General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsShould the US join the International Criminal Court at the Hague?
Last edited Sat May 9, 2026, 01:33 PM - Edit history (1)
Perhaps the next Attorney General can request that some individuals be indicted and tried in front of the International Court?
Does the United States need UN observers at our election sites?
Surely there is some accountability somewhere?
https://www.icc-cpi.int/about/the-court
SSJVegeta
(3,033 posts)...even they know it is inevitable.
Response to kentuck (Original post)
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leftieNanner
(16,166 posts)Sowhat13
(36 posts)hedda_foil
(17,005 posts)Sympthsical
(11,084 posts)Clinton signed the treaty, but the Senate never ratified it. Then W. Bush withdrew the signature. Obama had us there as an observer for a bit. Trump's actively against it.
You'd have to get the Senate to agree to its sovereignty, which is not a thing that is liable to happen any time soon.
DetroitLegalBeagle
(2,524 posts)Clinton signed onto the Rome Statute but it was never ratified by the Senate and never took effect. Bush unsigned it and then Congress passed a law the specifically forbids cooperation with the ICC, cuts military funding to allies that are part of the ICC unless separate agreements are met with the US, forbids extradition, and reinforces that the US does not recognize ICC jurisdiction over US personnel or citizens.
kentuck
(115,552 posts)edited.