http://www.takimag.com/site/article/the_super_judge/
The Super Judge
Posted by Srdja Trifkovic on February 19, 2009

Meet the Man Who Wants to Rule the World
With the ascension of Barack Obama in Washington, the proponents of the 
International Criminal Court (ICC) are entertaining fresh hopes that the United 
States will ratify the 1998 Rome Statutes and join 108 countries that have 
signed up to the Court thus far.
Designed as a key instrument of an “evolving” system of transnational criminal 
justice, the ICC has an open-ended mandate to investigate and prosecute loosely 
defined war crimes as its UN-appointed officials deem fit. It is the antithesis 
of fundamental American precepts and key constitutional principles of 
sovereignty, checks and balances, and national independence.
Roger Cohen summed up the internationalists’ demands in the New York Times last 
December: “After the terrible decade of the 1990s, with its genocides in Bosnia 
and Rwanda … it is unconscionable that America not stand with the institution 
that constitutes the most effective legal deterrent to such crimes.” Similar 
calls have come from an array of influential NGOs, such as Amensty 
International and the New York-based Human Rights Watch, and bien-pensants like 
Desmond Tutu, Cora Weiss, and Elie Wiesel.
The question seems to be not whether Obama will relent, but how soon and how 
thoroughly. “Now that it’s operational, we are learning more and more about how 
the ICC functions,” he said approvingly during the campaign. “It is in 
America’s interests that these most heinous of criminals, like the perpetrators 
of the genocide in Darfur, are held accountable. These actions are a credit to 
the cause of justice and deserve full American support and cooperation.” 
The Democrats had never opposed the concept in principle. The Clinton 
administration had been in the forefront of efforts to create international 
hybrid courts, notably the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal at The Hague. The 
humanitarian interventionists welcomed the veil of supranational legal 
propriety that could be invoked ex post facto to justify unilateral acts, such 
as their Balkan meddling. They were wary, however, of having a court that could 
theoretically prosecute American officials for pursuing American policies. 
In July 1998 the ICC made some concessions to get the U.S. to sign on. The Rome 
Statute establishing the Court allowed a state to have primary jurisdiction 
over a crime “unless [it] is unwilling or unable genuinely to carry out the 
investigation or prosecution.” But then came the catch: the ICC judges 
themselves were the only authority that could determine whether a state is 
“unwilling” or “unable” to investigate and prosecute, and how “genuine” are its 
investigative or prosecutorial efforts and procedures. More significantly, the 
Rome Statute made a final break with long-standing international legal 
tradition by asserting ICC jurisdiction over nationals and military personnel 
from states that are not party to the treaty or even those that had 
specifically rejected the court’s jurisdiction.
In spite of so problematic a brief, President Clinton signed the Rome Treaty in 
December 2000, in the final days of his presidency. The Bush Administration, to 
its credit, “unsigned” it in 2002 invoking issues of substance and insisted on 
signing bilateral immunity agreements with ICC member states. As John Bolton 
summed it up in late 2002, the ICC could not fit into an international 
“constitutional” design that delineates how laws are made, adjudicated or 
enforced—let alone how they are subjected to popular accountability and 
structured to protect liberty:
In the ICC’s central structures, the Court and Prosecutor, these sorts of 
political checks are either greatly attenuated or entirely absent. They are 
effectively accountable to no one. The Prosecutor will answer to no superior 
executive power, elected or unelected. Requiring the United States to be bound 
by this treaty, with its unaccountable Prosecutor and its unchecked judicial 
power, is clearly inconsistent with American standards of constitutionalism.
  
At the same time the Bush Administration weakened this principled position by 
remaining willing to collaborate with the UN in the development of ad-hoc 
hybrid institutions that incrementally legitimized the judicial machinery of 
the “international community.”
The discretionary power of the ICC prosecutor to investigate cases on his own 
initiation, to act without third-party restraint, and to claim universal 
jurisdiction, offer the scope for considerable legal creativity. Such sweeping 
power was denied even to Vishinsky or Freisler. A precedent does exist, 
however, in a Western liberal democracy of our own time.
Enter Baltasar Garzón, prosecuting magistrate of Chamber 5 of Spain’s national 
criminal court. He has, not only by Anglo-Saxon standards, unprecedented 
authority to initiate investigations, to jail or bail suspects, and to decide 
whether to bring charges. 
The media-savvy “Superjuez” first attracted limelight in October 1998, when he 
sent to London a warrant for the arrest of visiting former Chilean president 
Augusto Pinochet over the alleged deaths of Spanish citizens during his rule. 
Garzon’s claim to de facto universal jurisdiction was breathtakingly audacious. 
Eventually his request was turned down by British Home Secretary Jack Straw, 
not because Pinochet enjoyed diplomatic immunity—which he did—but on far 
feebler grounds of his poor health.
In subsequent years Garzon has tried to lay his hands on former U.S. secretary 
of state Henry Kissinger (in connection with the U.S. support of Latin American 
death squads in the early 1970s), on Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi 
(for tax evasion), on unspecified U.S. government officials (for alleged abuses 
at Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib), and on 98 leaders of the 1976-1983 Argentine 
military junta. Only one lower-ranking officer, Adolfo Scilingo, had the bad 
luck to be extradited—from Mexico—on Garzon’s “Dirty War” warrant. He was 
sentenced to a thousand years in jail, reduced on appeal to 640.
Garzon’s behavior has grown increasingly erratic of late. Last October he 
declared the acts of repression by General Franco during and immediately after 
the Civil War (1936-39) to be “crimes against humanity,” which he would start 
prosecuting. A month later, however, Garzon sullenly announced that he was 
dropping the case against Franco and his close aides, after his colleagues 
finally questioned his jurisdiction over acts committed 70 years ago by people 
who are all dead and whose alleged crimes were covered by the 1977 general 
amnesty.
Garzon’s showmanship would be merely irritating, in the manner of other 
self-promoting Euro-leftists—Bernard Kouchner, say—were it not for the fact 
that he uses self-appropriated powers to destroy the lives and reputations of 
his less well known targets. 
Take the case of Gennady Petrov, a Russian millionaire resident in Spain who 
was arrested last June on Garzon’s odrers on the suspicion of money laundering 
and organized crime connections. Following a spectacular military-style 
invasion of his villa in Mallorca, Petrov, his wife and their 10-year old 
daughter were kept naked at gunpoint for hours in their bedroom while the 
search was going on. Garzon used a Franco-era law to keep Petrov and other 
suspects arrested under the same warrant incommunicado for months on end, 
deprived of bail or legal assistance, while the investigation was proceeding in 
inquisitorial secrecy. The defense continues to be denied access to the 
evidence that prompted Garzon to act, in direct violation of the standards set 
by the European Court in Strasburg. Spain, being a signatory of the European 
Convention on Human Rights, is obliged to observe the rulings of the Court, but 
Garzon appears to give precedence to his country’s
 legislation when it suits his purposes—even if it was enacted by bête noir 
Francisco Franco. 
Last October Garzon went a step further when he ordered the Guardia Civil to 
raid the Spanish villa of Petrov’s alleged associate Vladislav Reznik, a deputy 
of United Russia party and chairman of the State Duma Financial Markets 
Committee. The seizure of valuable property (including artwork) was a case of 
deja-vu. Garzon’s subsequent attempt to get hold of Reznik, who was not in 
Spain at the time of the raid, was different—although by no means new: it 
reflected his customary dislike of established international legal rules. 
Garzon tried to issue a summons through the office of Reznik’s Spanish lawyer, 
in disregard of proper channels that exist under the legal assistance agreement 
between Spain and the Russian Federation.
This latest attempt by Garzon to exert universal jurisdiction over a foreign 
national, in violation of international legal norms and in disregard of the 
would-be defendant’s immunity in his own country of citizenship, indicates that 
the “Superjudge” primarily wants to create a scene. His real target was not 
Reznik, but the principle of sovereignty and national independence itself.
Garzonism is spreading. His colleague at the National Court, Eloy Velasco, 
announced in early January that he would investigate 14 Salvadoran military 
officers for the 1989 killings of six Jesuit priests in El Salvador. Velasco 
asserted point-blank that “under the principle of universal jurisdiction” he is 
competent to investigate Salvadoran citizens for their alleged participation in 
a crime allegedly committed in the Central American republic two decades ago. 
Two weeks later another Spanish judge, Fernando Andreu, announced that he would 
pursue a crimes against humanity complaint against seven senior Israeli 
military figures over a 2002 bombing in Gaza The complaint, which includes 
former defence minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer as one of its targets, was lodged 
in Madrid by the Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights. Judge Andreu 
also invoked the principle of universal jurisdiction, promting an Israeli 
politician to ask the courts in Israel to open proceedings against Spain for 
taking part in the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia.
Garzonism à la mode is catching on in another, equally unpleasant manner: in 
the apparent anti-Russian bias of Spanish investigators, in their 
heavy-handedness that would elicit howls of “racism” or “discrimination” if 
directed against a minority group—Muslims, say—deemed worthy of protection by 
the Euro-elite class. 
Take the case, unrelated to either Reznik or Petrov, of Aleksandr Gofstein, a 
prominent Russian lawyer and former legal counsel for Mikhail Khadarkovsky’s 
Yukos conglomerate. Gofstein was arrested in 2006 on a warrant issued by 
Fernando Andreu, investigator with the National Justice Chamber, on charges of 
money laundering for bringing $500 to his client, fellow Russian Zakhar 
Kalashov who is under arrest in a Spanish jail. Gofstein is currently out of 
prison on a quarter-million-dollar bail. Garzon’s influence has permeated the 
entire Spanish justice system.
Garzon’s histrionics reflect his abiding commitment to the assertion of 
borderless, transnational authority in disregard of the law. That same 
commitment is the moving force behind the ICC; it is the vision that moves its 
proponents, here and abroad. Theirs is the ideology of universal human 
values—that is to say, of a common culture identical for the whole world. It is 
the enemy of liberty as understood and practiced in the West for centuries, an 
enemy on par with the menace of Jihad. Its proponents are invariably also the 
upholders of multicultural diversity, while in fact promoting a soul-numbing 
social and legal monism.
The moral absolutism that is at the core of Garzon’s world view, identical to 
that of the ICC enthusiasts, is morally unsustainable. Genuine dilemmas about 
our human responsibility for one another must not be confused with their 
doctrine of global authoritarianism. Their disdain of the principle of 
sovereignty may be motivated by a genuine conviction that the war against the 
Westphalian order is a just one. But they are still less than forthright 
regarding the methods of justice they are willing to use as well as the real 
implications of countries subjecting themselves to «international justice.»  
Judge Baltasar Garzon’s illustrious career confirms that the more arrogant and 
universalist the doctrine behind the ICC, the more willing its devotees are to 
lie for the truth. “International justice” is a poisoned chalice that even 
Barack Obama should find the strength to reject. 
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