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Shocking Truth: Why the US Wants to Dismantle the International Criminal Court

Shocking Truth: Why the US Wants to Dismantle the International Criminal Court

The Big Fight Over the World’s Court: Why the Trump Team Wants to Shut It Down

What’s Happening in Simple Words

Imagine a group of countries made a special club called the International Criminal Court (ICC). This club tries to punish people who do terrible things like war crimes or genocide (killing whole groups of people).

Right now, the US is in a war in Iran that many say was unnecessary, and it’s not going well. Because of that, the Trump administration has decided to pick a fight with the ICC.

  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Monday he wants to “dismantle” (take apart) the court.
  • He says the court is a danger to US independence (“sovereignty” just means a country’s right to rule itself).
  • But the real reason, many argue, is that the US wants to do bad things in other countries without being punished.

Important Point: The US government’s stated reason for attacking the ICC is about protecting its independence, but the article says the true goal is to avoid punishment for possible war crimes.

Rubio’s Scary Story (That Isn’t True)

Rubio wrote an article and posted a video saying the ICC could grab everyday American police officers or border guards and drag them to a faraway court run by strangers. He said they could be:

  1. Tried by judges from random countries
  2. Found guilty under laws the US didn’t agree to
  3. Locked up far from home

But this is made-up. Here’s why:

  • The ICC cannot touch crimes done inside the United States.
  • Unless Trump sends police or border agents to another country, the ICC can’t charge them.

Did the US Agree to These Laws?

Rubio says the US never agreed to the laws the ICC uses. That’s not true either.

The ICC uses rules from treaties like:

  • The Genocide Convention (a promise to never allow genocide)
  • The Geneva Conventions (rules for war)

The US has either signed these or put them into its own military rulebooks. So the US did agree to them.

Important Point: The US has already accepted the basic laws the ICC uses—through treaties and its own military manuals.

“We Can’t Control the Law” — So What?

Rubio complains the US can’t “control” international law. But that’s the point: laws should control people, not the other way around. Trump once said, “I don’t need international law,” which most decent leaders would never say.

Funny enough, Rubio used international law to complain when Iran wanted to charge fees to ships in a waterway—while Trump was threatening to do the same thing! This shows the Trump team uses international law only when it helps them.

Who Runs the ICC?

Rubio says the court is run by “hostile” poor-country governments that hate the US. But:

  • Most European countries are in the ICC (125 countries total).
  • The worst abusive governments stay out so they won’t be punished.
  • The UN Security Council (where the US has a veto) can still step in.

The Real Reason for the Attack

Behind all the big talk, the Trump team is scared of this: the ICC can punish war crimes done in a member country even if the bad guy is from a non-member country (like the US).

Trump wants to commit war crimes anywhere with no consequences.

Important Point: The ICC’s “territorial jurisdiction” lets it charge outsiders for crimes committed inside a member country—that’s what the US really objects to.

A Quick History Lesson

  • In 1998, the US (under Clinton) voted against this territorial rule and lost 120–7.
  • In 2023, the ICC charged Russia’s Putin for taking Ukrainian kids. Suddenly the US loved the rule—because Ukraine is a member.
  • Biden called it “justified.” Even Republican Lindsey Graham agreed.
  • But when the ICC charged Israel’s Netanyahu in 2024 (for acts in Gaza, a member area), the US got angry.
  • Trump then put sanctions on ICC judges.

Why Territorial Jurisdiction Is Normal

If you murdered someone in Paris, France could jail you. If a US official commits war crimes in an ICC country, that country or the ICC can act. It’s the same idea.

This rule helps justice in places like:

  • Congo (for Rwanda-backed militia crimes)
  • Sudan (for UAE-backed genocide)

What Trump Officials Fear Most

They worry the ICC could charge them for:

  1. Killings of people on suspect drug boats in Venezuelan or Colombian waters
  2. Helping Israel’s Gaza genocide by sending weapons
  3. Trump punishing ICC officials (obstruction under the court’s rules)

Rubio promises more sanctions and pressure on the court. But really, he’s worried about US officials facing justice.

Important Point: The “risk to Americans” Rubio mentions is actually the risk that US leaders might be tried for war crimes.

Summary

The Trump administration says it wants to destroy the ICC to protect US sovereignty. But the court can’t touch crimes in the US, and the US already agreed to its laws. The real fight is over the ICC’s power to punish war crimes committed by Americans in other countries. The US has used the court when convenient (Putin) and rejected it when not (Netanyahu). In short: the ICC is being attacked because it might hold US leaders accountable.

FAQ

1. What is the ICC?
It’s a world court that tries people for big crimes like genocide and war crimes, set up by many countries.

2. Can the ICC arrest an American cop in the US?
No. It has no power over crimes committed inside the United States.

3. Why does the US sometimes like the ICC?
When the court charged Russia’s Putin, the US supported it. When it charged Israel’s leader, the US opposed it.

4. What does “territorial jurisdiction” mean?
It means the ICC can act if a crime happens in a country that joined the court, even if the suspect is from elsewhere.

5. What could happen to Trump officials?
They could be charged for war crimes or blocking the court if they broke ICC rules in member countries.

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