An alarming intimidation campaign targeting International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan has been extensively documented by French publication Le Monde, revealing systematic pressure tactics from multiple nations and internal sabotage attempts. The coordinated effort emerges directly from Khan’s pursuit of war crimes charges against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, and other Israeli officials.
The campaign features direct threats against ICC personnel, including British barrister Andrew Cayley who oversaw the Palestine investigation. Dutch intelligence warned Cayley of security risks in The Hague, followed by explicit December 2024 threats labeling him ‘an enemy of Israel’ who should ‘watch his back.’ Cayley subsequently left his position citing health impacts from pressure and fear of U.S. sanctions.
Internal undermining came from Thomas Lynch, Khan’s senior legal adviser and longtime colleague tasked with liaising with Israel. Lynch allegedly proposed arranging a Jerusalem dinner between Khan and Netanyahu through lawyer Alan Dershowitz—a move Khan reportedly rejected as inappropriate spectacle. Lynch later triggered internal harassment investigations against Khan and attempted to have him suspended following sexual misconduct allegations, which Khan denies.
Government-level intimidation included then-British Foreign Secretary David Cameron’s April 23, 2024 threat that Britain would withdraw from the Rome Statute if Khan pursued arrest warrants, comparing the action to detonating ‘a hydrogen bomb.’ Similarly, British-Israeli ICC lawyer Nicholas Kaufman warned Khan in a May 1 meeting that he and the ICC would be ‘destroyed’ unless warrants were reclassified as confidential to allow private Israeli challenges.
The pressure campaign extends to tangible sanctions: Khan has had his U.S. visa revoked, family members banned from traveling to America, UK bank accounts frozen, and credit cards canceled. Despite these pressures, Khan was reportedly preparing additional warrants for far-right Israeli ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir over West Bank settlement expansions before taking leave amid internal turmoil. The U.S. escalated pressure further by sanctioning four ICC judges on June 8, with State Department legal adviser Reed Rubinstein warning ‘all options remain on the table’ unless the investigation is dropped.
