Democracy under arrest: British Warrant for Knesset
Leader Livni
by John Bolton
The Wall Street Journal, December 15, 2009
"Universal jurisdiction" sounds
like a term plucked from obscure international law journals, but it has
pernicious and profoundly antidemocratic consequences in the real world.
A British arrest warrant, issued over the weekend in London for former
Israeli foreign minister Tzipi Livni, shows precisely why.
The warrant charged Ms. Livni— the current leader
of the Knesset opposition— with war crimes allegedly committed by
Israeli forces during Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip last winter.
Ms. Livni and other Israeli leaders have always staunchly defended their
operation against Hamas, and the arrest warrant was withdrawn Monday when
it became clear Ms. Livni would not be in Britain as previously scheduled.
But the fallout from this misguided warrant will linger long after it
fades from the headlines.
Universal jurisdiction originated centuries ago to deal
with hostes humani generis ("the enemies of all mankind") such
as pirates or slavers, who were not under any state's control but legitimately
concerned them all. It has grown explosively in recent years, as self-styled
human-rights advocates have pushed to criminalize national actions that
they find offensive.
Today's version of universal jurisdiction masquerades as
a legal concept, but is in fact a form of political morality. It empowers
prosecutions in states with little or even no connection to alleged offenses
such as war crimes and gross abuses of human rights. And in many countries,
as in Britain, the ability of private citizens to trigger the criminal
process only adds to the danger of politicized prosecutions.
When leaders of constitutional, representative
governments are targets, there is simply no argument for applying universal
jurisdiction. Ms. Livni and her colleagues won free and fair Israeli elections,
and were in fact defeated in subsequent free and fair elections. Israel's
laws have been adopted by democratically elected Knesset members and enforced
by an independent judiciary. If crimes under Israeli law have been committed,
they can be prosecuted by Israel's courts. Same goes for the United States.
Augusto Pinochet's 1999 arrest in Britain on a Spanish warrant
for offenses committed while overthrowing Chile's Salvadore Allende first
brought universal jurisdiction global prominence. But Pinochet's arrest
was followed by Belgium's toying with the idea of arresting Donald Rumsfeld
for having the temerity to visit NATO headquarters in Brussels. Now Ms.
Livni and other Israeli officials involved in recent regional conflicts
are subject to potential arrest and trial if they travel beyond Israel's
borders.
It is no accident that arrest warrants never seem to be
issued for the likes of Kim Jong Il or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, since the
real targets of universal jurisdiction these days are Western nations.
Ultimately, what it targets is the very ideas of sovereign accountability
and political independence. These goals largely motivated the 1998 Rome
Statute that created the International Criminal Court, itself a step toward
constraining states' abilities to police their own affairs, and an institution
that the Obama administration yearns to join.
Transferring accountability for decisions from democratic
politics to the criminal justice system understandably intimidates policy
makers from making perfectly justifiable choices, such as defending against
terrorist threats. Moreover, "command responsibility" has been
transmogrified from liability for failing to stop known criminal activity,
to liability when officials "should have known" their subordinates
were committing crimes. This further ups the ante and explains why former
foreign ministers like Ms. Livni or Henry Kissinger are at risk.
This deterrent impact is exactly what universal
jurisdiction advocates seek - both to affect decisions at the highest
national levels, and to discourage mid- and low-level officials from implementing
disfavored policies. Some foreign critics hope to prosecute former President
George W. Bush for enhanced interrogation techniques and the Guantanamo
Bay detention facility. While they likely won't get to the former president,
they'll be at least somewhat content prosecuting the attorneys who wrote
the underlying legal justifications. Incredibly, the Obama administration
has yet to definitively reject the possibility of allowing such prosecutions
overseas.
Universal jurisdiction against officials of authoritarian
regimes sounds appealing. But in these cases, the real goal should be
replacing such regimes with representative governments that undertake
sovereign accountability for prior transgressions.
Nonetheless, human-rights activists who view their morality
as higher than that of elected governments are satisfied by nothing less
than prosecution. That is precisely why contemporary universal jurisdiction
is so profoundly antidemocratic.
Undoubtedly, leaders of constitutional democracies make
mistakes about whom they do and do not prosecute. But to substitute the
judgments of self-designated international Platonic Guardians for representative
governments and independent judiciaries is perilous at best, and authoritarian
at worst. It's the time to unambiguously reject universal jurisdiction
before its infection spreads even further.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
Return to top of page>>
|