The revelation of a Wall Street Journal report detailing a witness statement that Qatar offered to “take care of” International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan strips away any remaining illusions of neutrality in international law. The allegation that Doha proposed a quid pro quo to ensure Khan pursued arrest warrants against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defense minister Yoav Gallant is a direct assault on the integrity of the global legal system.
This isn’t a legal dispute, but an intelligence operation disguised as a pursuit of justice. For too long, the international community has allowed Qatar and the ICC to operate under a shield of presumed objectivity. This report proves that both are vulnerable to or active participants in a game of strategic manipulation. It is time for the world to stop treating Qatar as a neutral mediator and the ICC as an institution impervious to the influence of bad faith.
The warrants in question, issued in November 2024, represent an unprecedented low in the court’s history. By targeting the democratically elected leaders of a state defending itself against a genocidal terror proxy, the ICC effectively criminalized the act of national survival.
The charges of starvation as a method of warfare and crimes against humanity were leveled despite the enormous humanitarian efforts facilitated by Israel. These warrants were not based on a rigorous application of the law, but on a narrative constructed by hostile actors and then rubber-stamped by a prosecutor who was reportedly being “wrapped in the arms” of the Qatari state.
Qatar has spent years building a reputation as a modern and moderate bridge between the West and the most radical factions of the Middle East. It hosts a massive American airbase while it simultaneously provides a safe haven for the leadership of Hamas. The WSJ report suggests that this double game has now extended to the Hague. One cannot be an honest broker while allegedly drafting plans to look after a prosecutor in exchange for the legal decapitation of the leadership of a democratic state.
ICC faces a crisis of legitimacy
The ICC is facing a crisis of legitimacy that cannot be ignored. Khan is currently the subject of disciplinary proceedings over separate allegations of sexual misconduct, which he denies. However, when these personal scandals are paired with reports of Qatari influence peddling, the court’s claims of judicial independence ring hollow. UN investigators recently found a factual basis for the claims of an aide who alleged non-consensual sexual contact by Khan.
The fact that Qatar reportedly sought to “take care” of a man under such severe personal and professional pressure suggests a predatory attempt to leverage a vulnerable official for political gain. The ICC was designed to be a court of last resort for the worst atrocities in the world, but it is instead being utilized as a lawfare tool by states that harbor terrorists.
The implications of this report reaffirm what Israel already knows, but must serve as a wake-up call for its allies. The legal campaign against Israel is not a spontaneous reaction to conflict, but a premeditated and well-funded strategy. The international community has allowed itself to become dependent on Qatari mediation and financial influence, which has effectively granted Doha immunity from accountability. By allowing a terror-hosting monarchy to potentially steer the focus of the ICC, the West is enabling the hollowing out of the very international order it claims to defend.
Israel must now move toward a strategy of total legal and diplomatic independence. This means more than just a strong defense in court, because Israel must work with allies to demand a complete overhaul of how the ICC is funded and monitored. Israel must expose the machinery behind these cases before they ever reach a judge. If a mediator is found to be manipulating a global court for political ends, then that mediator must be treated as a hostile actor rather than a diplomatic partner.
The battle for the future of Israel is being fought as much in the chambers of the Hague as it is on the front lines. The world must choose whether it wants a functioning system of international law or a system that serves as a weapon for those who host and fund terrorism. Israel has already made its choice, and Israel will not be a pawn in a Qatari intelligence operation. It is time for the rest of the world to catch up.