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View Full Version : US will deny aid to countries that refuse court immunity deals




zimv20
Nov 4, 2003, 11:38 AM
link (http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=460255)


By Rupert Cornwell in Washington

04 November 2003

The United States aims to secure agreements "with every country in the world" guaranteeing immunity for its citizens from any prosecution from the new International Criminal Court (ICC), and will cut off military aid to countries which do not comply.

In an uncompromising defence of Washington's decision to shun the court, Under Secretary of State John Bolton announced yesterday that the US has already reached so-called Article 98 exemption agreements, under the Rome statutes setting up the ICC, with 70 countries; 50 of them among the ICC's 90 signatories.

Speaking at the conservative thinktank, the American Enterprise Institute, Mr Bolton also accused the European Union of imposing an "unfair choice" on aspirant members by insisting they do nothing to weaken the authority of the ICC. This made it harder for these countries to reach exemption deals with the US, he complained.

The White House's total rejection of the court, announced soon after it took office in 2001, fuelled some of the first criticism of the Bush administration as unilateralist and scornful of international pacts. The language of Mr Bolton, in-house 'neo-conservative' hawk at the State Department, will only sharpen such complaints. He lambasted the "intolerable" authority of the court, with its "unaccountable prosecutors and unchecked judicial powers" which represented a "macro-constitutional" issue for the US. More clearly than ever before, Mr Bolton indicated that Washington's biggest objection is not to the risk that the court poses to American soldiers, diplomats and other officials, but that it would encourage attempts to prosecute top figures in US government, past and present, for war crimes.

He cited the efforts in Belgium - since abandoned - to level charges against President Bush and military and civilian leaders at the Pentagon over Iraq. "Launching criminal investigations can have enormous political implications," Mr Bolton said.

Washington's favoured retaliation is to sever military aid to countries which refuse to grant Article 98 exemptions.

The Act has been rigidly applied by the Bush administration, even to close allies who have contributed to the American-led occupation of Iraq.

(emphasis mine)


bush feels free to bypass the courts for those he doesn't like, but when it comes to himself, he wants to be immune. nice ****ing inconsistency.

since when is the president above the law?



Sayhey
Nov 4, 2003, 11:49 AM
I have a radical notion for Mr. Bush, Mr. Bolton, etal -- follow international law!

zimv20
Nov 4, 2003, 11:56 AM
Originally posted by Sayhey
I have a radical notion for Mr. Bush, Mr. Bolton, etal -- follow international law!

[paranoid conservative]
But the US is bound only by the Constitution! The framers would be rolling over in their graves if they knew we'd sold out to the UN and shredded our Constitution! Show me where in the Constitution is says we have to abide by anyone else's laws!!!!! Look out! HELICOPTERS!!!!!
[/paranoid conservative]

mactastic
Nov 4, 2003, 11:59 AM
Would that make Kofi Anann our new overlord?[/paranoid conservative]

zimv20
Nov 4, 2003, 12:09 PM
Originally posted by mactastic
Would that make Kofi Anann our new overlord?[/paranoid conservative]

yes. now we have to introduce him to oil executives, give him part ownership in a major league baseball team, and teach him how to say "evildoers" with 3 syllables.

Pinto
Nov 4, 2003, 02:18 PM
The US is obviously planning to commit crimes and needs to be able to protect it's criminal activities from the rule of law.

More "leading by example" as Rat would say.