Embassy Warsaw agreed with one recommendation and disagreed with the other recommendation. OIG considers both recommendations resolved. The embassy’s response to each recommendation and OIG’s reply can be found in the Recommendations section of this report. The embassy’s formal written response is reprinted in its entirety in Appendix C.

 

1 (U) The U.S. diplomatic mission to Poland consists of Embassy Warsaw and Consulate General Krakow.
2 (U) Department of State, “Memorandum of Understanding Between the U.S. Mission to Ukraine and the U.S. Mission to Poland Regarding the Mission Ukraine Transit Center (MUTC),” June 20, 2023.
3 (U) OIG, Inspection of Embassy Warsaw and Constituent Post, Poland (ISP-I-24-18, report not yet released).

Hmmm...Trying to understand why we can’t stay focused

The Battle for Attention

How do we hold on to what matters in a distracted age?

Several people, very busy multitasking. Some are on the phone and talking to each other at the same time. Some are eating and looking at a computer screen.

If you can make it to the end of this paragraph without scrolling away, well, you’re remarkable. As Nathan Heller learned in reporting this engrossing piece about a secret society devoted to paying attention, people can focus on a single screen for an average of only forty-seven seconds. Among those trying to understand why we can’t stay focussed is D. Graham Burnett, a historian of science at Princeton. He has argued that the original impetus for fast tools and fast lives is human desire, rather than technological innovation. “The acceleration of life isn’t an inevitability,” Heller explains, “but an ideological outcome.” Burnett is also, secretly, a Bird.

A what? The Order of the Third Bird is an underground international fellowship, made up of artists, authors, booksellers, professors, and avant-gardists who try to understand what attention is, how to channel it, what it can do. Named for a piece of lore about three birds encountering a painting by the ancient artist Zeuxis—the first is scared away, the second is confused, and the third just looks—the Birds, Heller explains, “converge, flash-mob style, at museums, stare intensely at a work of art for half an hour, and vanish, their twee-seeming feat of attention complete.”

Heller wants in on the action, and through his connection with Burnett he attends several events in New York. At the New Museum, the Birds put security guards on alert; in front of a public sculpture by Peter Lundberg near the George Washington Bridge, he watches “the group wield their strange power on the art work” and wonders, “Could it have been my own imagination that the steel flanks of the sculpture seemed to flash with new importance under the force of their attention?”

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