US Government Endorses Dean Scharf鈥檚 Proposal for an Internationalized Ukraine War Crimes Court to Prosecute Russian Aggression

Beth Van Schaack speaking at 星空传媒
Beth Van Schaack speaking at 星空传媒

Last summer, 星空传媒 School of Law Co-Dean Michael Scharf and his colleagues at the Public International Law and Policy Group (PILPG) drafted model legislation to establish the Ukraine High Court for War Crimes. The project was the result of weeks of research and meetings with Ukrainian and U.S. legal experts. The would create an 鈥渋nternationalized鈥 domestic court modeled on the existing High Anti-Corruption Court of Ukraine to prosecute high-level cases of war crimes, crimes against humanity and aggression. The draft was subsequently translated into Ukrainian and provided to members of Ukraine鈥檚 parliament. The proposal was the subject of a story in the . 

The International Criminal Court (ICC) recently for Russian President Vladimir Putin for war crimes committed in the abduction of Ukrainian children and their transfer to Russia for adoption by Russian parents. But the ICC is designed to prosecute only a handful of leaders, and it can鈥檛 prosecute the crime of aggression.

Ukraine has opened domestic investigations into some 90,000 incidents of Russian war crimes committed since the Feb. 2022 invasion. 鈥淎s the conflict goes on, more and more Russian soldiers, colonels and generals are going to fall into the custody of the Ukrainians,鈥 Scharf told Foreign Policy. 鈥淎nd as that happens, there鈥檚 going to be a lot of interest in starting the prosecutions. 鈥 I cannot imagine that the current Ukrainian court system can handle that.鈥

Some experts have suggested that Ukraine should create a hybrid court with international prosecutors and judges like the Special Court for Sierra Leone which tried Liberian President Charles Taylor. 鈥淏ut Ukraine鈥檚 Constitution prohibits the creation of special or extraordinary courts and provides that only Ukraine nationals can be judges in Ukraine courts,鈥 said Scharf. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 more, the Ukrainian Constitution prohibits amendments during times of martial law, as has been the case since 2014.鈥  

So Scharf and his PILPG colleagues felt the answer was an internationalized Ukrainian court like the , whose prosecutors were assisted by US Department of Justice attorneys, whose defense counsel were foreign attorneys, and whose judges were assisted by foreign judges associated with the International Bar Association. They knew that Ukraine had established a similar court, the High Anti-Corruption Court, in 2018, which could serve as a model.  

Seven months later, on March 27, 2023, US Ambassador for Global Criminal Justice, Beth Van Schaack, to throw its support behind the creation of an internationalized domestic court in Ukraine to prosecute the Russian crime of aggression. The US proposal hues closely to the model set forth last summer by PILPG.

A few days later, Scharf and his colleagues penned an essay in , the prestigious online foreign policy forum, which explained the benefits of an internationalized Ukrainian court for prosecuting the crime of aggression. 鈥淲hatever shape an aggression tribunal ultimately takes,鈥 they concluded, 鈥渨e applaud the new US position which is likely to generate momentum for the prosecution of Russia鈥檚 crime of aggression against Ukraine.鈥 

Scharf co-founded PILPG with his former State Department colleague Paul Williams 26 years ago. The Nobel Peace Prize-nominated NGO has participated in two dozen peace negotiations, advised every international war crimes tribunal and was instrumental in convincing the United States to last year. 鈥溞强沾 law students, professors and alumni have been fortunate to have the opportunity to play an important role in PILPG鈥檚 work over the years,鈥 said Scharf.