As Russia continues its assault on Ukraine, top Biden administration officials are working behind the scenes with the Ukrainian government and European allies to document a tsunami of war crimes allegedly committed by Russian forces.
But the sheer volume of the documented war crime cases could be too overwhelming for Ukraine’s justice system as well as for the International Criminal Court (ICC), raising questions of how many cases will be brought to trial and how many accused Russian war criminals could ultimately face justice.
“This is a Nuremberg moment in terms of just the sheer scale of the breach of the rules-based international order that has been perpetrated by Russia in this invasion,” said Beth Van Schaack, the US ambassador-at-large for global criminal justice. “Even the most well-resourced prosecutorial office would have a hard time grappling with the sheer scale of the criminality that’s been on display.”
The United States joined a slew of other Western countries and international institutions in devoting resources to help Ukraine document and collect evidence on as many alleged war crimes as possible, from Russian soldiers torturing, raping and executing Ukrainian civilians to Russian armoured units and air forces indiscriminately shelling civilian targets.
When Russian forces withdrew from the Kyiv region in early April, they left in their wake nightmarish scenes of bodies strewn along the roads of Bucha. The massacres came to symbolise Moscow’s savage disregard for civilian life and raised fears about what awaits investigators in cities such as Mariupol, which endured months under siege by Russian forces.
The efforts to document and eventually prosecute these war crimes is largely without precedent, veteran human rights activists say, both because of the sheer number of documented cases flooding into Ukraine’s central government — the Ukrainian prosecutor’s office has 15,000 possible cases to investigate by the latest tally — and the fact that the government managing these cases is still battling the Russian invasion.
“The national legal system, even with an effective prosecutor’s office, couldn’t cope with 15,000 cases,” Oleksandra Matviichuk, a leading Ukrainian human rights lawyer and the head of Ukraine’s Center for Civil Liberties, told Foreign Policy during a recent visit to Washington. “And remember, we are a country still at war. We have limited resources.”
There are so many alleged Russian war crimes that the investigative response is also unprecedented. The ICC, the premier intergovernmental body tasked with prosecutions of war crimes, has dispatched 42 investigators to probe possible war crimes in Ukraine, its “largest ever” team of experts to carry out such a task. Other European countries, including Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, and Poland, joined Ukraine in setting up a so-called joint investigation team to cooperate on war crimes investigations, while the US government is funding complementary efforts to document war crimes and support Ukrainian organisations dedicated to doing so.
The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, a leading multilateral organisation, has also established an expert mission to document human rights abuses. In Ukraine, meanwhile, the prosecutor general’s office has brought forward several war crimes trials against captured Russian soldiers and is investigating thousands more, while civil society groups are training volunteers on how to properly document evidence of possible war crimes, effectively crowdsourcing the early stages of investigations for future cases.
There’s a growing concern among some US officials and Ukrainian activists that all these concurrent efforts could eventually trip over one another and may start doing more harm than good — that is, unless there’s a central hub set up to coordinate all the work. “It’s been a little bit chaotic,” conceded one US official working on supporting efforts to document war crimes in Ukraine, who spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to the media. (Van Schaack, for her part, insisted that these efforts are “decentralised” but not chaotic, because each group is in constant contact with one another to coordinate their work.)
Matviichuk and other Ukrainian civil society groups are advocating for the international community to establish a special “hybrid” international tribunal court to centralise and absorb all the investigations into possible war crimes and human rights violations committed during the war.
The proposal is not without precedent. These types of so-called hybrid courts, backed by both international and domestic laws and staffed by a combination of local and international experts, have been established to handle war crimes cases in Cambodia, Sierra Leone and Rwanda and could be modelled in part after the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
However, there’s another major hurdle: many of those international tribunals were established by (and gained their legitimacy through) the UN Security Council. Russia, as a permanent member of the Security Council, would undoubtedly veto any effort to set up a tribunal documenting war crimes against its own soldiers and leaders, meaning that Ukraine and its allies in the West would have to find a workaround for establishing an international court that doesn’t require UN Security Council approval.
One option would be to gain backing from the UN General Assembly instead, but doing so would require a two-thirds majority vote of members, which is by no means guaranteed. Another challenge with a global forum such as the United Nations is that it could be open to allegations of selectivity, said Tom Dannenbaum, an assistant professor of international law at Tufts University’s Fletcher School.
“The fact that the United Nations responds in some cases and not others can affect the politics around the tribunals it backs,” Dannenbaum said. One way around that could be to have a European institution, such as the European Union or the Council of Europe, lend its backing to the tribunal, he said.
The idea of a special tribunal has already gained traction in the European Parliament, where a group of EU parliamentarians formally endorsed the idea in May. Washington has yet to back such a plan, but Van Schaack said the administration is actively reviewing a series of proposals on how to bring to justice accused Russian war criminals. “Our focus at the moment has been on maximising the effectiveness of existing accountability mechanisms,” she said.
Another option is for other states to try accused Russian war criminals within their own domestic systems under the principle of universal jurisdiction. Offences such as genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity are perceived to pose such a grave threat to the international system that they can be tried in any country regardless of whether they have a direct tie to the case. In an interview on Friday, Lithuanian Foreign Affairs Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said his country was exploring the possibility of trying some of Ukraine’s war crimes cases in Lithuanian courts.
In Congress, meanwhile, US lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are clamouring to help in the effort with new legislation and funding for documenting war crimes.
“As the United States keeps its focus on Ukraine and helping its population defend its land and protect its people today, we should also be prepared to work in the same synchronised manner so that the Kremlin is forced to face its own reckoning for this unprovoked, bloody war,” US Senator Jeanne Shaheen, a Democratic member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told Foreign Policy in a statement.
Shaheen was one of 13 senators from both parties to sponsor a bill last month aimed at ensuring the US government is allocating resources to documenting war crimes in Ukraine. Among the tens of billions of dollars that the Biden administration has requested to aid Ukraine in the war, some $80 million is devoted to accountability on war crimes.
Still, documenting the war crimes is only part of the legal battle. There are also hurdles to preserve evidence and track down witnesses for cases that could be tried years down the road — a difficult task, let alone in an active war zone. Launching cases in international courts, including the ICC, can be a costly and lengthy process. The ICC has historically only handled a select few cases, emblematic of wider human rights abuses in a specific conflict.
“I think it’s important to temper expectations. Not every perpetrator will have their day in court — it’s not realistic. We have not seen that historically in lots of other countries around the world,” said Kelebogile Zvobgo, an assistant professor of government at William & Mary and founder of the International Justice Lab.
Then there’s the matter of getting custody of the accused war criminals — another steep hurdle for the current war, beyond the limited number of cases where the accused Russian war criminals have been captured by Ukrainian forces during the war. The ICC has sought to avoid trying people in absentia.
“Most of the architects of violence remain in Russia,” Van Schaack said. “And of course, Russia will be unwilling to extradite or conduct their own process internally, which they are obliged to do under the laws of war.”
In many instances, it can be easier to prosecute the low-ranking soldiers who are responsible for committing the crime than the commanders who may have instructed them to do it. “Do we have communications, do we have evidence of that? Was there a letter, or was there a recording of the order?” Zvobgo said.
And then there’s the question of whether Russian President Vladimir Putin would ever see the inside of a courtroom. Russia’s most senior officials, such as Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, are offered immunity under international law, but even that has its limits.
“As soon as a head of state or foreign minister leaves office, their status immunity elapses. And these crimes don’t have any statute of limitations, so Putin or Lavrov could be prosecuted 30 years down the line, longevity permitting,” Dannenbaum said. There is also precedent for the ICC to indict a sitting head of state.
“I think that there would be a significant risk for Putin or Lavrov to travel to any state party to the ICC and any state that recognises the international status of any hybrid tribunal that is created,” he said.
Despite all these hurdles, Matviichuk said she has confidence that Russians who committed war crimes will be brought to justice, eventually. “History has shown that sooner or later authoritarian regimes collapse and war crime perpetrators face justice. War crimes have no limited deadline. If they are alive, they will be caught,” she said.
Ukraine has already begun prosecuting war crimes cases against Russian soldiers in its custody, sentencing 21-year-old Russian Army Sergeant Vadim Shishimarin to life imprisonment for shooting a civilian. It is highly unusual to try a war crimes case while the conflict still rages, but Zvobgo said it was in Ukraine’s interest to ensure the alleged war criminals received free and fair trials.
“I am optimistic about Russian personnel getting due process,” she said. “Ukraine has been juxtaposing itself against Russia as being lawful, law-abiding and a respected member of the international community and doing things by the letter of the law.”
Will this include activities by other countries? Iraq invasion? Somalia? Afghanistan, Vietnam/Cambodia/Laos? Etc
Peter, I agree whilst open to information from both sides, I am of the strong belief that reporting in the MSM is tainted.
I predicted before the event that fuel prices would rise as a consequence of the action. This has happened but all reports I read refer to economic circumstances – no mention of the conflict as a cause. Australians don’t realize we are paying for the war at the bowser.
We have our own alleged war criminal who is auggested to have shot an innocent non combatant in cold blood. Get our own house in order before accusing others. Too much of look over there but don’t look here.
Sorry “alleged”
This is not original Crikey work, but follows Amber Schultz’s take on the Ukraine conflict;, Russia is “allegedly” guilty of numerous war crimes. And again it assumes that NATO and the US are honest brokers in this war . What a joke. Just read any unbiased report how we got here and how restrained the Russians have been in this conflict and this piece is fundamentally flawed. Until it is accepted that anything coming out of official sources from US, UK and NATO is part of an information war scenario, then these pieces are simply noise. Some critical thinking please. Read Mary Kostakidis ,Tony Kevin, Tim Anderson, Scott Burchill etc.for some real information.
Agreed re “official” western reporting on this war. No Crikey comment on the irony of the US urging prosecution for war crimes, given their refusal to sign up to any international tribunal or court system. Suggest you add Aron Maté, Joe Lauria, Richard Medhurst, Scott Ritter to your list for alternative analyses.
Aron Maté allegedly cooperated with the Kremlin on The Grayzone which described the ‘white helmets’ as a conspiracy to protect Putin’s friend Assad in Syria; Eric Draitser of the left wing Counter Punch gives him, two others, and many others of the left supporting Putin, a spray for being ‘sh*theads’.
Forensic rebuttal. Saves having to contest their arguments I suppose. Just brand them Putin supporters.
Great comment – Crikey’s reporting on the events in Ukraine, limited as they are, have been appalling. Sending Schultz to the frontline to pen ‘human interest’ stories was an utter waste of time. Some actual critical analysis of how we got here would have been welcome…
I’d also add The Jacob Dreizen Report, The New Atlas and The Duran to the list of alternative voices on Ukraine/Russia.
Sophistry, shoot the messenger to then present flawed analysis? You excluded from your list of ‘critical thinking’ Mearsheimer, Lancaster or the Grayzone? What verified objective media coverage is emerging from Russia, none, as it’s illegal?
What credibility do the list of ‘sources’ or ‘critical thinkers’ have when it comes to formal research and analysis of Russia, Ukraine and related geopolitics over decades, none?
There are numerous high level experts, researchers and media starting with Russians, Ukrainians, Central Europeans, etc. versus the conspiratorial dependence upon influencers and commentators in the Anglosphere e.g Tucker Carlson and Fox News (being gamed by Hungary & Russia)?
On Russia, starting with many journalists in exile, prison or murdered, there are academics and/or journalists Anne Applebaum, Tim Snyder, Masha Gesson, Misha Glenny, Bruce Clark, Robert Service, Ben Judah, Eric Draitser, Edward Lucas et al. have deep and broad knowledge and understanding with related published works, and skills of ‘critical thinking’.
thanks for reprinting that reliable body of atlanticist thought, an article from foreign policy
crikey is in the grass these days
Are we suggesting that Russia is the only Country that commits War Crimes during War? I would suggest that due to the much larger volume of reporting on this particular conflict, there has been a much larger number of cases in Ukraine being uncovered.
But are we to assume that Ukrainian forces are not committing any War Crimes, or that over the last multiple interventions by the USA that they or their opponents should also have been prosecuted for War Crimes.
Whataboutery and falling for the trap of focusing upon US etc. making very bad choices in the past e.g. Iraq, under a GOP regime, to depersonalise and bypass the current interests of 250 million+ people from the NW Europe, Baltics, Central Eastern Europe and Turkey. Deflecting from the actions and events now in Ukraine with an invasion initiated by Putin.
Why do so many of both right and left feel compelled to support Putin when he is also admired by radical right libertarians and nativists in the west for his authoritarian tendencies; hero worship or fear?
The Left is not supporting Putin
Yes and no, maybe not Oz; there had been much ‘reflexing’ from left and right claiming Putin was a victim of NATO expansion etc. etc.; Nick Cohen in The Observer did an article on both left and right running cover for Putin, three months ago.
‘Far right and far left alike admired Putin. Now we’ve all turned against strongmen…. The worst people in the west were pro-Putin. They excused his imperialist ideology and crimes against humanity and never paid a price for bootlicking a dictatorship. On the contrary, they took Britain out of the European Union and took over the Labour party. They won the presidencies of the United States and the Czech Republic and seized control of politics and the media in Hungary.’
Most Crikey commenters here today clearly don’t agree as their sentiments and beliefs seem influenced by Tucker Carlson Fox News (?), retired diplomats and grifters supporting autocracy, have been challenged; cognitive dissonance or narcissistic personality disorder?
“cognitive dissonance or narcissistic personality disorder?”
Neither I would suggest. You and Nick Cohen have created a quilombo of fellow travellers whose membership in the quilombo lacks conceptual coherence.
Liberal apologists have no coherence analysis because they can’t admit the US and other imperial powers are serial human rights abusers. Instead in their intellectual cheapness. they run dogs breakfast inspired arguments trying to link the left with the far right. Well, I do not believe it, the arugment is a nonsense.
And all of this in the context of criticising whatabout-ism…
Well I still say what about putting Bush, Blair, and Howard on trial for war crimes. Oh yes, but the US withdrew from the ICJ after it got caught mining Nicaraguan harbours, so who is going to hear the case?
Foreign Policy journos have forgotten more things than they ever knew or know.
My fault for reading the article.
‘created a quilombo of fellow travellers whose membership in the quilombo lacks conceptual coherence….’ What? Talking of coherent arguments based on credible sources….
Mate, “source-ism”, that is, citing some source as if it or he is authorative when it is not, is very shallow, more liberal sleight of hand.
The right and the left are not the same whatever your source claims.
Right, ‘source-ism’ now I think you just made that up to discredit any analysis you disagree with?
What’s the next resort to avoid facts and analysis, ‘fact-ism’, ‘science-ism’ etc.? Straight out of the climate science denial playbook, ditto Covid; ever heard of the fossil fueled Koch Network, which indirectly supported Mearsheimer, another apologist for Putin?
Yep, I made it up, and also the usage of the word “quilombo”, by way of responding to your grapb-bag of an incoherent argument. The main stream media have been “source-ist” for ever, refusing to accept a truth unless it comes from a controlled source. Now you are applying the same technique.
Mount a real argument that the left and the right are the same on Russia, using facts and real ideas, instead of quoting an “approved” source, if you can.
It’s going to interesting when Russia starts is own war crimes court, what with the non-stop Ukrainian shelling of civilians of the Donbass for 8 years resulting in the deaths of around 15,000 with just under 1,000 of those being children and the using of civilians as protective cover by the Ukrainian army as noted extensively by non-Western sources. I could keep on going but won’t but will relate one story that I heard from a Chechen fighter in Mariupol. He related that he saw a mother and young child of around 3 trying to get some water near the Avostal Metal Works when the rest of Mariupol was free from those N A Z I S. The mother was intentionally shot by a sniper and the Chechens were yelling to the child to run. The child did not and was killed by the same sniper with a head shot. F@cking obscene! I accept this man’s testimony as he was next to tears in the video. It was very close to the bone.
Yeah the Ukrainians were the aggressors in the Donbas thank god VP sent all those little green men to protect them from commercial airliners… where do you get your news, not Russia Today?
Colonel William McGregor. Jacob Dreizen. Scott Ritter all ex US Military intelligence. 2 bloggers – The Saker, ex NATO military intelligence and the Moon of Alabama – ex German military intelligence. Just to name a few. And your source(s)? NYT, WP, CBC etc I bet.
Why are these people credible apart from them and you telling us they are credible and comparing with news outlets; basic academic source analysis e.g. CRAAP test would say otherwise.
Whoops. That should be Colonel Douglas McGregor.
Public holiday, many posters here assuming they can post Putin agitprop, bypass bots and or informed comments…..
Indeed. Not a peek from journalists during 2014-2022 when the Ukrainian government used two neo-Nazi militia batallions to attack the people of Donbass. (Do please check the Nazi insignia of the Azov batallion which they have only just removed from their shirts. See: the “Azov Regiment” Wikipeadia page.) The tears and concern only flow when the Russians take up the cudgels.
Interestingly the USA and Australia make court cases against journalists who reveal their war crimes. Julian Assange is being threatened by the USA with permanent life detention. Will American presidents and generals ever face a War Crimes tribunal?
Unprovoked war is a crime – but not, apparently when it is comitted by us and the Americans.