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Tag Archives: Rome Statute
April 7: Has the U.S. Already Crossed the Line into War Crimes?
It is Monday morning, April 6, 2026. We are exactly 39 hours away from a deadline that was set not in a diplomatic cable, and not in a briefing room, but on a social media platform in the middle of … Continue reading
Posted in In the News
Tagged Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 54 of Additional Protocol I, B1 Bridge, Bridge Day, CAIR, civilian infrastructure, Collective Punishment, Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, Council on American-Islamic Relations, crime against humanity, deadline, discriminatory intent, Doctrine of Command Responsibility, Donald Trump, double-tap, Geneva Convention, guilt, hors de combat, indiscriminate, infrastructure, infrastructure targeting, intent, International Criminal Court, iran, iran war, missile strike, NATO, No Quarter, Operation Epic Fury, Pope Leo XIV, Power Plant Day, Principle of Proportionality, reckless, religion, religious persecution, Rome Statute, Shajarah Tayyebeh girls' school, Sizdah Be-dar, stale intelligence, stone ages, stupid rules of engagement, triple-tap, war crime, water desalination systems
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