We will argue that the ICC has no jurisdiction against Israel, not only because it isn’t a member, but also because the treaty that established that court precludes it from considering cases against any country with a valid judicial system that is willing and able to investigate the alleged crimes. This concept is called “complementarity.” Israel has one of the best and most independent legal systems in the world, one that is both willing and able to investigate its own leaders. The Israeli courts have convicted and imprisoned a former prime minister, a former president and several ministers. Hamas has no such judicial system.When the ICC prosecutor Karim Khan first announced his intention to request arrest warrants earlier this year, Israeli international law experts Amichai Cohen and Yuval Shany wrote about this topic of complementarity, and the case is not so clear cut.
Since last June, Israel's Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara has warned Netanyahu on several occasions that his failure to establish a state commission of inquiry into the events of October 7 could expose the country to risks in the international legal arena. In a letter to Netanyahu, Baharav-Miara wrote, "No other existing mechanism is adequate for addressing the unique risks the country faces at this time."Also in June, former Supreme Court Justice Menachem Mazuz told Haaretz that the most appropriate solution to Israel's crisis with the World Court was the establishment of a state commission of inquiry into the war, the members of which would be appointed by the president of the Supreme Court. Despite this, Netanyahu refrained from setting up such a commission.
Israel can still do this, although it is more difficult because it would appear more like a response to the ICC than an organic desire for an investigation. Israel's history of independent Commissions of Inquiry does not help this situation now, as Dershowitz seems to be arguing.
Still, if sch a COI includes prominent independent legal figures and has a mandate that theoretically could lead to criminal charges, it is something that should be done. Even though it is an insult to the State of Israel to even consider that its wartime decisions are criminal, the damage done by the ICC warrants overrides the insult.
Israel has not handled the public portion of these wars competently. Hoping that a new prosecutor will drop the case is not a strategy. This is one aspect where it dropped the ball.
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