Why is Trump targeting the International Criminal Court?
President Donald Trump signed an executive order imposing sanctions on the International Criminal Court over investigations deemed a threat to U.S. and ally security. The ICC, based in The Hague, prosecutes war crimes but faced backlash for target...

Here's an explanation of the court's mission and why the Trump administration focused its latest executive action on the tribunal.
What is the International Criminal Court?
The International Criminal Court is the world's highest criminal court, and is located in The Hague, Netherlands, a global center of international law.
The court was set up under a 1998 treaty to prosecute individuals for war crimes, genocide, crimes against humanity and the crime of aggression -- defined by the court as "the use of armed force by a state against the sovereignty, integrity or independence of another state." Countries join the court by adopting the treaty, known as the Rome Statute.
Before the court's creation, the U.N. Security Council established several ad hoc tribunals to prosecute atrocities.
Where does the court have jurisdiction?
The jurisdiction of the court includes the territories of its member states, regardless of the nationality of the accused.
The court does not have a police force to make arrests and cannot try defendants in absentia, so it relies on member nations to carry out arrests. Global leaders who face charges but whose nations are not members of the court can be arrested if they travel to a member nation, which includes most European countries. Member states are obliged to -- but do not always -- detain suspects to stand trial in The Hague.
Why has the court been in the news recently?
On the same day, the ICC also issued an arrest warrant for Hamas' military chief, Mohammed Deif. Initially, the court had sought arrest warrants for two other Hamas leaders, Yahya Sinwar and Ismail Haniyeh, but both were confirmed killed before the warrants could be issued. Deif's death was confirmed by Hamas last month.
Why did Trump issue sanctions against the court?
On Thursday, two days after welcoming Netanyahu to the White House, Trump signed an executive order imposing sanctions on the court. The order cited the court's actions against Israel and "preliminary investigations" into U.S. personnel that "set a dangerous precedent." But those investigations, aimed at secret CIA prisons in Afghanistan, Poland, Lithuania and Romania, were dropped several years ago.
The ICC condemned the order Friday, saying the action sought to harm the court's "independent and impartial judicial work."
Late last month, Democrats blocked a bill in the Senate that would have punished the court for its actions against the Israeli officials, a direct challenge to the tribunal's existence. But the Democrats' objections were not so much a defense of the court's reach; rather, that the bill was far too broad, and could be used to punish not only a wide range of personnel at the court, but also American companies working with it.
Trump has taken action against the ICC before. During his first presidency, in June 2020, his administration issued sanctions against international investigators looking into reports of torture, rape and other mistreatment of detainees by Americans in Afghanistan and at so-called black sites in Europe.
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