The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) is withholding valuable information from the International Criminal Court (ICC), hindering the court’s investigation of alleged Russian war crimes in Ukraine, according to a key U.S. ambassador.
At a Wednesday Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Global Criminal Justice Beth Van Schaack testified that she believes the DOD is the one department holding up U.S. support for the ICC investigations into alleged Russian war crimes. During the hearing, Van Schaack also testified that the DOD may be blocking support for the ICC’s war crimes investigations in Ukraine out of concern that such cooperation would expose the United States and its allies to added legal liability for their own wartime conduct in recent history.
Van Schaack said various U.S. agencies and departments have collected a “range of very actionable information that we have been able to collect that might be very helpful to a justice process.” She then told Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) that the United States could share that information with a variety of international actors seeking war crimes prosecutions “but we can’t share it with the ICC because of the position DOD has taken.”
“And the one agency that is not consenting is DOD, is that right?” Van Hollen asked. “The defense department is not cooperating in that way right?”
DOD’s War Crime Concerns
While the DOD has broadly condemned the actions of Russian troops in Ukraine, the department may be concerned that support for ICC crime prosecutions against Russia will also invite investigations into U.S. personnel.“The prosecutor has already announced that he has deprioritized any investigation into international forces in Afghanistan and is instead turning his attention, as is appropriate, to ongoing crimes against humanity being committed by the Taliban, by ISIS-K, and by other non-state actors in Afghanistan,” she added.
Menendez said he had asked the DOD to participate in Wednesday’s hearing, but DOD officials did not attend.
NTD News reached out to the DOD for further comment on its stance with regard to ICC war crimes investigations. The department did not respond by the time this article was published.