INSS Insight No. 492
Israel and the EU recently
reached a last minute compromise enabling Israel to join the EU’s research and
development program, Horizon 2020. Nonetheless, the EU guidelines adopted
earlier this year relating to the settlements in the West Bank will likely
continue to jeopardize Israel’s international economic interests. In another
development regarding Israel’s international legitimacy, nearly three years after the Israeli takeover of
the ship Mavi Marmara, the Comoros Islands, where the ship was
registered, filed a complaint against Israel with the International Criminal Court.
There is temporary
relief in the last minute understanding reached between the EU and Israel
regarding Horizon 2020, and in negligible prospects for the Comoros ICC claim
against Israel. However, Israel operates in an increasingly complicated and
delicate environment, which demands constant sensitivity and accommodation to
the numerous facets of the international arena
In late November 2013
Israel and the EU reached a last minute compromise enabling Israel to join the
EU’s research and development program, Horizon 2020. Nonetheless, the EU
guidelines adopted earlier this year relating to the settlements in the West
Bank will likely continue to jeopardize Israel’s international economic
interests. According to the guidelines, projects carried out in Israeli
settlements beyond the Green Line will not be eligible for EU grants, and
organizations that operate beyond that line will not be eligible for EU loans
and financial assistance.
Other developments on
the international legitimacy front pose related threats to Israel’s international
standing. One concerns the Palestinian Authority, which recently revisited the
intention of prosecution against Israel before the International Criminal Court
(ICC). Indeed, the EU has encouraged the Palestinian Authority to join the ICC
should Israel pursue its settlement policy.
On a different
matter, nearly three years after the Israeli takeover of the ship Mavi
Marmara, the Comoros Islands, a small African archipelago near Madagascar,
filed a complaint against Israel with the ICC. Comoros, where the ship was
registered, is a tiny 2000 square km United Nations member with a population of
less than one million. As a signatory of the ICC it has the formal standing to
bring such a claim.
Photo: Wikipedia
The Office of the
Prosecutor (OTP) reported recently that the examination is currently in phase 2
– analysis. In fact, very few preliminary examinations actually lead to a full
investigation, much less an actual trial or realistic possibility of conviction.
The OTP is currently conducting preliminary examinations in eight
situations only out of more than 550 submissions in the last year: four (including the Comoros file)on subject-matter
jurisdiction, and four on admissibility. Such proceedings should raise concern
in Israel, however, in light of the Palestinian plea for membership in the
United Nations and its expressed intention to apply to international tribunals
and subsequently file claims against Israel and Israelis.
Although riddled with
imperfections and often facing harsh criticism on issues such as its
questionable legitimacy and insufficient means of enforceability, the
International Criminal Court is a worldwide, easily recognizable establishment.
Even if it is not universally acknowledged as the world's primary criminal
court, the ICC has commanded the attention of many major media outlets, often
indirectly dictating which stories receive international attention. Although
the ICC claims to be an unbiased judicial entity, the practical consequences of
the court are visibly political. Thus even cases that are not selected for
trial receive a considerable amount of international media attention.
The ICC has 122
signatories, but many countries are hesitant to acknowledge the court's
authority. For various reasons (including the United States standpoint that the
ICC violates international law by imposing obligations without consent), it has
failed to gain support of countries such as the United States, Russia, and
China. Therefore, the ICC lacks influence in its ability to make a meaningful
impact and legitimately enforce its convictions.
Israel is not a
signatory of the act whereby the ICC was established according to the Rome
Statute. Nevertheless, theoretically it can be brought under ICC jurisdiction
in one of three ways: if the prosecutor receives a referral by the UN Security
Council, if the crime was committed in the territory of a signatory, or (however
unlikely) if Israel consents to being subject to the court's jurisdiction.
Turkish lawyers representing Comoros claim that under Article 12 of the Rome
Statute, which states that territorial jurisdiction is established if the crime
took place on a signatory's vessel, Comoros has a legitimate claim in bringing
Israel under the court's jurisdiction.
Realistically, the
case in question is not likely to invoke further ICC intervention. The court
was established with the idea of complementing national jurisdiction, not
replacing it with international law. Thus, the ICC generally does not intervene
when a country has the capability of conducting an independent, objective
investigation. Moreover, the jurisdiction of the Court is questionable prima
facie because the incident has already been the subject of multiple credible
investigations. A thorough analysis of the incident was sponsored by Israel
promptly after the event occurred through the Turkel Commission. Investigators
found that any mistakes that were made were not criminal and certainly did not
warrant further international probing.
Furthermore, this
case would not likely proceed to trial due to the nature of the incident. The
ICC was created with the intent of prosecuting truly heinous crimes, such as
genocide and torture, generally committed in a systematic manner over an
extended period of time. The court was not meant for small scale, isolated
events, let alone cases of self defense or a justifiable blockade. In
determining what crimes warrant prosecution, the ICC uses a "gravity
threshold," meaning the alleged crimes must have widespread and
substantially grave consequences. Generally the court will examine the scale,
nature, manner of commission, and impact of the crimes. In comparison to the
treacherous acts in former ICC prosecutions, the events surrounding the Marmara
are considerably mild.
Therefore, in
acknowledging both the jurisdictional issues of the case and the obvious
likelihood of inadmissibility due to the nature of the alleged crimes, one
questions the motives in bringing a claim that is so clearly incompatible with
past patterns of the court. Moreover, if the ICC eventually takes up the
matter, it is bound to examine a situation as a whole and must consider all
actions by any party in order to make its decision whom to prosecute and for
which crimes: Palestinians and especially Hamas may well be also prosecuted. Hence
the question: is this complaint brought as a legitimate means of seeking
justice, or is the ICC being used – and not for the first time – as a political
tool to invoke a media response?
In a world where
international image carries immense weight, being in the worldwide spotlight
due to alleged war crimes has the potential for bringing considerably grave
impacts on the accused and, in Israel’s case, further nurture the
de-legitimization campaign against it – even if there is no substance to a
claim. Moreover, it is particularly problematic that any signatory, without
consequence or accountability, can easily bring accusations against citizens of
any state, even one that has not consented to the jurisdiction of the ICC.
The claim regarding
the Marmara incident is evidence that the ICC has the potential for
dangerous manipulation. When countries can so easily mask political intent as a
judicial claim, the court is more likely to be used as a tool for strategic media
exposure, as opposed to its stated purpose as a mechanism to seek international
justice.
There is temporary relief
in the last minute understanding reached between the EU and Israel regarding
Horizon 2020, and in negligible prospects for the Comoros ICC claim against
Israel. However, Israel operates in an increasingly complicated and delicate
environment, which demands constant sensitivity and accommodation to the
numerous facets of the international arena.
No comments:
Post a Comment