Trump Administration Launches Global Campaign Against ICC, Calls Court a Threat to U.S. Sovereignty

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The Trump administration has unveiled a sweeping diplomatic campaign to isolate the International Criminal Court (ICC), arguing that the Hague-based tribunal has become a threat to American sovereignty and warning that every available diplomatic tool will be used to curb its influence.Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced the initiative, framing it as a defense of U.S. service members, government officials, and the constitutional principle that American citizens should be subject to American—not international—courts.In a video message and an accompanying opinion article, Rubio argued that the ICC has moved beyond its original mission of prosecuting genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, becoming instead an institution that seeks to expand its authority over sovereign nations that never consented to its jurisdiction.“The U.S. is launching a diplomatic campaign with a simple message—sovereign states over globalism,” Rubio said. “Those who benefit from American security must not stand idly by while those who provide that security are targeted.”The International Criminal Court seeks to become the unaccountable arbiter of a new global law — empowered to prosecute and arrest our citizens at will and existentially threaten American sovereignty.We will teach the ICC the full meaning of American resolve. pic.twitter.com/2egHK1jA98— Secretary Marco Rubio (@SecRubio) July 13, 2026A Longstanding Dispute Over SovereigntyThe United States has never ratified the Rome Statute, the treaty that created the ICC in 2002, maintaining that the court should not have jurisdiction over American citizens.Successive administrations from both parties have opposed the ICC’s claim that it can prosecute nationals of countries that are not ICC members, arguing that such authority undermines national sovereignty and could lead to politically motivated prosecutions against American military personnel, intelligence officers, and elected officials.The Trump administration contends that the ICC’s expanding interpretation of its authority represents a direct challenge to U.S. constitutional governance and democratic accountability.The latest initiative also follows the ICC’s decision to issue arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, a move that provoked strong condemnation from Washington and intensified concerns about the court’s growing reach.Op-Ed from @SecRubio: Why We’re Dismantling the ICChttps://t.co/T4J5COuqUQ— Department of State (@StateDept) July 13, 2026Diplomatic Pressure Set to IncreaseSenior State Department officials say the administration is preparing a broad strategy to reduce the ICC’s international influence.Measures under consideration include:Expanded sanctions against ICC officials and affiliated entities.Visa restrictions and travel bans.Diplomatic efforts encouraging allies to reject ICC jurisdiction over U.S. citizens.Countries hosting American military installations, cooperating with U.S. security efforts, or receiving U.S. defense assistance could face increased diplomatic pressure to oppose ICC actions against Americans.“The United States will leave no diplomatic option off the table in confronting the threat the ICC poses to Americans,” the State Department said.Rubio warned that, if unchecked, the ICC could eventually pursue legal actions against U.S. Border Patrol agents, Marines, intelligence personnel, and officials involved in counterterrorism and immigration enforcement.According to the administration, international legal mechanisms are increasingly being used as political tools against democratic nations rather than focusing exclusively on the world’s worst atrocities.The ICC’s Limited Enforcement PowersThe ICC currently has no active investigations targeting U.S. personnel. Although it previously examined alleged crimes connected to the war in Afghanistan, the court shifted its focus after 2021 toward alleged offenses committed by the Taliban and Afghan actors.Unlike domestic courts, the ICC has no police force or independent enforcement mechanism. It depends entirely on member states to execute arrest warrants and enforce its decisions.A Broader “America First” StrategySupporters of the administration argue that the campaign is necessary to protect American sovereignty from unelected international institutions that lack direct democratic accountability.Critics argue that weakening the ICC could undermine international efforts to prosecute war crimes, genocide, and crimes against humanity, claiming that countries can avoid ICC intervention by conducting credible investigations through their own judicial systems.For the Trump administration, the dispute represents a broader battle between national sovereignty and international institutions.The initiative also reinforces Washington’s close alignment with Israel, which rejects ICC jurisdiction over its citizens and has condemned the court’s actions against Israeli leaders.Attention will now turn to U.S. allies, especially European governments that strongly support the ICC, and whether they align with Washington’s efforts to limit the court’s authority over non-member states.The confrontation marks a new chapter in the decades-long debate over the limits of international justice and the primacy of national sovereignty. As the Trump administration escalates its campaign, the clash between global judicial institutions and sovereign governments is expected to become a major issue in U.S. foreign policy.Read more:Trump Administration Delivers a Major Blow to Entitlement Fraud: Nearly 300,000 Illegal Aliens Purged from Social Security and Over 100,000 from MedicareThe post Trump Administration Launches Global Campaign Against ICC, Calls Court a Threat to U.S. Sovereignty appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.