Statement by the
President on Signing
the International Criminal Court Treaty
December 31, 2000
The United States is today signing the 1998 Rome
Treaty on the International Criminal Court.In taking this action,
we join more than 130 other countries that have signed by the
December 31, 2000 deadline established in theTreaty. We do so
to reaffirm our strong support for international accountability
and for bringing to justice perpetrators of genocide, war crimes,
and crimes against humanity. We do so as well because we wish
to remain engaged in making the ICC an instrument of impartial
and effective justice in the years to come.
The United States has a long history of commitment
to the principle of accountability, from our involvement in the
Nuremberg tribunals that brought Nazi war criminals to justice,
to our leadership in the effort to establish the International
Criminal Tribunals for the FormerYugoslavia and Rwanda. Our action
today sustains that tradition of moral leadership.
Under the Rome Treaty, the International Criminal
Court (ICC) will come into being with the ratification of 60 governments,
and will have jurisdiction over the most heinous abuses that result
from international conflict, such as war crimes, crimes against
humanity, and genocide. The Treaty requires that the ICC not supercede
or interfere with functioning national judicial systems; that
is, the ICC Prosecutor is authorized to take action against a
suspect only if the country of nationality is unwilling or unable
to investigate allegations of egregious crimes by their national.
The U.S. delegation to the Rome Conference worked hard to achieve
these limitations, which we believe are essential to the international
credibility and success of the ICC.
In signing, however, we are not abandoning our
concerns about significant flaws in the Treaty. In particular,
we are concerned that when the Court comes into existence, it
will not only exercise authority over personnel of states that
have ratified the Treaty, but also claim jurisdiction over personnel
of states that have not. With signature, however, we will be in
a position to influence the evolution of the Court. Without signature,
we will not.
Signature will enhance our ability to further protect
U.S. officials from unfounded charges and to achieve the human
rights and accountability objectives of the ICC. In fact, in negotiations
following the Rome Conference, we have worked effectively to develop
procedures that limit the likelihood of politicized prosecutions.
For example, U.S. civilian and military negotiators helped to
ensure greater precision in the definitions of crimes within the
Court's jurisdiction.
But more must be done. Court jurisdiction over
U.S. personnel should come only with U.S. ratification of the
Treaty. The United States should have the chance to observe and
assess the functioning of the Court, over time, before choosing
to become subject to its jurisdiction. Given these concerns, I
will not, and do not recommend that my successor submit the Treaty
to the Senate for advice and consent until our fundamental concerns
are satisfied.
Nonetheless, signature is the right action to take
at this point. I believe that a properly constituted and structured
International Criminal Court would make a profound contribution
in deterring egregious human rights abuses worldwide, and that
signature increases the chances for productive discussions with
other governments to advance these goals in the months and years
ahead.
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