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Marco Rubio's Attack on the ICC: A Bid for Impunity

Marco Rubio's Attack on the ICC: A Bid for Impunity
The International Criminal Court in The Hague
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Secretary of State Marco Rubio has launched a rhetorical assault on the International Criminal Court (ICC), vowing to “dismantle” it as a supposed threat to US sovereignty.

His rationale, however, is built on fiction and aims to secure impunity for war crimes.

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In a Wall Street Journal op-ed and a video posted on X, Rubio conjured a dystopian scenario where local American officials—police officers or border patrol agents—could be dragged before an international court.

This is utterly false: the ICC has no jurisdiction over crimes committed in the United States.

The court can only prosecute crimes committed on the territory of its member states or by their nationals.

Unless US officials commit war crimes abroad, they face no risk from the ICC.

Selective Outrage Over International Law

Rubio’s attack on international law is ironic.

He invoked it to condemn Iran for charging fees for ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz, even as Trump briefly threatened to do the same.

This reveals the administration’s view: international law is a weapon to use against others, not a constraint on itself.

Rubio also described the ICC as “run” by “hostile Third World governments,” ignoring that most of its 125 members are European allies.

The most abusive governments avoid joining precisely because they fear prosecution.

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The real objection is to the ICC’s territorial jurisdiction, which allows it to prosecute war crimes committed on the soil of member states, even if the perpetrator is from a non-member country.

D
Editors Team
Author: Daniel
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