US moves to isolate ICC with sanctions, visa bans and pressure
Why it matters: Washington is urging countries that host US forces or rely on US aid to reject the court’s authority over Americans.
The Trump administration is pursuing a broader campaign to weaken the International Criminal Court, weighing tougher sanctions, travel bans, visa revocations and pressure on other countries to distance themselves from the tribunal. A State Department official said Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other US officials are pressing governments to reject any ICC authority to investigate or prosecute Americans. The effort reflects a long-running US view that the court threatens national sovereignty, especially over military actions overseas. The Hague-based ICC, created in 2002 to prosecute war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity, has never had US membership. In June, three ICC judges sued the administration over 2025 sanctions, calling them unlawful.