Article contents
China, the Crime of Aggression, and the International Criminal Court
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2014
Abstract
At the Kampala Review Conference in 2010, the adoption of the amendments to the Rome Statute laid the groundwork for the eventual prosecution of the crime of aggression. China, a non-State Party to the International Criminal Court, has articulated its concerns regarding the Court's jurisdiction over the crime of aggression in legal terms. This paper examines the Chinese concerns regarding the role of the Security Council in the determination of an act of aggression and the definition of aggression primarily from a legal perspective. It argues that China has hovered back and forth between two conflicting legal positions on these issues during different periods in history according to its policy preference. This paper also considers the concerns of China from a policy perspective before concluding that the crime of aggression should not be regarded as an insurmountable barrier preventing China's accession to the ICC in years to come.
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Footnotes
PhD, School of Law, University of Edinburgh, LL.M. (Xiamen University), LL.B. (Jilin University). The author would like to thank Professor Bill Gilmore, Professor Alan Boyle, Professor Robert Cryer, Dr James Harrison, and the anonymous reviewers of the Asian Journal of International Law for their comments on earlier drafts of this paper.
References
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Distinguishing between the aggressor and the victim of aggression meant distinguishing, at the international level, between right and wrong. His delegation considered that when questions of that kind were discussed in the United Nations an analysis should be made on the basis of the objective facts by all the Member States, big or small, so as to arrive at a correct and truthful conclusion.
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92. Ibid., art. 1.
93. Ibid., art. 3.
94. Ibid., art. 2.
95. Ibid., art. 4.
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109. Ibid., para. 16.
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111. Amendments to the Rome Statute, supra note 44, art. 8bis.
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120. Supra note 84, annex, art. 2.
121. Ibid, art. 4.
122. Statement by An Chih-Yuan, supra note 76, para. 16.
123. Ibid.
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128. Statement by Ch'ing, Ling, supra note 75Google Scholar, para. 75:
With regard to the question of aggression or the victim of aggression, his delegation maintained that any country which first used armed force to encroach upon the sovereignty, independence or territorial integrity of other countries had naturally committed a crime of aggression, that a crime of aggression should be subjected to severe international condemnation and sanctions and that peoples had the right to wage wars of national liberation and revolutionary wars of self-defence. It was absolutely impermissible to mention in the same breath wars of aggression and wars against aggression, which were different in nature.
129. Supra note 55. The General Assembly found that “China, by giving direct aid and assistance to those who were already committing aggression in Korea … has itself engaged in aggression in Korea”.
130. Statement by WU Hsiu-Chuan (China), UN SCOR, 527th mtg., UN Doc. S/PV. 527 (1950), 28 November 1950, at 21−2: “Under such circumstances the United States armed aggression against Korea cannot be regarded as a matter which concerns the Korean people alone … The United States aggression against Korea gravely endangers the security of the People's Republic of China.”
131. Ibid., at 4, 25.
The members of the Security Council will recall that on 24 August Foreign Minister Chou En-lai lodged a charge with the United Nations Security Council that the United States Government had committed armed aggression against China's territory, Taiwan; “In order to safeguard international peace and security and to uphold the sanctity of the United Nations Charter, the United Nations Security Council has the inalienable duty to apply sanctions against the United States Government for its criminal acts of armed aggression upon the territory of China, Taiwan, and its armed intervention in Korea.”
132. Draft Resolution Submitted by the Representative of the General People's Government of the People's Republic of China at the 527th Meeting of the Security Council held on 28 November 1950.
133. For example, 1962 China's boundary conflict with India; 1969 China's involvement in the Vietnam War against US aggression; 1969 Sino-Soviet border clashes; and 1979, China's “defensive counter-attack” against Vietnam; see MUSHKAT, Roda, “Is War Ever Justifiable? A Comparative Survey” (1987) 9 Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Journal 227 at 289−290Google Scholar.
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135. Supra note 84, annex, art. 3(d).
136. Statement by An Chih-Yuan, supra note 76, para. 15.
137. Ibid.
138. Ibid.
139. Official Records of the Third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea, Vol. 17, Plenary mtg., UN Doc. A/CONF.62/WS/37 and Add. 1 and 2, at 243. While maritime powers maintained that the EEZ should have the traditional freedom of the high seas, coastal states argued for more rights and control over the zone. China failed to achieve its objective to broaden coastal state rights and include security interests as a costal state competency in the EEZ.
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141. Statement by Ch'ing, Ling, supra note 75Google Scholar, para. 76: “While intent was a subjective element, it was nevertheless manifested through concrete acts of aggression.”
142. Ibid. According to Ling Ch'ing:
Consequently, the objective acts must be taken as the basis for judging whether a certain action constituted aggression, including whether the State committing it had aggressive intent, and definitely not the other way round, i.e. the existence of an act of aggression could not be determined on the basis of whether it was committed with aggressive intent. History proved that no aggressors would ever admit that they had aggressive intent … If aggressive intent was to be made a criterion for judging aggression, that would inevitably play into the hands of the aggressor, who tried to justify their aggressive acts and to mislead the public by disclaiming any aggressive intent. Such a definition of aggression would obviously be incapable of protecting the interests of the victims of aggression.
143. The US, which holds different views from China on the issues of humanitarian intervention and self-defence, played a significant role in preserving these grey areas issues. According to a former US Legal Adviser:
If Article 8bis were to be adopted as a definition, understandings would need to make clear that those who undertake efforts to prevent war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide—the very crimes that the Rome Statute is designed to deter—do not commit “manifest” violations of the U.N. Charter within the meaning of Article 8bis. Regardless of how states may view the legality of such efforts, those who plan them are not committing the “crime of aggression” and should not run the risk of prosecution. At the same time, in order for an investigation or prosecution to proceed, it must be shown that it was manifest that the action was not undertaken in self-defence, without the consent of the state in question, and without any authorization provided by the Security Council.
See US Department of State, “Statement at the Review Conference of the International Criminal Court” (4 June 2010), online: DoS <http://www.state.gov/s/l/releases/remarks/142665.htm>.
144. Sharon A. WILLIAMS and William A. SCHABAS, “Article 12” in Triffterer, supra note 35, 547 at 548.
145. KIRSCH, Philippe and HOLMES, John T., “The Rome Conference on an International Criminal Court: The Negotiating Process” (1999) 93 American Journal of International Law 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar at 3.
146. Under an “opt-in” system, ratification only signifies that a state becomes a party to the Statute, a separate declaration is required for a state to accept the ICC's jurisdiction over all crimes or only over certain crimes.
147. Statement by CHEN Shiqiu (China), Sixth Comm, 25th mtg, UN GAOR, 50th Sess, UN Doc A/C.6/50/SR.25, 30 October 1995, para. 70: “Acceptance of the court's jurisdiction would be based on the voluntary consent of the states parties and could not be mandatory”; see also Statement by LI Yanduan (China), Rome Conference Official Records, supra note 2, UN Doc A/CONF.183/C.1/SR.8, 19 June 1998, para. 37:
The opt-in system would allow many countries to become parties to the Statute and allow the Court to acquire universality in a very short period of time. After that, the countries concerned could gradually accept the jurisdiction of the Court. The fact that the Court enjoyed universal support would serve as a strong deterrent with regard to the core crimes. She therefore favoured the opt-in system.
148. SCHEFFER, David, “Letter to the Editors” (2001) 95 American Journal of International Law 624−625Google Scholar; LEIGN, Monroe, “The United States and the Statute of Rome” (2001) 95 American Journal of International Law 124Google Scholar at 126.
149. Amendments to the Rome Statute, supra note 44, art. 15bis(4).
150. “Opt-out” means a state, by becoming party to the Court's Statute, would automatically confer jurisdiction to the Court over the crimes under the Statute, but the state would have the right to exclude some crimes from such jurisdiction.
151. Amendments to the Rome Statute, supra note 44, art. 15bis(5).
152. Statement by Qu Wensheng, supra note 5, para. 34:
Under article 121, paragraph 5, any amendment to articles 5 to 8 of the Statute would not have effect with respect to States parties that had not accepted the amendment … a non-party would not be able to invoke the same grounds to refuse the Court's jurisdiction over the crime in question.
153. Report of the Special Working Group on the Crime of Aggression, Doc. ICC-ASP/7/SWGCA/2 (2009), paras. 31−7.
154. Statement by Liu Daqun (China), Rome Conference Official Records, supra note 2, UN Doc. A/CONF.183/SR.9, 17 July 1998, para. 39:
The Prosecutor's right to conduct investigations or to prosecute proprio motu, without sufficient checks and balances against frivolous prosecution, was tantamount to the right to judge and rule on State conduct. The provision that the Pre-Trial Chamber must consent to the investigation by the Prosecutor was not an adequate restraining mechanism.
155. Amendments to the Rome Statute, supra note 44, art. 15bis(8).
156. SCHABAS, William A., An Introduction to the International Criminal Court, 4th ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar at 153.
157. It was argued that:
States should settle their disputes through negotiation and consultation … states were free to choose other means to settle their disputes. If a sovereign State were asked to accept unconditionally the compulsory jurisdiction of an international judicial organ, that would amount to placing that organ above the sovereign State, which was contrary to the principle of State sovereignty.
See Statement by LAI Ya-Li (China), The Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea, Official Records, Vol. V (1976) at 27.
158. Declarations Made after Ratification, China (25 August 2006), online: UNCLOS <http://www.un.org/Depts/los/convention_agreements/convention_declarations.htm#China Upon ratification>.
159. ANDERSON, Kenneth, “The Rise of International Criminal Law, Intended and Unintended Consequence” (2009) 20 European Journal of International Law 331CrossRefGoogle Scholar at 355.
160. Hans-Peter KAUL, “Is it Possible to Prevent or Punish Future Aggressive War-Making?”, Forum for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law, Occasional Paper, 8 February 2011, at 10.
161. Schabas, , supra note 156 at 27Google Scholar.
162. Marja LEHTO, “The ICC and the Security Council: About the Argument of Politicization” in Politi and Nesi, supra note 9, 145 at 146.
163. According to David Kay:
There are three closely related behaviour patterns of politicization: first, considering and acting on matters that lie essentially outside the specific functional domain of a given specialized agency or program; secondly, the reaching of decisions on matters within an agency's or program's functional competence through a process that is essentially political and does not reflect technical and scientific factors in the decision process; and thirdly, the taking of specific actions on issues within an agency's or program's competence for the sole purpose of expressing a partisan political position rather than attempting to reach an objective determination of the issues.
See KAY, David, “The Function and Effectiveness of Selected United Nations System Programs” (1980) 18 American Society of International Law Studies in Transnational Legal Policy at 7Google Scholar.
164. Blokker, and Kreß, , supra note 41 at 895Google Scholar.
165. CRYER, Robert, “Darfur: Complementarity as the Drafters Intended?” in Carsten STAHN and Mohamed M. El ZEIDY, eds., The International Criminal Court and Complementarity: From Theory to Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011)Google Scholar, 1097 at 1098.
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