ICC responds to appeal of Netanyahu arrest warrant

Francis Tuschek

The International Criminal Court (ICC) Appeals Chamber has instructed a lower panel to reconsider Israelโ€™s objections to the courtโ€™s jurisdiction over arrest warrants issued for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, according to a ruling published on Thursday.

Last November, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant for allegedly committing grave atrocities, including the use of starvation as a method of warfare, during Israelโ€™s military campaign in Gaza launched in response to a deadly 2023 raid by the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

Israel, which is not a signatory to the Rome Statute, argued that the court lacks jurisdiction over its citizens. At the time, the ICCโ€™s Pre-Trial Chamber dismissed Israelโ€™s objections โ€“ filed before the warrants were issued โ€“ as premature.

However, the Appeals Chamber has now determined that the lower panel โ€œcommitted an error of lawโ€ by failing to adequately address Israelโ€™s arguments, and has remanded the matter for a new ruling.

The directive does not annul the existing warrants but requires the Pre-Trial Chamber to reevaluate the substance of Israelโ€™s jurisdictional objections.

Israeli officials have welcomed the Appeals Chamberโ€™s decision โ€“ but criticized it for refusing to suspend the arrest warrants immediately. Foreign Minister Gideon Saar stated on X that the arrest warrants were issued unlawfully and are โ€œnull and void.โ€

โ€œWe said it from the start: The International Criminal Court in The Hague (ICC) doesnโ€™t have, and never had, jurisdiction to issue arrest warrants against Israelโ€™s Prime Minister and its former Minister of Defense,โ€ Saar wrote.

Israelโ€™s UN ambassador, Danny Danon, accused the ICC of acting โ€œas a political tool serving Israelโ€™s enemies.โ€

โ€œThe decision to revisit the question of jurisdiction exposes the lack of legitimacy behind the political arrest warrants,โ€ Danon said, according to a statement from his office. โ€œIsrael will continue to defend itself, in coordination with its partners, and will not remain silent in the face of such hypocrisy.โ€

The ICC Prosecutorโ€™s Office has acknowledged the Appeals Chamberโ€™s ruling and is currently reviewing the decision, although the timeline for the reconsideration has not been specified. The court had also issued an arrest warrant for Hamas military leader Mohammed Deif for alleged war crimes, which was withdrawn in February 2025 following confirmation of his death.