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The International Criminal Court, the United States, and the Domestic Armed Conflict In Syria
Author(s) -
Eric Engle
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.2259266
Subject(s) - political science , criminal court , armed conflict , law , international humanitarian law , criminology , international law , sociology
Reviews the various objections made by certain elements to U.S. ratification of the ICC and considers alternatives to the ICC. Argues that criticisms of the ICC are over-stated and can be answered decisively with good legal arguments. Argues that the U.S. should continue its close cooperation with the ICC and seek to ratify the ICC treaty as part of the U.S. pivot out of the failed, expensive, unilateral, lawless "global war on terror" and toward a multilateral rule of law approach which correctly constructs terrorism as illegal cowardly crime, and not an act of war (and thus implicitly lawful if not heroic). This pivot enables the U.S. to credibly call on aid from U.S. friends and allies, as well as persuading possible allies and dissuading actual enemies.

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