Open Letter TO CONGRESS AND THE INCOMING PRESIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATION Regarding US Sanctions on the ICC

January 6, 2025

To Members of the 119th Congress and the incoming Presidential Administration of Donald J. Trump:

The undersigned organizations write to express grave concerns and to unequivocally oppose the use of the sanctions authority of the United States to attack the International Criminal Court (ICC), an independent judicial institution dedicated to combating impunity for the gravest crimes known to humanity.

The ICC performs a vital role in international affairs by investigating the worst international crimes that shock the collective conscience of humanity and investigating those accused of committing those crimes. It does so in a manner that protects the due process rights of the accused, the sovereignty of states, including the United States, and the rights of victims. As has been widely observed, supporting the work of the Court is in the interest of the United States, and sanctioning it, conversely, undermines important US interests. The positive role of the ICC has been recognized through previous bipartisan support for investigations into war crimes allegedly perpetrated by Russian officials in the Ukraine conflict (S.Res.531 and H.Res.963), attempts to bring justice for the victims of gross human rights violations in Myanmar, and as a pathway to accountability for perpetrators of atrocities in Sudan.

Many of the undersigned spoke out when the previous Trump administration subjected two senior ICC officials to sanctions and travel restrictions. At that time, we cautioned that it was “uniquely dangerous, extreme, and unprecedented to utilize a mechanism designed to penalize criminals, their aiders, and abettors, against an independent judicial institution.” The previous sanctions against the Prosecutor and a member of her team raised serious concerns about the ICC’s ability to fulfill its mandate, including the Prosecutor’s obligation to report to the UN Security Council on the situations in Darfur and Libya, and to participate in the annual meetings of the Assembly of States Parties (ASP), the ICC’s oversight management and legislative body, where the US participates as an Observer.

In 2024, the House of Representatives passed the so-called “Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act.” Although the bill’s full scope was ambiguous, the legislative intent was to punish foreign persons who aid, materially assist, or provide financial support for efforts by the ICC to undertake certain investigations and prosecutions. The Biden administration strongly opposed the bill and the previous Senate did not vote on the legislation. As human rights, legal, and faith-based organizations, the foundations of civil society, as well as individuals who have dedicated their careers to these causes, we decry attempts to attack an independent judicial institution and urge the 119th Congress and incoming administration to reconsider this misguided position.

Asset freezes and entry restrictions are tools intended to combat individuals and entities constituting a threat to US national security, such as kleptocrats committing grand corruption, gross human rights offenders, and perpetrators of war crimes and crimes against humanity. By applying these measures to a court that 125 countries – and on two occasions, the United Nations Security Council – have entrusted with providing accountability for atrocity crimes, the United States has brought upon itself the stigma of siding with impunity over justice. In fact, Russia sanctioned some of the court’s judges last year, and the United States should not similarly adopt such vindictive tools. Such actions jeopardize the ability of desperate victims across all the court’s investigations to access justice, weaken the credibility of sanction tools in other contexts, and place the United States at odds with its closest allies.

The ICC represents and constitutes part of a global system of international justice of which the United States was a chief architect at Nuremberg and beyond. Today, the ICC, alongside other tribunals, regional mechanisms, and national courts, is carrying forward these efforts through investigations and prosecutions that could help realize justice for atrocity victims from Sudan to Myanmar to Ukraine. As a court of last resort, the ICC only can intervene when and where a State has demonstrated unwillingness or inability to hold its nationals to account for crimes within the Court’s jurisdiction. The ICC therefore provides an essential backstop for victims who have no other recourse to justice. The use of sanctions has the potential for wide-reaching impact against this institution dedicated to advancing justice for victims.

The proposed sanctions were prompted by the arrest warrants issued on November 21, 2024, for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. Practically, sanctioning the court or its officials would halt its work across all situations that are under its purview, including those critically important to the United States, such as the situation in Ukraine and in Sudan. US citizens who represent victims and survivors also could be implicated for their work to help achieve justice for perpetrators of atrocity crimes. The idea that justice can be selectively used to advance geopolitical concerns is a moral affront to all those who are in peril and an abrogation of the universality of human rights. An attack on the ICC in one situation is an attack on the rule of law itself.

At an historical moment when the global rule of law is under attack from multiple fronts, institutions like the International Criminal Court are needed more than ever to advance human rights protections and the universal goal of preventing future atrocities and advancing justice for victims. Instead, sanctions send a signal that could embolden authoritarian regimes and others with reason to fear accountability who seek to evade justice. It is essential that the United States answer any allegation of wrongdoing in a manner that does not betray the cause of global justice, abandon international cooperation, or compromise support for human dignity and rights.

It would be a terrible irony if a tool designed to penalize gross violators of human rights could instead contribute to their continued impunity. We urge other governments, Members of Congress, and advocates for victims everywhere to raise their voices to oppose attacks on the independence and autonomy of international judicial institutions like the ICC. We invite allies of justice to join us in standing against these destructive measures. 

Contacts: Rebecca A. Shoot (rshoot@globalsolutions.org) and Elizabeth Evenson (eevenson@gmail.com), Co-Conveners of the Washington Working Group for the ICC. 

SIGNATORY ORGANIZATIONS (updated 1/7/25) 

Advocacy Network for Africa (AdNA)

The Advocates for Human Rights

Al Haq

American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)

American Friends Service Committee

American Human Rights Council

Amnesty International USA

Aotearoa Lawyers for Peace

Arizona Justice Alliance

Association for the Promotion of Sustainable Development

Association of Reintegration of Crimea

Association of World Citizens

Australian Religious Response to Climate Change

Basel Peace Office

Center for Constitutional Rights

Center for the Development of International Law

Center for the Human Rights of Children at Loyola University Chicago School of Law

Center for International Human Rights, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law

Center for International Policy Advocacy

Center for Truth and Justice

Centro de Desarrollo Étnico-CEDET

Charity and Security Network

Citizens for Global Solutions

Coalition for the UN We Need (C4UN)

CODEPINK

Darfur Women Action Group

DAWN

Defending Rights and Dissent

Defined Impact Group

East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)

Ensaaf

Foreign Policy for America

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Friends of Sabeel North America (FOSNA)

Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect

Global Justice Center

Hawaii Peace and Justice

Historians for Peace and Democracy

The Human Rights Center, University of California Berkeley School of Law

Human Rights First

Human Rights Watch

Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention, Binghamton University, the State University of New York

Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti (IJDH)

International Alliance of Women to the UN

International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN)

International Criminal Court Alliance

International Human Rights Clinic, Boston University School of Law

J Street

The Jacob Soetendorp Institute for Human Values

Journal of Social Encounters

Laboratorio de Paz (Venezuela)

Law and Democracy Support Foundation

MADRE

Maine Coalition for Palestine

MARUF CT (Muslim Advocacy for Rights, Unity, and Fairness)

Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

The Minnesota Peace Project

Movimento Federalista Europeo

MPower Change Action Fund

National Forum for Human Rights (Yemen)

New Jewish Narrative

New Lines Institute

No Business With Genocide

Nonviolence International (USA)

Nonviolent Peaceforce

Open Society Justice Initiative

Operation Broken Silence

Pax Christi, Greensburg, Pennsylvania

Pax Christi, New York State

Pax Christi USA

Peace Action

Peace Action of San Mateo County

Peace, Justice, Sustainability Now!

Physicians for Human Rights

Presbyterian Church (USA), Office of Public Witness

Programa Venezolano de Educación Acción en Derechos Humanos (PROVEA)

Progressive Democrats of America - Central New Mexico (PDA-CNM)

Project Expedite Justice

Religions for Peace Canada

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights

The Sentry

Southern Anti-Racism Network (SARN)

StoptheDrugWar.org

Stop Genocide Now

Ukrainian Legal Advisory Group (ULAG)

UN Association of Greater Philadelphia

Unitarian Universalist Service Committee (UNSC)

United Church of Christ

United Church of Sante Fe

United Nations Association of Sweden

US Boats to Gaza

US Campaign for Burma

Veterans for Peace

Women’s Initiatives for Gender Justice

World Beyond War

World Court of Human Rights Coalition

World Federalist Movement - Canada

World Federalist Movement-Institute for Global Policy

World Without Genocide at Mitchell Hamline School of Law

Youth and Women for Change in Eswatini

Zarga Organisation for Rural Development (Sudan)