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Germany's dilemma: Support Hague or Netanyahu

May 24, 2024

The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor has applied for an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Now Germany is torn between its "reason of state" and international law.

https://p.dw.com/p/4gEau
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu side by side
German Chancellor Scholz and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake handsImage: Michael Sohn/AP/picture alliance

These are exactly the headlines that the German government was desperate to avoid. "Scholz spokesman hints: Germany would arrest Netanyahu," ran the headline of the country's highest-circulation broadsheet, Bild, on Wednesday evening.

Die Welt newspaper chimed in: "Germany would extradite Netanyahu, government spokesman hints."

Is it really conceivable that Germany would arrest or even extradite the leader of Israel if the International Criminal Court issues an arrest warrant for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu? For the leader of the biggest opposition party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Friedrich Merz, the mere thought of this is absurd. "The silence of the German government, right up to the suggestion by the government spokesman that Netanyahu could be arrested on German soil, is now really becoming a scandal," Merz told Bild.

On Monday, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, British lawyer Karim Khan, applied for arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant  because of the great suffering of the people in the Gaza Strip since Israel responded militarily after the October 7 Hamas attack. Khan also applied for arrest warrants for three leaders of Hamas on charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes. The group is considered a terrorist organization by Germany, the EU, the US and other governments.

Khan specifically accused Netanyahu and his defense minister of using the starvation of the people in the Gaza Strip as a weapon of war. The chief prosecutor announced his applications, which are now to be examined and decided by the court, in the same breath.

Merz claimed that Khan's announcement made a certain connection between the Israeli head of government and the three Hamas leaders. "Even applying for the arrest warrant against Prime Minister Netanyahu and Hamas leader Sinwar at the same time is an absurd perpetrator-victim reversal," he said.

A tense government in Berlin

At the regular government press conference on Wednesday, Chancellor Olaf Scholz's spokesperson, Steffen Hebestreit, made it clear just how difficult it is for the German government to take a clear position in this case. Visibly tense, Hebestreit initially had to counter rumors on Wednesday that Scholz was "shocked" by the chief prosecutor's announcement. Hebestreit said: "I cannot report any shock or anger. We have made it very clear that we take a very critical view of the equation [of Netanyahu with Hamas]. And we pointed out differences in terms of how the state of Israel, its independent judiciary, is constituted.."

Some international judges do have doubts as to whether Khan should have filed a lawsuit against Netanyahu at all. According to international law expert Constantin Ganss in the Berlin newspaper Tagesspiegel, one of the ICC's rules is that it can only become active if the state in question is unwilling or unable to carry out investigations itself. Other legal experts, however, disagree with that argument.

Germany is one of the major supporters of the International Criminal Court, which has been investigating violations such as genocide and war crimes and passing sentences since 2002. In 2023 alone, the government sent $20 million (€18.5 million) to support the court. Some 124 countries have ratified the Rome Statute, the ICC's founding treaty. But the US and Israel are not.

Dennis Ross: Indictments would lead Israel to continue war

Germany's 'special relationship' with Israel

Officials have said Germany supports Israel as its "reason of state" as a result of the murder of millions of Jews under the Nazi dictatorship. But does this "reason of state" also apply personally to Netanyahu? "In principle, we are supporters of the International Criminal Court — and that's the way it stays," Hebestreit said. "We abide by law and order."

Israel's ambassador in Berlin, Ron Prosor, offered strong criticism of Khan, but also of the German government. "The reason of state is now being put to the test, Prosor said, "without ifs and buts." He called the government's statements "soft" and added: "The statement that Israel has the right to self-defense loses credibility if our hands are tied as soon as we make use of it."

In fact, other states are far more unequivocal than Germany when asked whether they would arrest Netanyahu. Hungary, for example, says no. The country supports the ICC, but Chancellery Minister Gergely Gulyas said the Israeli head of government should not expect to be arrested if he visits Hungary. And a few days ago, US President Joe Biden described the request from The Hague as outrageous. But the United States has also never supported the ICC. Things are different in Germany — and therefore much more complicated.

This article was originally written in German.

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Jens Thurau Jens Thurau is a senior political correspondent covering Germany's environment and climate policies.@JensThurau