Nah, it does. The ICC was created by the Rome Statute, and while we helped negotiate it, in order to join it and recognize it’s jurisdiction we would have to ratify the treaty. We did initially sign it but didn’t ratify it. Then, in 2002, under Bush, we withdrew our signature and said it wouldn’t be ratified. We did this because we committed war crimes during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and we didn’t want Americans to be tried for said war crimes.
It has 124 state members, and we aren’t one of them. Some other countries that aren’t members are Indonesia, India, China, and Israel (of course). So it’s not everyone but us that are a part of it, but yeah. We aren’t a part of the ICC even if we are a part of the world.
While we’ve been an “observer” before, we don’t recognize it having jurisdiction over any non-member country.
Edit: unless you mean my usage of apart instead of a part. If so, then this is awkward. I’m always bad at that.
Nah, it does. The ICC was created by the Rome Statute, and while we helped negotiate it, in order to join it and recognize it’s jurisdiction we would have to ratify the treaty. We did initially sign it but didn’t ratify it. Then, in 2002, under Bush, we withdrew our signature and said it wouldn’t be ratified. We did this because we committed war crimes during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and we didn’t want Americans to be tried for said war crimes.
It has 124 state members, and we aren’t one of them. Some other countries that aren’t members are Indonesia, India, China, and Israel (of course). So it’s not everyone but us that are a part of it, but yeah. We aren’t a part of the ICC even if we are a part of the world.
While we’ve been an “observer” before, we don’t recognize it having jurisdiction over any non-member country.
Edit: unless you mean my usage of apart instead of a part. If so, then this is awkward. I’m always bad at that.