Posted on 05/06/2002 10:13:45 AM PDT by jgrubbs
Letter: U.S. Withdrawal from ICC
NewsMax.com
Monday May 6, 2002
Dear Mr. Secretary-General:
This is to inform you, in connection with the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court adopted on July 17, 1998, that the United States does not intend to become a party to the treaty. Accordingly, the United States has no legal obligations arising from its signature on December 31, 2000. The United States requests that its intention not to become a party, as expressed in this letter, be reflected in the depositary's status lists relating to this treaty.
Sincerely,
John R. Bolton
The Honorable
Kofi Annan
Secretary General of the United Nations
The United Nations
New York
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE ORIGINAL LETTER
I'm more than a little suspiscious of it,too.
While it's probably safe to say I am not the biggest Bubba-2 supporter to be found on FR,firing Powell is something Bubba-2 CAN'T do. He could get away with firing Laura quicker than firing Powell. The most obvious reason for this is that Powell is black,but the real reason is that Bubba-2 can't afford to create a political martyr out of Powell. Powell probably has wet dreams about Bubba-2 firing him.
We could put Powell-protege Richard Armitage in a lower ranking
Armitage is not only a guy who CAN be fired,but a guy that SHOULD be fired.
Nope,they are not gonna do this. They're not going to do it because the CAN'T do it without admitting they never should have arrested him in the first place,and admitting they made a mistake is impossible for gooberments.
And his options were what,to become a Goldwater Republican? Communism was the only game in town for him,and you HAD to play that game if you wanted any work above the menial labor level. You also had to play it if you wanted a place to live,hot water,health care,etc,etc,etc.
I wonder why this announcement came from
John Bolton at the Office of the Under Secretary for Arms Control
and International Security
(and why all those words aren't on the letterhead).....instead of coming from
Pierre Prosper, Ambassador at Large for War Crimes Issues (S/WCI).
I remember Prosper getting a lot of press about the possible "unsigning" of this thing?State Department Organizational Directory - Complete List
(Last modified 4/05/2002)
Ambassador at Large for War Crimes Issues (S/WCI) AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE Ambassador-At-Large Pierre Prosper 7419A 202-647-6051 Deputy Brent Blaschke 7419A 202-647-6751 Special Counsel LTC Michael Newton 7419A 202-647-5093 Special Counsel Christine Choi 7419A 202-647-5072 Special Counsel Misti Rawles 7419A 202-647-5072 Special Assistant Jonathan Crock 7419A 202-647-5201 Staff Assistant Angela Gordon 7419A 202-647-5043
Office of the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security (T) Under Secretary of State John R. Bolton 7208 202-647-1049 Senior Advisor Fred Fleitz 7208 202-647-0072 Special Assistant Frances Bolton 7208 202-647-1522 Secretary Janice Neal 7208 202-647-0060 Executive Assistant Terry Godby 7208 202-647-1749 Secretary Louis Archer 7208 202-647-4226 Senior Adviser James Timbie 7208 202-647-4404 Special Assistant Sherri Kraham 7210 202-647-0071 Special Assistant Fred Fleitz 7208 202-647-0072 Special Assistant Caroline Barnett 7208 202-647-0357 Special Assistant Mark Groombridge 7208 202-647-0065 Special Assistant David Wurmser 7210 202-647-0069 Special Assistant Christian Cullum 7208 202-647-0068 Special Assistant Erica Tuttle 7208 202-647-7960 ARMS CONTROL NONPROLIFERATION ADVISORY BOARD (T/ACNAB) Executive Director (Vacant) 5844 202-647-4622
Can't help but wonder why x42 signed the thing with one hand while saying he would never send it to the Senate for confirmation. Now, that's real leadership.
Not.
Monday, May 06, 2002
WASHINGTON The United States said Monday it wants nothing to do with a treaty creating the first permanent international war crimes tribunal, a decision immediately criticized by human rights groups and some lawmakers. Others welcomed the move.
"We believe that states, not international institutions, are primarily responsible for ensuring justice in the international system," Marc Grossman, the undersecretary of state for political affairs, said in announcing the Bush administration decision.
As constituted today, Grossman said, the international criminal court "claims the authority to detain and try American citizens, even though our democratically elected representatives have not agreed to be bound by the treaty."
That threatens U.S. sovereignty, he said.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said the tribunal's planned July 1 start-up "means that our men and women in uniform as well as current and former U.S. officials could be at risk of prosecution.
Particularly in the midst of the war against terrorism, Rumsfeld said, the flaws in the treaty are "particularly troubling."
Although nations have the authority to try non-citizens who commit crimes against their citizens or on their territory, "the United States has never recognized the right of an international organization to do so" without its consent or without a U.N. Security Council mandate, Grossman said.
The International Criminal Court gained the necessary international backing to come into being last month when 10 nations joined 56 others in ratifying the treaty, negotiated in Rome in 1998.
President Clinton signed the treaty, but never submitted it to the Senate for ratification. The Bush administration has made its opposition clear.
Pierre-Richard Prosper, the U.S. ambassador for war crimes issues, said the United States has no intention of ratifying the treaty and now considers itself "no longer bound in any way to its purpose and objective." The declaration was contained in a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan delivered to U.N. headquarters in New York.
Grossman, in a speech Monday in Washington, said President Bush wanted to formally renounce the treaty to avoid creating expectations of U.S. involvement in the future.
Instead, the United States favors working with nongovernment organizations, private industry and universities and law schools to help individual countries set up tribunals when needed, officials said.
But Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he was dismayed by the decision.
"Beyond the extremely problematic matter of casting doubt on the U.S. commitment to international justice and accountability," Feingold said, "these steps actually call into question our country's credibility in all multilateral endeavors."
House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, R-Texas, said Bush "sent a clear message we do not support this rogue court ... an institution of unchecked power that poses a real threat to our men and women fighting the war against terror.
Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., chairman of the House International Relations Committee, said, "We simply cannot accept an international institution that claims jurisdiction over American citizens."
But Human Rights Watch, an advocacy group, described the decision as an empty gesture that will further estrange Washington from its allies.
The Washington Working Group on the ICC, a coalition of organizations that support the tribunal, said the decision "signals to the world that America is turning its back on decades of U.S. leadership in prosecuting war criminals since the Nuremberg trials."
The coalition includes human rights organizations such as Amnesty International-USA and Physicians for Social Responsibility.
The court, to be formed this summer, will fill a gap in the international justice system first recognized by the U.N. General Assembly in 1948 after the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials for World War II's German and Japanese war criminals.
Tribunals have been created for special situations like the 1994 Rwanda genocide but no mechanism existed to hold individuals criminally responsible for serious crimes such as genocide.
Last night during the airing of Letterman,right after an Emergency Broadcast TEST, for a few seconds on the screen was the U.N. symbol saying The United Nations.I saw this as sure as the sun rose this morning,it was strange.
US says it will not become party to Rome Statute of International Criminal Court
6 May The United States has formally advised United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan that it does not intend to become a party to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, a UN spokesman said today.
Accordingly, the US Government maintains that it has no obligations arising from its signature of the Statute on 31 December 2000, spokesman Fred Eckhard told the press in New York.
"The Secretary-General, as the depositary of the Rome Statute will, consistent with normal practice, circulate the US notification to all States concerned," Mr. Eckhard said. "The effect of the notification is a matter for the parties to the Statute to decide."
Responding to questions, the spokesman called the action by the US "unique and unprecedented."
By withdrawing its signature, the US sought to free itself of obligations that a signatory would have, the spokesman noted. "But the Statute has come into force; the court will come into being," he stressed.
Several evil connotations:
...the US Government maintains that it has no obligations arising from its signature of the Statute on 31 December 2000,... Attention globalist scum--the US did NOT sign this POS "Statute". The POS, treasonous, scumbag Clinton did and he has--and had--no authority to commit the US to this. We don't "maintain" we have no obligations; we're telling you we have no obligations and we don't give a flying xxxx what YOU "maintain" to the contrary.
"The effect of the notification is a matter for the parties to the Statute to decide." Well you just go ahead and decide what the effect is gonna be on all of you, but you better understand the parties to the Statute are NOT gonna decide what the effect of this notification is to US. This kind of sounds like a threatening little hint that all you parties will decide whether or not you'll "let" us out of it. Hah!
...the US sought to free itself of obligations that a signatory would have, the spokesman noted. "But the Statute has come into force; the court will come into being," he stressed. We didn't "seek" to free ourselves from signatory obligations. We freed ourselves from obligations WE never took on and we don't need your permission, agreement, or acceptance. We are a sovereign nation and your evil little Statute and piss ant court can come into being and force, but it has NO jurisdiction over US and never will.
Although nations have the authority to try non-citizens who commit crimes against their citizens or on their territory, "the United States has never recognized the right of an international organization to do so" without its consent or without a U.N. Security Council mandate, Grossman said.
This sounds like it might be OK with us if the UN Security Council says so. NOT! especially with all the trial balloons we've seen over the last couple years about removing the veto power from individual members of the Security Council and/or not having permanent seats on the Council etc.
Instead, the United States favors working with nongovernment organizations, private industry and universities and law schools to help individual countries set up tribunals when needed, officials said. NGOs, private industry, universities and law schools?! IOW Globalist princes are going to run more kangaroo tribunals like the ICTY monstrosity in the future that we would favor "working with". I suspect that this statement was just slipped in by the article's author with the hope that his saying so would make it happen. I almost didn't notice that the worst statement in there was attributed to anonymous "officials" because it was sandwiched in with sourced quotes from a couple of actual state department people.
I was also spooked by your description of the UN symbol in the emergency test...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.