How glorious
Trump’s attack on the ICC is really an attack on the rule of law
Posted on May 19 2026The Financial Times has reported that during discussions with Xi Jinping, Donald Trump suggested that the US, China and Russia should effectively collaborate against the International Criminal Court (ICC). As the paper put it:
During his summit with Xi, Trump also suggested that the US, China and Russia should join forces to combat the ICC, saying their interests were aligned, according to the people familiar with the talks.
The same report noted that the Trump administration has described the ICC as engaging in “politicisation”, “abuse of power”, “disregard for US national sovereignty” and “illegitimate judicial over-reach”.
Whether or not Trump actually intended these comments to become public is almost beside the point. What matters is what they reveal about the worldview now shaping much of global politics. The hostility here is not simply towards one court. It is towards the idea that there should be laws capable of constraining power, whether exercised by politicians, states, corporations or military alliances.
Spud then chunters on about all of this and it’s terrible, break of international whatever and so on.
Without actually noting that the US, China nd Russia are not party to the ICC anyway. While they signed the relevant treatry they’ve since withdrawn or in the US casae the Senate never ratified it.
Sigh.



