Trump administration issued ultimatum to ICC: Report

The Trump administration has issued a stark ultimatum to the International Criminal Court, demanding fundamental changes to its founding treaty and the termination of specific investigations under threat of additional sanctions, according to multiple diplomatic sources.

Recent reports indicate that U.S. officials have pressured the ICC to amend the Rome Statute to prevent investigations against President Donald Trump, senior administration members, and Israeli politicians. These demands specifically target ongoing probes into the Gaza conflict—recognized as genocide by UN experts and scholars—and potential war crimes by U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

The pressure campaign has intensified through diplomatic channels, with the U.S. allegedly conditioning the lifting of existing sanctions on the ICC’s compliance with these demands. Additionally, Washington has called upon member states to support treaty amendments that would grant immunity to citizens of non-signatory nations, a move that would effectively shield American and Israeli officials from prosecution.

This development occurs amidst unprecedented challenges to the ICC’s authority. The court currently faces multiple pressures, including Israeli legal challenges to its jurisdiction in Palestine and a separate complaint questioning the prosecutor’s impartiality. Meanwhile, ICC judges already face sanctions for their work on the Afghanistan investigation, which has notably shifted focus away from U.S. nationals since 2021.

The Assembly of States Parties meeting last week became a focal point for these tensions, with diplomats confirming that U.S. representatives attempted to leverage sanctions relief to influence the court’s investigative priorities. The proposed treaty changes would also impact other investigations, including those concerning alleged Russian war crimes in Ukraine, as Russia is also a non-member state.

ICC prosecutor Karim Khan, currently on voluntary leave pending a UN investigation into impartiality allegations, has been a specific target of U.S. sanctions since February, alongside deputy prosecutors, judges, and Palestinian organizations.