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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
Digital Library Collections
This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections.
Collection: Roberts, John G.: Files
Folder Title: JGR/Genocide Convention
(2 of 3)
Box: 27
To see more digitized collections visit:
https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library
To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit:
https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection
Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected]
Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing
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WITHDRAWAL SHEET
Ronald Reagan Library
Collection Name ROBERTS, JOHN: FILES
Withdrawer
LOJ 7/31/2005
File Folder
JGR/GENOCIDE CONVENTION (2 OF 3)
FOIA
2005-139
Box Number
CFOA0578
COOKE
1009
ID Doc Type
Document Description
No of Doc Date Restrictions
Pages
19469 MEMO
ROBERT MCFARLANE TO THE
2
ND
B1
PRESIDENT, RE GENOCIDE
CONVENTION
19470 MEMO
CHARLES HILL TO MCFARLANE, RE
2
8/22/1984
B1
openes
GENOCIDE CONVENTION
R
6/22/2006
08/03/2005
DOCUMENT PENDING REVIEW IN ACCORDANCE WITH E.O. E. 13233
GIC
Freedom of Information Act - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)]
B-1 National security classified information [(b)(1) of the FOIA]
B-2 Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an agency [(b)(2) of the FOIA]
B-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIA]
B-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial information [(b)(4) of the FOIA]
B-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIA]
B-7 Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA]
B-8 Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of financial institutions [(b)(8) of the FOIA]
B-9 Release would disclose geological or geophysical information concerning wells [(b)(9) of the FOIA]
C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of gift.
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
9/4/84
Nancy
Attached parkage pertains to
Genoride convention. It is my
understanding that the plan to go
toward has been approved-lnt is to
be held close until Thursday
I have told Bob tumer and
Ron Sable. Bob Kimmitt has talked
to B. congressional natifications
should be planned for tomorrow.
cc John Roberts
Paul T.
WITHDRAWAL SHEET
Ronald Reagan Library
Collection Name
Withdrawer
ROBERTS, JOHN: FILES
LOJ 7/31/2005
File Folder
FOIA
JGR/GENOCIDE CONVENTION (2 OF 3)
2005-139
COOKE
Box Number
CFOA0578
9LOJ
ID
Document Type
No of
Doc Date
Restric-
Document Description
pages
tions
19469 MEMO
2
ND
B1
ROBERT MCFARLANE TO THE PRESIDENT, RE
GENOCIDE CONVENTION
Freedom of Information Act - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)]
B-1 National security classified information [(b)(1) of the FOIA]
B-2 Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an agency [(b)(2) of the FOIA]
B-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIA]
B-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial information [(b)(4) of the FOIA]
B-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIA]
B-7 Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA]
B-8 Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of financial institutions [(b)(8) of the FOIA]
B-9 Release would disclose geological or geophysical information concerning wells [(b)(9) of the FOIA]
C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of gift.
PRESIDENTIAL STATEMENT
This Administration has done an extensive review of the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide. As a result of that review and at the strong urging of
the American Bar Association and other interested groups, I have
concluded that it would be in the nation's best interest for the
United States to ratify the Genocide Convention.
The commitment of our country to prevent and punish acts of
genocide is indisputable. Yet our failure to ratify this treaty,
which has now been pending before the Senate for thirty-five
years and has been supported by Presidents Truman, Kennedy,
Johnson, Nixon, and Carter, has opened the United States to
criticism in international fora. We can refute such baseless
criticism by ratifying the Convention, and more importantly we
can utilize the Convention in our own efforts to expand freedom
and fight human rights abuses around the globe.
In 1976, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee reported
favorably on the Convention and recommended that the Senate give
its advice and consent to ratification subject to three
understandings and one declaration. This approach exceeded the
clarifications considered necessary by the Nixon Administration,
but I support these understandings and declaration and believe
they will help to secure Senate advice and consent to
ratification of the Convention.
My Administration looks forward to working with the Senate to
resolve any issues that may arise in connection with its
consideration of this treaty. Ratification of the Genocide
Convention would reaffirm in this international legal context the
fundamental and timeless American commitment to human rights.
THE WHITE HOUSE
8/30/84 WASHINGTON
Ollie:
Ted Olson ( Asst AG)
informed me tonight that
AG has no legal objection
to going forward on the
genocide Connention. Unless
we object, that cleans the
way for an annauncement
in the Binai Buth speech
on 9/6. Please yet a
package over on 8/31. Thanks.
Boh
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
September 4, 1984
MEMORANDUM FOR FRED F. FIELDING
FROM:
JOHN G. ROBERTS
DDR
SUBJECT:
Genocide Convention
Bob Kimmitt has copied you on a memorandum to Special
Assistant to the Attorney General Ron Blunt, requesting
Department of Justice comments on a memorandum on the
genocide convention prepared by the Department of State.
The memorandum, addressed to Robert McFarlane, recommends
that the President announce his support for ratification of
the convention, with the three understandings and one
declaration recommended by the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee in 1976.
Ted Olson has advised Kimmitt that the Attorney General has
no legal objection to the State recommendation, although
Justice declined to take a position on the policy question
of whether to announce support for ratification at this
time. State notes that such an announcement could be viewed
as "a cynical electoral ploy," but argues that the Adminis-
tration is vulnerable to criticism as the only one since
Truman's not to support ratification.
The genocide convention makes genocide a crime under inter-
national law. Parties to the convention agree to provide
"effective penalties" for genocide, extradite those accused
of genocide (in accordance with existing extradition treaties),
and to submit disputes concerning the convention -- including
the liability of a state for genocide -- to the International
Court of Justice.
Conservative opposition to the convention has, over the past
several decades, focused on several objections: the convention
"internationalizes" criminal law, hitherto a purely domestic
concern; there is no justification for submitting American
conduct to an international tribunal; violent nations will
ignore the convention; the Senate by approving the convention
will impose an obligation on the House to pass the requisite
implementing legislation; the acts that constitute genocide
-- primarily murder -- have traditionally been matters of
state, not Federal, jurisdiction; hostile states will use
the convention for propaganda purposes, accusing the United
States before the ICJ of "genocide" in Vietnam. These
objections are not unfounded, but a consensus has evolved
- 2 -
that they are outweighed by the propaganda windfall our
failure to ratify the convention has already afforded our
international opponents.
The "declaration" accompanying ratification -- that ratifi-
cation will not be effective until implementing legislation
has been passed -- responds to one of the principal objections.
Two of the three "understandings" seek to limit the convention's
rather broad and vague definition of "genocide;" the third
notes that the extradition provision does not affect the
right of the United States to try its own citizens before
its own tribunals for extraterritorial offenses.
I have reviewed the State memorandum, and the previous
material provided by Justice and NSC on this matter, and
have no objection to the State recommendation.
Attachment
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
September 4, 1984
MEMORANDUM FOR ROBERT M. KIMMITT
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
FROM:
FRED F. FIELDING
COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT
SUBJECT:
Genocide Convention
Counsel's Office has reviewed the draft Department of State
memorandum on the Genocide Convention, and has no legal
objection to the State recommendation that the President
announce support for ratification of the Convention, with
the noted three understandings and one declaration.
CC: Richard G. Darman
FFF: JGR:aea 9/4/84
bcc: FFFielding/JGRoberts/Subj/Chron
ADMINISTRATIVELY SENSITIVE . not to be released ID #
CU
without authority of the Counsel to the President
WHITE HOUSE
CORRESPONDENCE TRACKING WORKSHEET
0 OUTGOING
H INTERNAL
I . INCOMING
Date Correspondence
Received (YY/MM/DD)
/
/
Name of Correspondent:
Robert M. Kimmitt
MI Mail Report
User Codes: (A)
(B)
(C)
Subject: Genocide Convention
ROUTE TO:
ACTION
DISPOSITION
Tracking
Type
Completion
Action
Date
of
Date
Office/Agency
(Staff Name)
Code
YY/MM/DD
Response
Code
YY/MM/DD
WHOLL
ORIGINATOR 84,08,28
/
/
Referral Note:
CUAT 18
D 84,08,28
58408,31
Referral Note:
COB
CUAT 04
A
84,08,28
/
/
Referral Note:
/
/
/
/
-
Referral Note:
/ /
/
/
-
Referral Note:
ACTION CODES:
DISPOSITION CODES:
A - Appropriate Action
1.00 N Info Copy Only/No Action Necessary
A Answered
C Completed
C - Comment/Recommendation
R - Direct Reply w/Copy
B . Non-Special Referral
S Suspended
D Draft Response
S For Signature
F Furnish Fact Sheet
X Interim Reply
to be used as Enclosure
FOR OUTGOING CORRESPONDENCE:
Type of Response = Initials of Signer
Code
=
"A"
Completion Date = Date of Outgoing
Comments:
Keep this worksheet attached to the original incoming letter.
Send all routing updates to Central Reference (Room 75, OEOB).
Always return completed correspondence record to Central Files.
Refer questions about the correspondence tracking system to Céntral Reference, ext. 2590.
ADMINISTRATIVELY SENSITIVE - not to be released
5/81
without
6058
UNCLASSIFIED WITH
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
CONFIDENTIAL
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20506
ATTACHMENT
August 27, 1984
MEMORANDUM FOR RONALD L. BLUNT, SPECIAL ASSISTANT
TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Department of Justice
SUBJECT: Genocide Convention
Would you please provide by August 31 Justice comments and or
concurrence on the attached State memorandum? Thank you.
RobutM. Kinnth
Robert M. Kimmitt
Executive Secretary
Attachment
a/s
CC: Fred F. Fielding
UNCLASSIFIED UPON REMOVAL
OF CLASSIFIED ENCLOSURE(S)
11/31/05
UNCLASSIFIED WITH
CONFIDENTIAL
ATTACHMENT
CONFIDENTIAL
United States Department of State
Washington, D.C. 20520
MEMORANDUM FOR MR. ROBERT C. McFARLANE
THE WHITE HOUSE
August 22, 1984
Subject: Genocide Convention
In recent months a variety of groups and individuals
have written to the President or to senior staff members
of the White House to urge Administration support for
Senate ratification of the Genocide Convention. These
have included a letter (dated April 12, 1984) to the
President from Mr. Gerald Kraft, the President of B'nai
B'rith, and most recently a letter to you (dated August 2,
1984) from Professor John Norton Moore on behalf of the
American Bar Association. Attached is a draft presi-
dential statement supporting ratification of the Genocide
Convention.
The Genocide Convention has been pending before
the Senate for 35 years, and ratification has been
supported by Presidents Truman, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon,
and Carter. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee last
reported the treaty out in 1976 with three understandings
and one declaration. Due to opposition from various groups,
the treaty was never brought to a vote on the floor.
Over the years, opposition to the Genocide Convention
has diminished. The American Bar Association, which until
the 1970s was opposed to the treaty, is now a very strong
supporter. Moreover, conservative opposition has diminished,
and senators such as Lugar and Armstrong have privately
said they would support ratification under appropriate
circumstances. The core opposition now appears to be
limited to Senators Thurmond, East, and Helms, and the
Liberty Lobby. Jewish groups have long urged ratification.
We consider that our technical questions about the
treaty can be cured by the three understandings and one
declaration that the Committee approved in 1976. The
Committee's position, which we endorse, was even more re-
strictive than that taken by the Nixon Administration.
CONFIDENTIAL
OADR
DECLASSIFIED
NLS F05-139/1#19470
BY LOT NARA, DATE 6/22/06
CONFIDENTIAL
- 2 -
The key argument against presidential support for
ratification at this time is political. The Administration
might be accused of a cynical electoral ploy, in submitting
the treaty too late for action during the President's entire
term after sitting on it for three and a half years; as noted,
a few conservatives would oppose ratification on substantive
grounds. The key argument in favor of an announcement of
presidential support for ratification at this' time is in
essence defensive. It is not urged that the Administration
would gain a great deal by announcing support, but rather
that a failure to support the treaty might well be denounced
as an extreme position at variance with those of most pre-
ceding presidents including President Nixon. Moreover, the
treaty is substantively acceptable and there is increasing
pressure for the Administration to take a position on it.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff have made,
it clear to us that the treaty cannot be considered this
year, and we could seek to defer the holding of a hearing
on the treaty if we felt such a hearing would be contro-
versial. The Department recommends that the President announce
support for ratification, as part of his overall human rights
policy, at whatever time the President may consider appropriate.
for Executive Secretary
Charles Hill
Attachments:
As Stated.
CONFIDENTIAL
DRAFT PRESIDENTIAL STATEMENT
This Administration has done an extensive review of
the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide. As a result of that review and at the
strong urging of the American Bar Association and other
interested groups, I have concluded that it would be in the
Nation's best interest for the United States to ratify the
Genocide Convention.
The commitment of our country to prevent and punish
acts of genocide is indisputable. Yet our failure to ratify
this treaty, which has now been pending before the Senate
for thirty-five years, and has been supported by Presidents
Truman, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, and Carter, has opened the
United States to criticism in international
fora. We can refute such baseless criticism by ratifying
the Convention, and more importantly we can utilize the
Convention in our own efforts to expand freedom and fight
human rights abuses around the globe.
In 1976, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee reported
favorably on the Convention and recommended that the
Senate give its advice and consent to ratification subject
to three understandings and one declaration. This approach
exceeded the clarifications considered necessary by the
:
Nixon Administration, but I support these understandings
and declaration and believe they will help to secure Senate
advice and consent to ratification of the Convention.
- 2 -
My Administration looks forward to working with the
Senate to resolve any issues that may arise in connection
ith its consideration of this treaty. Ratification of the
Genocide Convention would reaffirm in this international
-
egal context the fundamental and timeless American commit-
ent to human rights.
The Declaration and the 3 Understandings
(adopted by Senate Foreign Relations
Committee in 1976)
TEXT or RESOLUTION or Reminication
4
Resolved. (treo-thirds of the Senators present concurring therein),
That the Senate advise and consent to the ratification of the Interna-
tional Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide. adopted unanimously by the General Assembly of the
United Nations in Paris on December 9. 1945. and signed on behalf of
the United States on December 11. 1948 (Executive O. Eighty-first
Congress. first session) subject to the following understandings and
declaration:
1. That the United States Government understands and construes
the words "intent to destroy. in whole or in part a national, ethnical.
racial. or religious group as such" appearing in article II, to mean the
intent to destror 2 national. ethnical. racial. or religious group by the
acts specified in article II in such manner as to affect 2 substantial part
of the group concerned.
2. That the United States Government understands and construes
the words "mental harm" appearing in article II (b) of this Conven-
tion to mean permanent impairment of mental faculties.
3. That the United States Government understands and construes
article VI of the Convention in accordance with the agreed language
of the Report of the Legal Committee of the United Nations General
Assembly that nothing in article VI shall affect the right of any State
to bring to trial before its own tribunals any of its nationals for acts
committed outside the United States.
4. That the United States Government declares that it will not de-
posit its instrument of ratification until after the implementing legis-
lation referred to in article V has been enacted.
ID #.
238404 CU
N
WHITE HOUSE
Hu030
CORRESPONDENCE TRACKING WORKSHEET
0 . OUTGOING
H * INTERNAL
I - INCOMING
Date Correspondence
Received (YY/MM/DD)
/
/
Name of Correspondent:
Theodore B. Olson
Dich
MI Mail Report
User Codes: (A)
(B)
(C)
Subject:
Genocide Convention
ROUTE TO:
ACTION
DISPOSITION
Tracking
Type
Completion
Action
Date
of
Date
Office/Agency
(Staff Name)
Code
YY/MM/DD
Response
Code YY/MM/DD
WHolland
ORIGINATOR
/
/
Referral Note:
CUATOY
And 84,06,25
/
/
Referral Note:
ALLRAH's note
CUAT18
A 84,07,02
S 84,07,12
Referral Note g,
/
/
/
/
Referral Note:
/
/
/
Referral Note:
ACTION CODES:
DISPOSITION CODES:
A - Appropriate Action
I * Info Copy Only/No Action Necessary
A Answered
C Completed
C Comment/Recommendation
R - Direct Reply w/Copy
B - Non-Special Referral
S Suspended
D Draft Response
S For Signature
F . Furnish Fact Sheet
X Interim Reply
to be used as Enclosure
FOR OUTGOING CORRESPONDENCE:
Type of Response = Initials of Signer
Code
II
"A"
Completion Date = Date of Outgoing
Comments:
nsc 840 220%
Keep this worksheet attached to the original incoming letter.
Send all routing updates to Central Reference (Room 75, OEOB).
Always return completed correspondence record to Central Files.
Refer questions about the correspondence tracking system to Central Reference, ext. 2590.
5/81
2204
MEMORANDUM
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
ACTION
June 21, 1984
MEMORANDUM FOR ROBERT C. McFARLANE
FROM:
STEVEN E. STEINER
Steve
SUBJECT:
Ratification of Genocide Convention
As I indicated in my Weekly Report of June 8 (Tab I), we have
been looking at the possibility of submitting the UN Genocide
Convention of 1948 to the Senate for ratification. Faith
Whittlesey wrote to Jim Baker and you in March (Tab II) asking
that we do SO. I have been coordinating with Jim Ciccone of
Baker's staff, who indicates that Baker has concurred that we
should move on this. Since every Administration since Eisen-
hower has submitted the Convention for ratification, failure
to do so could leave us open to attack on the "sensitivity"
issue.
Ciccone suggests that since this is an international issue,
the NSC Staff should call Assistant Attorney General Ted Olsen
and ask that Justice put their comments on paper and return
the action to State. Once State and Justice are in accord on
the reservations we would attach to the Convention, State will
submit the issue to the White House for final decision. In
the meantime, we will take discreet soundings to see whether
submission for ratification would cause any controversey and
whether the Senate would be any more likely than in past years
to move on this.
Ciccone feels that Olsen is sympathetic, but that philo-
sophical reservations on the part of the Attorney General have
led Justice to sit on this issue. Ciccone intends to follow
up with a call to Smith's office once we have touched base
with Olsen.
RECOMMENDATION
That you authorize us to ask Olsen to put Justice's comments
in writing and move action back to State. (We will press no
further at this point.)
Approve
Disapprove
yes
Walt Raymond, Jack Matlock, Chris Lehman and Paul Thompson
concur.
Attachments
Tab I
Weekly Report of June 8, 84
Tab II
Whittlesey to RCM, March 15, 84, w/atch
RIMENT
OF
U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Legal Counsel
23840
cu
Office of the
Washington, D.C. 20530
Assistant Attorney General
JUN 21 1984
MEMORANDUM TO FRED F. FIELDING
COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT
As you know, the State Department sent the Genocide
Convention to the Department of Justice for our review.
We have had an opportunity to study the matters now and
the Attorney General has asked me to ascertain from you
what the White House would like us to do at this juncture.
If the White House feels that it would be timely to communi-
cate our thoughts to you at this time, we would be happy to
do SO.
SheodneBullson Theodore B. Olson
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Legal Counsel
MEMORANDUM
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
with
R
INFORMATION
June B, 1984
MEMORANDUM FOR ROBERT C. McFARLANE
FROM:
STEVEN E. STEINER start
SUBJECT:
Weekly Report - International Communications
and Information
--
Ratification of Genocide Convention: There may be a push
within the Administration to submit the United Nations
Genocide Convention to the Senate for ratification. The
Convention was drawn up in 1948 and has been approved by
92 countries, including the USSR. Although this adminis-
tration has not yet taken a position, every President
beginning with Eisenhower has pressed for ratification.
However, the Senate has not ratified it and is unlikely
to do so in the near term.
Shultz has approved the Treaty with some legal reser-
vations and sent it to Justice. Justice has made addi-
tional reservations, which I understand are acceptable to
State, but wants to hold this over until Ed Meese has
been confirmed. State would like to move now, as they
consider it good international politics, and Faith
Whittlesey is pushing for ratification with the thought
that this is also good domestic politics. She sent you a
copy of her March 16 memorandum to Jim Baker with a plea
for your help.
I have been discussing this with State and with Jim
Ciccone in Baker's office. Jim and I feel it would seem
to be good politics to go forward. Jewish and other
ethnic communities would strongly welcome it. Some
conservatives would be opposed, but Evangelical Christian
groups are likely to support ratification as long as we
have appropriate clarifying reservations. One point of
potential conservative opposition centers on the role
which the International Court of Justice would play, but
our reservations will make it clear that this would have
to be based on the consent of the parties.
Ciccone intends to discuss this with Baker after the
President returns from Europe, and Baker may then be in
touch with you. The next step would likely be for
Justice to take this off the shelf, put their reser-
vations in writing and return it to State for comment.
Once State and Justice are in agreement, it will come
here for consideration by interested White House parties,
including Baker, Fielding and yourself.
Walt Raymond and Jack Matlock support the suggestion of
moving now to prepare the Convention for submission to
the Senate.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March 15, 1984
A8:25
TO:
ROBERT MCFARLANE
FROM: FAITH R. WHITTLESEY
7RW
Information
Action
Please help!
Delay in making this decision amounts
to a negative decision and loss of an
opportunity
for
Presidential
leadership.
that
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March 16, 1984
MEMORANDUM FOR JAMES A. BAKER, III
FROM:
Faith Whittlesey FRW
SUBJECT: Ratification of the Genocide Convention
As you know, American ratification of the United Nation's
genocide convention was first proposed in 1948. The treaty
has been approved by 92 countries including the Soviet Union
and various Eastern Bloc states. However, the treaty has
never been ratified by the United States Senate.
This Administration has not yet taken a position on the treaty,
stating repeatedly since 1981 that the question of support for a
ratification effort is "under study. Some months ago, Secretary
Shultz approved the treaty with minor language modifications or
"reservations" and sent it to Justice where it is now waiting
review. * Assistant Attorney General Theodore Olsen has sent an
options memo to Attorney General Smith suggesting a number of
additional "reservations" - all of which are acceptable in
principle to State. It is our understanding that the Attorney
General, as a courtesy, is planning to hold this matter over
until Ed Meese's confirmation.
Delay in addressing this matter will be the equivalent of making
a negative decision. That is because it will be extremely
difficult for an Administration bill approving the treaty to pass
the Senate if the go-ahead does not occur until early April. The
short legislative session will require that some decision on this
matter occur at this time.
From a political perspective the following points are relevant:
There is every indication of broad support for
a treaty with proper clarifying "reservations."
This support flows from conservatives as well
as liberals. Opposition should be limited to
a handful of senators, and a number of well-known
conservatives may be prepared to work to mitigate
such opposition. Further, Evangelical Christian
groups are likely to support ratification of a
treaty which contains appropriate clarifying
"reservations."
Passage of the treaty would be a significant political
plus for the President. It would show him to be a
leader - as five Presidents since Eisenhower tried
to get a treaty passed and failed. If we could say
that this President succeeded, it would underscore
his leadership capabilities.
It would position the President as a leader who is
prepared to make use of international treaties
where appropriate, although he also has the will
to reject international relationships (e.g., Law
of the Sea, UNESCO) where necessary for United
States interests.
Ratification of the treaty would be well received
in the Jewish community, the Eastern European ethnic
community and the moderate-to-liberal
"internationalist" political community - all areas
where gains by the President would be significant.
cc: Edwin Meese, III
Robert McFarlane
Richard Darman
* Legal scholars, in general, support ratification as an impor-
tant symbolic statement which will in no way affect United States
sovereignty. As is the case with some fifty treaties ratified by
the United States, dispute settlement under the genocide conven-
tion falls within the compulsory jurisdiction of the
International Court of Justice. However, in no case may
individuals ever be charged and brought before the ICJ, which has
neither personal nor criminal jurisdiction. Moreover, the
proposed "reservations" ensure that the definition of genocide
accepted by any instrument of ratification would be drawn so as
to protect the United States from frivolous or malicious charges
in any international forum. Further, even if ratified the
genocide convention and its provisions will have no domestic
legal effect until implementing legislation is passed by each
House of Congress.
2
Office of Legal Counsel
Office of the
Washington, D.C. 20530
Assistant Attorney General
1 JUN 1382
MEMORANDUM FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Re: Genocide Convention
The Department of State is now considering whether to
recommend to the President that he seek the advice and consent
of the Senate to ratification of the Genocide Convention, 78
U.N.T.S. 277. The Secretary of State may in the near future
seek your advice or support relative to his recommendation.
In general, the Convention makes genocide a crime under
international law. Genocide is defined as the commission of
various specified acts with the intent to destroy, in whole
or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group,
as such. Parties to the Convention. undertake to enact, in
accordance with their respective constitutions, legislation
necessary to provide penalties for persons guilty of those
acts.
Entering into the Convention would be an appropriate
exercise of the treaty power under the United States Constitu-
tion in the sense that it deals with a proper subject of inter-
national concern. 1/ About ninety States are now parties. 2/
1/ The Constitution states no restriction on the treaty power
(The President "shall have Power, by and with the Advice and
Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two-thirds
of the Senators present concur." Art. II, § 2). The Supreme
Court has consistently said that the treaty power extends "to
all proper subjects of negotiations between our government and
other nations." Asakura V. Seattle, 265 U.S. 332, 341 (1924).
No treaty has ever been held to be an improper? subject. "Con-
vention, as used in this memorandum, is synonymous with treaty.
It is a term commonly used for multilateral treaties.
2/ The parties include Australia, Belgium, Canada, Cuba, France,
German Democratic Republic, Federal Republic of Germany, Greece,
Hungary, Israel, Mexico, Netherlands, Philipines, Poland, Spain,
Sweden, U.S.S.R., United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland, and Vietnam. Significant non-parties are the People's
Republic of China, South Africa, and the United States.
The provisions of the Convention do not conflict with the
Constitution. Whether the Administration wishes to support
the Convention will, therefore, depend on its perception of
the international and domestic legal and political factors
involved, factors discussed in parts II and III of this
memorandum.
To assist you in your consideration of the Convention and
any recommendation regarding its ratification you may decide to
make, the balance of this memorandum provides, in part I, a
brief analysis of the Genocide Convention; in part II, some
background material on efforts of prior Administrations to secure
advice and consent for the Convention; and in part III, an
analysis of arguments for and against ratification. Copies of
the Convention and proposed implementing legislation are attached.
We have no recommendation to make with respect to whether
the United States should become a party to the Convention.
Whether to do so is largely a policy question with foreign
policy and political overtones.
I. The Genocide Convention
Parties to the Convention undertake to prevent and punish
genocide, which is defined and confirmed as a crime under
international law. Any of the following five acts, if accompanied
by the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, 3/ a national,
ethnic, racial, or religious group, as such, constitutes genocide:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to
members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions
of life calculated to bring about its physical
destruction in whole or in part;
3/ Proposed implementing legislation, first drafted by the
Department of Justice in 1972, defines "in part" to mean a
"substantial part" of "such numerical significance that the
destruction of that part would cause the destruction of the
group as a viable entity. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, 94th Cong., 2d
Sess. 34-35 (1976).
On next page.
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(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births
within the group; and
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to
another group.
The Convention also provides that conspiracy, attempt
to commit genocide, direct and public incitement to commit
genocide, and complicity in genocide shall be punishable.
(Fn. p. 2) Prior administrations and the Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations have recommended an "understanding" by
the Senate to make clear that the United States understands
and construes the words "mental harm" to mean permanent
impairment of mental faculties. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, 94th
Cong., 2d Sess. 6 (1976). This understanding has been incor-
porated into implementing legislation submitted in the past
by this Department. Id. at 35.
An "understanding" is a statement which accompanies ratifica-
tion of a treaty and explains the meaning given to the treaty by
the party submitting the understanding. It differs from a reserva-
tion, which excludes or varies the legal effect of a provision of
a treaty in its application to the reserving State.
The designation by the ratifying State as to whether a state-
ment is a reservation or understanding is not controlling. Whether
the statement modifies the legal effect of the treaty or merely
expresses its true intent depends, on the substance of the state-
ment. Statements made upon ratification are communicated to other
signatory and acceeding states. Each has the separate right to
decide whether the statement modifies the legal effect of the
treaty and whether it will consider itself in treaty relations
with the State proposing the reservation or understanding. If
accepted, the reservation or understanding becomes a condition
to the ratification of the State making it.
Parties have the right to object to a reservation or under-
standing as incompatible with the purpose of the Convention. In
so objecting a State may refuse to consider itself in treaty
relations with the reserving or construing State or may, alter-
natively, consider the provisions to which the reservation
relates as not being in force between the two States. Id. at
15-16; Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 8 Int' Leg.
Mat. 679, Art. 21. Thus, the treaty relationship among parties
to a multilateral treaty may not be identical.
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Parties to the Convention undertake to enact the necessary
legislation to "give effect" to the provisions of the treaty
including "effective penalties" for persons found guilty of
genocide or conspiracy, incitement, attempts or complicity.
In connection with the obligation of parties to enact
legislation necessary to give effect to the provisions of
the Convention, legislation making genocide a federal crime was
first drafted and submitted to Congress in 1972. It has been
introduced in Congress several times since then. Past Admin-
istrations have had an understanding with the Senate Committee on
Foreign Relations that the United States would not deposit
its instrument of ratification (and thus not become a party to
the Convention) until such legislation was enacted. E.g., S. Ex.
Rep. No. 23, supra, at 9. The proposed legislation would amend
Title 18 and would therefore be considered by the Committees on
the Judiciary of the House and Senate. The Committee on Foreign
Relations has, however, taken note of bills introduced to imple-
ment the Convention in analyzing the issues that it presents.
Id. at 33. Any implementing legislation would presumably be
cleared through the Criminal Division and the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget prior to being transmitted to Congress.
In general, most acts constituting genocide would violate
existing Federal law, particularly the broadly-worded civil
rights statutes, which prohibit acts of violence which deny
rights secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States.
18 U.S.C. §§-241, 242, 245. 5/ See United States V. Guest, 383
U.S. 745 (1966); United States V. Price, 383 U.S. 787 (1966).
Most acts of the type contemplated by the Convention which
destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, as such,
would seem necessarily to deny rights secured by the Constitution
and laws of the United States. Based on particular facts, other
Federal laws, such as those against kidnapping, may be violated.
A specific statute making genocide an offense would avoid the
problems of pleading and interpretation required by the
5/ Section 241 makes unlawful conspiracies to injure any citizen
in the free exercise of "any right of privilege secured to him by
the Constitution or laws of the United States"; section 242 makes
it a crime, under color of law to deprive any person of any rights,
privileges, or immunities secured or protected by the Constitution
or laws of the United States; section 245 provides penalties for
interference with persons engaged in listed federally protected
activities.
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language of the civil rights laws and would cover some peripheral
aspects of the offense of genocide, paticularly attempts and
incitement, which do not appear to be covered by existing
statutes.
Under the Convention, persons charged with genocide would
be tried by a competent tribunal of the State in whose territory
the act was committed. As an alternative, they may be tried by
"such penal tribunal as may have jurisdiction with respect to those
contracting parties which shall have accepted its jurisdiction."
Although some consideration was given to establishing a tribunal
at the time the Convention was drafted, no such tribunal has been
created or proposed, so the issue of acceptance of jurisdiction
is not presented at this time. Thus, persons charged in the United
States with violation of the federal statutes implementing the
Convention would only be tried in the federal courts of the United
States. Draft implementing legislation has provided in the past
that criminal prosecution shall be the exclusive means of enforce-
ment. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, supra, at 37.
Parties to the Convention are bound to grant extradition, in
accordance with their laws and treaties, of persons charged with
crimes falling under the Convention. Thus, if the United States
and another State were both parties to an extradition treaty and
to the Convention, genocide would be considered an extraditable
offense. Genocide is not to be considered a political crime for
the purposes of extradition. This point is worth noting because,
under existing extradition treaties, extradition is not normally
granted for political offenses.
6 Opponents of the Convention do not appear to be claiming
now that the implementing legislation would increase federal
jurisdiction over violent crimes. When the Convention was first
submitted to the Senate in 1950 opponents argued that a genocide
statute could be used as a federal anti-lynching law. See
Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
(Historical Series), vol. 2, 81st Cong., 1st and 2d Sess. 391
(1949-50). Passage of civil rights legislation in the 1960's,
such as 18 U.S.C. § 245, and court decisions, such as Guest
and Price, supra, clarifying the scope of earlier statutes,
ought to have eliminated this objection. Nevertheless, the
strongest opposition to the Convention continues to come from
the South. The proposed implementing legislation is not designed
to amend or affect existing civil rights legislation.
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Disputes relating to the interpretation, application, or
fulfillment of the Convention, including those relating to
the "responsibility of a State" for genocide, "shall" be submitted
to the International Court of Justice ("I.C.J.") at the request of
any of the parties to the dispute. 7/ This provision, Article IX,
seems to contemplate that a nation which is a party may bring
another such party before the I.C.J. and accuse it, institu-
tionally, of genocide. If the alleged genocide has been
committed against citizens of the complaining party, damages may
be sought. However, if a party were accused by another State of
mistreating its own citizens, it appears that damages could not
be awarded but that party could be adjudicated a violator with the
attendant publicity such adjudication would entail.
7/ The I.C.J. is the principal judicial organ of the United
Nations. All members of the United Nations are parties to the
Statute of the Court which is part of the Charter. United
Nations Charter, 59 Stat. 1031, Arts. 92, 93.
8/ See Hearings on the Genocide Convention before a subcommittee
of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, 81st Cong., 2d Sess.
134-35 (1950). On December 2, 1948, when voting in favor of the
text of the Convention, the United States representative in the
General Assembly stated that if "responsibility of a state" is
used in the traditional sense of responsibility to another State
for injuries sustained by nationals of the complaining state, the
words would not appear to be objectionable. He further said that
if the words mean that a State can be held liable in damages for
injury inflicted on its own nationals, the provision is objection-
able. Subsequently, when the Convention was transmitted to the
Senate in 1949, President Truman recommended an understanding that
under Article IX a State could not be held liable in damages for
injuries inflicted by it on its own nationals. Id. at 5. There
has been no recommendation of such an understanding since then but
it would be possible to renew this recommendation. It appears to
be consistent with dictum by the I.C.J. to the effect that all
States have a "legal interest" in protecting human rights but that
"the instruments which embody human rights do not confer on States
the capacity to protect the victims of infringement of such rights
irrespective of their nationality." Barcelona Traction Case, [1970]
I.C.J. Rep. 4, 32, 47. The Restatement of Foreign Relations Law
of the United States (Revised) 170-71 (tent. draft No. 3, 1982)
states that any State may pursue remedies for violations of human
rights even if the individual victim was not a national of the com-
plaining State. The draft Restatement does not go so far as to say,
however, that a State may seek damages even if there was no damage
to it and there is no precedent for such an action.
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The term "genocide" has, of course, been used rather loosely
in both domestic and international contexts. Mere charges of
discrimination would not, it seems, be recognized under the Con-
vention since the acts embraced within the definition include only
such things as killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, in-
flicting conditions on a group calculated to bring about its destruc-
tion, imposing measures to prevent births or separating children
from their families. However, it may be important to define
these terms further to make it entirely clear that these defini-
tions could not be construed beyond those acts clearly embraced
within the concept of genocide. Of course, a charge of violation
must be predicated on an "intent" to "destroy one of the protected
groups "as such.' 9/ This should provide some protection against
frivolous, propaganda-inspired, charges. However, irrespective of
the ability of a party to defend itself on the merits of such
charges, it does appear on the surface that charges could be made
and supported by some unspecified form of evidence of "intent."
A related issue is whether a nation such as the
United States could be charged with genocide for events which
occured prior to ratification. State Department witnesses have
testified in the past that the Convention is purely prospective,
but have not explained how they reached that conclusion. Geno-
cide Convention, Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. at 68-69
(1970). Similarly, an often-quoted writer on the Convention
has stated that the Convention "purports to operate in futuro
by reference to a crime which the Contracting Parties 'under-
take to prevent and punish. 2.P. Drost, The Crime of State
120 (1959). It is not clear, however, that the quoted language
9/ For example, treatment of Haitians detained by the INS would
not be genocide even though they may claim to have been "mentally
harmed" by the experience. Detention is based on their status;
Haitians who are in this country lawfully are not subjected to
similar treatment. There is no intention to "destroy" Haitians
"as such."
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limits the Convention to future acts. Article I "confirms" that
genocide is a crime under international law which could be con-
strued as suggesting that the Convention recognizes a pre-existing
obligation. The United States could submit an understanding
stating that it understands the Convention to apply only to acts
taking place after ratification. No such understanding has
previously been discussed or proposed.
It should be noted, however, that if a State, such as
Vietnam (however inappropriate Vietnam may be as a complainant),
wished to charge the United States with genocide in the I.C.J.,
it probably could lodge such a charge irrespective of the Con-
vention and assert that its claim was based on the obligations
of the United States under customary international law, which
exist in addition to those that would be undertaken in the Con-
vention. As early as 1951 the I.C.J. made clear "that the
principles underlying the Convention are principles which are
recognized by civilized nations as binding on States, even without
any conventional obligation." Reservations to the Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, [1951]
I.C.J. Rep. 15, 23. See Barcelona Traction Case, [1970] I.C.J.
Rep. 4, 32; Restatement, Foreign Relations Law of the United
States (Revised) 156, 158 (Tent. draft No. 3, 1982). 10/
10/ Claims may, however, be barred by lapse of time. International
law recognizes a rule of extinctive prescription similar to
the equitable doctrine of laches. 1 H. Lauterpacht, Oppenheim's
International Law 349 (8th ed., 1955)
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Article (2) of the I.C.J. Statute empowers the I.C.J.
to decide without any special agreement any question of
international law and the existence of any fact which, if
established, would constitute a breach of an international
obligation where States have declared that they recognize the
jurisdiction of the Court to decide such matters. The United
States has filed such a declaration, subject to the "Connally
Amendment" that the declaration shall not apply to disputes
with regard to matters which are essentially within the
domestic jurisdiction of the United States "as determined
by the United States." 61 Stat. 1218 (1946). 11/ The United
States probably could invoke this reservation if charged
under customary international law with genocide as to its own
citizens within the United States but the terms of the reserva-
tion would not seem to embrace actions taken abroad, such as
those which might be contained in charges that might be brought
by Vietnam. 12/
11/ There has been considerable debate as to precisely what
the Connally Amendment means and the extent to which the
I.C.J. can review determinations made by the United States.
See Gross, Bulgaria Invokes the Connally Amendment, 56 Am.
J. Int'l L. 357 (1962). The State Department has taken the
position in the past that the Reservation is inconsistent
with the provision of the Statuté, of the Court that the
Court shall determine its own jurisdiction, Digest of U.S.
Practice in Int'l Law 1567 (1978), thus suggesting that any
determination by the United States pursuant to the Reservation
may not be conclusive. As long as the Reservation remains
we ought to assume, however, the United States would be ready
to assert it in a proper case.
12/ Article (1) of the Statute of the I.C.J. vests juris-
diction in cases provided for in treaties and conventions in
force, thus allowing for jurisdiction under Article IX of the
Genocide Convention. The Connally Amendment is, by its own
terms, only a reservation to Article 36(2) and not Art. 36(1)
and would therefore have no effect on the jurisdiction of the
I.C.J. under the Convention if the United States become a
party. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, supra, at 13.
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II. The History of Efforts to Secure Advice and Consent
to the Convention
Traditional international law was concerned with co-existence
among States; it did not ordinarily regulate the manner in which a
country treated its own nationals. 13/ The scope of international
law has, in recent years, been significantly broadened. The
experience of the Second World War gave rise to the growth of a
philosophy that international protection of individual human
rights should be the rule rather than the exception and should
be embraced within concepts of international law. Thus, the
United Nations ("U.N.") has sponsored the codification of human
rights in various treaties. 1 H. Lauterpacht, Oppenheim's
International Law 736-53 (8th ed., 1955).
The Truman Administration was, through its representatives
at the U.N., active in the drafting of the first of these
treaties, the Genocide Convention. The text was adopted by the
U.N. and opened for signature and ratification by members in 1948.
President Truman transmitted it to the Senate for advice and
consent in 1949, and hearings were held in 1950. The Genocide
Convention, Hearings before a subcommittee of the Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. (1950). Solicitor General
Perlman was a leading witness, taking the position that there was a
firm constitutional basis for the treaty. The opposition was led by
the American Bar Association. In general, opposition witnesses
13/ By international law, we mean "the body of customary and treaty
rules which are considered legally binding by States in their inter-
course with each other." 1 H. Lauterpacht, Oppenheim's International
Law 4-5 (8th ed., 1955). By its very nature, "international law"
is in many respects quite amorphous. Its meaning on any particular
subject may be debatable. Much international law is evidenced in
the form of scholarly writings and speculation. Other sources, in
addition to treaties, include international custom and the general
principles of law recognized by civilized nations. See Statute of
the I.C.J., Art. 38.
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argued that the Convention would intrude federal criminal juris-
diction into local matters and that the treaty power should not
be used to convert domestic criminal matters into international
legal matters. No action was taken by the Senate on the Conven-
tion at that time. The Convention itself, pursuant to its terms,
entered into force in 1951 when twenty States became parties.
The Eisenhower Administration, through Secretary Dulles,
opposed implementing human rights through the treaty power,
partly as a strategy to defeat the so-called Bricker amendment
to the Constitution. Senator Bricker's proposed constitutional
amendment would have limited the growth of federal power through
exercise of the treaty power by overruling Missouri V. Holland,
252 U.S. 416 (1920). 14/ That decision held that a treaty could
be the basis for enacting legislation to carry out the treaty
even if the treaty dealt with matters otherwise reserved to the
States by the Tenth Amendment. 15/ The Eisenhower Administration
felt that if it supported the Convention it would have given
more impetus to those who were sponsoring and supporting the
Bricker Amendment. After Secretary Dulles stated in 1953 that
he would not press for ratification of the Convention, there
seems to have been no subsequent reconsideration of this
position during the Eisenhower Administration.
14/ Hearings were held on the Bricker amendment, which appeared in
different forms, in 1952, 1953 and 1955. It was reported favorably
by the Senate Committee on the Judiciary in 1953. S. Rep. No. 412,
83rd Cong., 1st Sess. (1953). L. Henkin, Foreign Affairs and the
Constitution 384 (1972). The key provision was: "A treaty shall
become effective as internal law in the United States only through
legislation which would be valid in the absence of a treaty."
15/ It does not seem that adoption of the Bricker Amendment would
have prevented implementation of the Genocide Convention. The
Constitution, Art. I, § 8, cl. 10, specifically authorizes Con-
gress to define and punish offenses against the law of nations.
Congress could therefore make genocide a federal crime under
such power or under other constitutional provisions without
relying on the treaty power.
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Presidents Johnson and Nixon supported ratification of
the Genocide Convention. A second series of hearings was held
on the Convention in 1970. This Department was represented
by then Assistant Attorney General Rehnquist, who reaffirmed
this Department's 1950 position that the treaty was lawful under
the Constitution. He noted that in 1950 the questions posed
concerning the treaty power and federal jurisdiction were some-
what novel, adding that "developments in the intervening years--
the extensive use of the treaty power and the growth of Federal
criminal jurisdiction--have, it seems, illuminated both these
areas to the point where I believe I can safely say that the
questions
are more matters of policy than questions of
legal power.' Thus, he explained, the 1950 presentation was
as fully valid in 1970 as it was before. If anything, the
questions had become easier because of the growth of precedent;
about two-thirds of the total number of treaties entered into
by the United States since 1776 had been concluded between
1949 and 1968. These included several human rights treaties
including the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees,
19 U.S.T. 6233. Mr. Rehnquist later wrote that the number
of parties to the Genocide Convention had increased between
1950 and 1970 from 7 to 75, "thus emphasizing the view of the
world community that genocide is both a matter of international
concern and a proper subject for treaty negotiations. " Genocide
Convention, Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 147, 162, 164 (1970).
The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations reported the Conven-
tion out for the first time in 1970 but no further action was taken.
S. Ex. Rep. No. 25, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. (1970). Hearings were
held again in 1972 without participation by Government witnesses;
the Convention was again reported out, but was not considered
by the full Senate.
In 1974 the Convention came to the Senate floor for the only
time. No vote was taken on the merits because of a filibuster led
by Senator Ervin; several attempts to pass a cloture motion failed.
Digest of U.S. Practice in Int'l Law 128-29 (1974). In 1976, the
the American Bar Association reversed its position and has, since
that time, supported the Convention. 16/ It was reported out again
that year. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. (1976). The
Carter Administration attempted to secure ratification of the
Convention. Hearings were held in 1977 at which both Executive
branch and ABA witnesses appeared in support.
16/ An earlier attempt to change the ABA position in 1969-70
had been defeated by a narrow margin. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23,
supra, at 3. The Convention had not been a live issue in
the ABA in the years between 1950 and 1969.
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In December, 1981 hearings were again held on the Convention.
The Department of State declined to appear because the matter was
under study. The Department of Justice was not invited. The
principal supporters were the ABA, Senators Proxmire and
Boschwitz, and former Senator Javits. The opposition included
Senators Thurmond and Helms and the Liberty Lobby, which has
regularly appeared at hearings against the treaty. No Com-
mittee action has been taken since the 1981 hearings.
Thus, over a period of 32 years, the Genocide Convention
has been the subject of five hearings and has been reported out
of committee four times, most recently in 1976. Opponents have
always been able to command enough support to prevent approval
by the Senate.
III. Arguments for and against the Convention
The arguments in favor of the Convention have been suggested
in the discussion above and are easily stated. The United States
is alone among the major democratic nations in not being party to
the Convention. It is urged that it would therefore serve our
foreign policy interests to become a party and demonstrate our
support in the world community for the protection of human
rights. Ratification would also provide the United States with
legal standing, should the occasion arise, to bring cases before
the I.C.J. and to file protests at the diplomatic level. These
possible advantages must be weighed against the practical and
political difficulties involved.
As noted, Senators Helms and Thurmond both opposed the
Convention in recent hearings. We summarize their main points
and provide comments or a summary of the responses which have been
or could be made to them. (Citations are to pages in the 1981
hearing unless otherwise designated: The Genocide Convention,
Hearing before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations,
97th Cong., 1st Sess. (1981).)
a. Senator Helms
1. The Convention creates a new theory of international
law; criminal law has always been a matter of purely domestic.
concern and by approving the treaty we limit the sovereignty
of the United States (p. 4).
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Comment: The Constitution empowers Congress to define
and punish offenses against the law of nations (Art I, § 8,
cl. 10), and that authority has been used over the years
to punish a variety of crimes, including piracy, assaulting
foreign ambassadors, counterfeiting foreign currency, and
aircraft hijacking. See Statement of Solicitor General
Perlman in 1950 Hearings at 40-42.
Virtually all treaty obligations limit the sovereignty
of parties in some way. The limitation is not significant
here since the United States would not want to engage in
genocide. As noted, supra, genocide is, in any event, an
offense against customary international law.
2. There is no justification for submitting American
conduct to the judgment of the world. (p. 4).
Comment: Ninety nations are now parties to the Conven-
tion. The above argument is necessarily based on the percep-
tion that the United States would not receive fair treatment by
an international institution with power to adjudicate violations
of the Convention. Some actions of the United Nations may
provide a basis for this perception. U.N. bodies have, for
example, denounced the United States for "practicing colonialism"
in Puerto Rico. The only body authorized to make determinations
under the Convention, however, is the I.C.J. which operates as
a judicial rather than a political body. Although no one can
predict what the I.C.J. would do in a particular case, it has not
been the subject of the same criticism as the General Assembly
for being biased against the United States.
3. The violent nations of the world will not obey the
Convention (pp. 4-5, 8). 17/
Comment: This may well be very true. The Convention
will not, of course, eliminate genocide. Becoming a party
would, as noted, give the United States a right in some cases
to call violators to account in an established forum. (No
case has, however, been brought to the I.C.J. alleging genocide.)
There have been instances in recent years in Central America
and Southeast Asia in which the United States may have wished
to have had a forum to bring charges against certain nations
for brutal repression against ethnic groups. 1 The approximately
ninety parties include virtually all of the major countries
of the world except the United States and the People's Republic
of China. Most of the Communist nations are parties. Whether
the airing of such charges in the I.C.J. would have had any
salutary effect, however, is simply a matter of speculation.
17/ Senator Thurmond also made this point.
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4. The Senate, in approving the Convention, would impose
upon the House an obligation to pass implementing legislation
which the House may not wish to pass (p. 5).
Comment: This problem has been avoided in the past by
an understanding between the Executive and the Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations that the President will not deposit the
instrument of ratification until implementing legislation has
been enacted. Under this procedure, there is no international
obligation to pass such legislation until the time of deposit.
If legislation is not passed, the United States simply does not
become a party to the Convention. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, supra,
at 9, 19. This process would leave the House of Representatives
free to exercise its own independent judgment on the matter.
b. Senator Thurmond
The Convention would become binding domestic law, and
would nullify acts of Congress and prior treaties inconsistent
with the Convention (p. 8, 9).
Comment: The legislative history and the Convention
itself make clear that the Convention would not be self-
executing and that implementing legislation would be necessary.
Statement of Solicitor General Perlman in 1950 Hearings at
31-32. We are not aware of, nor has Senator Thurmond identified,
any existing statutes or treaties which would be inconsistemt
with the United States' becoming a party to this Convention.
2. Matters concerning criminal conduct involving murder
or conspiracy to commit murder should be primarily a matter
of state jurisdiction (p. 9).
Comment: Ordinary crimes such as murder would still be state
crimes. Legislation submitted in the past has made clear that state
law is not pre-empted. S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, supra, at 37;
Statement of Solicitor General Perlman in 1950 Hearings at 46.
A federal statute, were it deemed desirable, might well deal
with matters beyond the capacity of individual state authorities.
In any event, were crimes arguably constituting genocide, as
defined in the Convention, to be committed within the jurisdiction
of the United States, it would arguably be desirable for the
Attorney General, rather than local prosecutors, to prosecute or
determine not to prosecute such crimes due to the obvious
international attention that would be drawn to such events.
- 15 -
3. The Convention would nullify Article II (7) of the U.N.
Charter, which states that the Charter does not authorize the
U.N. "to intervene in matters which are essentially within
the domestic jurisdiction of any state." (p. 9).
Comment: The Convention rests on its own authority as
a treaty and not on the U.N. Charter. The Convention does
not grant any additional power to the U.N. Statement of
Solicitor General Perlman in 1950 Hearings at 27. The approxi-
mately ninety parties to the Convention apparently do not
consider concern about genocide to be solely a domestic affair.
In fact, the United States has taken the position in the past
that it is not. However, this Administration's judgment on
this matter presents a policy, rather than a legal, issue.
4. The Convention creates a risk that Americans may be
tried in an international tribunal (p. 10).
Comment: The Convention permits persons charged with
genocide to be tried "by such international penal tribunal
as may have jurisdiction with respect to those Contracting
Parties which shall have accepted its jurisdiction." As noted
in part I, supra, no tribunal has, in fact, been created or
is now proposed. Statement of Solicitor General Perlman
in 1950 Hearings at 44.
Apart from policy considerations, constitutional questions
would probably prevent the United States from submitting
persons accused of genocide in the United States to trial in
such a tribunal. For example, Article III of the Constitution
and the Sixth Amendment provide that the trial of all crimes
shall be by jury and shall be held in the State where the
crimes are committed.
5. The United States would not be able to refuse extradi-
tion for genocide on the grounds that it was a political offense
and thus would be precluded from asserting that basis for not
extraditing an American serviceman for fighting in a country
with whom the United States has an extradition treaty (p. 10).
Comment: The Convention provides that genocide shall not be
a political offense for extradition purposes. Extradition, how-
ever, requires a judicial hearing to review evidence and further
review by Executive Branch officials. Such evidence must be suffi-
cient to justify a person's arrest and committal for trial in the
United States. 18 U.S.C. § 3181 et seq.; 6 M. Whiteman, Digest of
International Law 996, 1026-30. There is no reason, therefore,
to assume that extradition would take place in this country for
- 16 -
unfounded charges of genocide. If the United States believed the
charge justified, the Convention does not prevent the United
States from electing to try its own nationals. The Convention
does not make this explicit, but the proposition has clear support
in the drafting history. The Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations has therefore proposed that the United States submit
an understanding to this effect at the time of ratification.
S. Ex. Rep. No. 23, supra, at 10. See Letter from Assistant
Attorney General Rehnquist in 1970 Hearings at 162-63.
6. States, such as the Soviet Union and Vietnam, could
bring charges of genocide against the United States in the
International Court of Justice and wage an unfounded
propaganda campaign (p. 11).
Comment: The International Court of Justice might be used
in such a manner. However, reservations to the Convention
by most Soviet bloc countries require the consent of all
parties before a dispute can be brought before the I.C.J., a
reservation 18/ that the United States could therefore
invcke if brought by such a country.
Vietnam did not make such a reservation when it became a
party in 1981, and could presumably file a case under the
Convention against the United States based on the killing of
Vietnamese in Vietnam if the United States ratified the treaty
without such a reservation. (This assumes that the Convention
might be applied to facts taking place before United States
ratification, an issue discussed in part I, supra. It also
assumes that Vietnam would choose to bring charges of genocide
against any country and implicitly place in issue its own
conduct.) The United States would presumably contend that it
18/ The United States could submit a reservation to Article IX of
the Convention relating to the jurisdiction of the I.C.J. similar
to that submitted by the U.S.S.R. If it did so, however, other
parties to the Convention, as described in note 4, supra, could
take the position that such a reservation was incompatible with
the purpose of the Convention and therefore object to it. In so
objecting they may refuse to consider themselves in treaty
relations with the United States as far as this Convention is
concerned. Reservations to the Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, [1951] I.C.J. Rep. 15.
The Netherlands, for example, does not consider states making
reservations to the I.C.J. jurisdiction provision of the Con-
vention as parties to the Convention.
- 17 -
has never attempted to destroy Vietnamese, "as such," within
the meaning of Article II of the Convention. The forces that
the United States assisted in Vietnam were identical ethnically,
nationally and racially with the forces we opposed. See
Memorandum from then Assistant Attorney General Rehnquist to
the Attorney General, Nov. 10, 1969, at 12.
7. The Genocide Convention would chill free speech
because of the prohibition on incitement to commit genocide.
(p. 11).
Comment: Article III of the Convention prohibits "direct
and public incitement to commit genocide." This prohibition
appears to be fully consistent with standards governing regula-
tion of incitement to lawless action announced by the Supreme
Court. Brandenburg V. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444, 447 (1969). See
Statement of Assistant Attorney General Rehnquist in 1970 Hearings
at 152, 163. Other States with different views of free speech
could, as suggested by opponents, challenge the United States
interpretation in the I.C.J. and argue that what the United
States considers protected speech ought to be punished. Whether
the United States wishes to take such a risk is essentially a
political judgment. However, the United States probably stands
more to gain than to lose in any debate over freedom of
expression.
CONCLUSION
Whether to recommend ratification of the Convention is
largely a policy question. Some judgment must be made con-
cerning the value to the United States of entering into such.
a compact which may be said to be largely unenforcable against
those countries most likely to violate it and useful as a
propaganda vehicle against those countries which are most
sensitive to human rights. On the other hand, the United
States may well feel that if the tribunal before which such
charges would be lodged is a fair one, it may have an excellent
platform to seek to expose atrocities being committed in
communist nations which otherwise are largely ignored in the
world community. Assuming a fair tribunal, the United States
has little to fear from charges brought against it. The I.C.J.
has proved to be a useful tribunal to the United States in the
past. In the Iran dispute, its judgment, while not directly
enforceable, was valuable to the United States for economic and
diplomatic purposes.
- 18 -
Some consideration should be given to the internal political
impact of support of this Convention. Advantages and disad-
vantages in that regard should be explored by experts in those
matters.
Theodore B. Olson
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Legal Counsel
cc: Deputy Attorney General
- 19 -
E. WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY, INCLUDING GENOCIDE
16. Convention on the Prevention and
(c) Direct and public incitement to commit genocide;
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
(d) Attempt to commit genocide;
(e) Complicity in genocide.
Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by
General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1943
Article IV
ENTRY INTO FORCE: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article
Persons committing genocide or any of the other acts
TII.
enumerated in article III shall be punished, whether
they are constitutionally responsible rulers, public
The Contracting Parties,
officials or private individuals.
Having considered the declaration made by the General
Assembly of the United Nations in its resolution 96 (I)
Article V
lated 11 December 1946 that genocide is a crime under
The Contracting Parties undertake to emact, in ac-
nternational law, contrary to the spirit and aims of the
cordance with their respective Constitutions, the necessary
United Nations and condemned by the civilized world,
legislation to give effect to the provisions of the present
Recognizing that at all periods of history genocide
Convention and, in particular, to provide effective
inflicted great losses on humanity, and
penalties for persons guilty of genocide or any of the
other acts enumerated in article III.
Being convinced that, in. order to liberate mankind
rom such an odious scourge, international co-operation
Article VI
required,
Hereby agree as hereinafter provided:
Persons charged with genocide or any of the other
acts enumerated in article III shall be tried bya competent
tribunal of the State in the territory of which the act
Article I
was committed, or by such international pezal tribunal
The Contracting Parties confirm that genocide,
as may have jurisdiction with respect to those Contracting
whether committed in time of peace or in time of war,
Parties which shall have accepted its jurisdiction.
a crime under international law which they undertake
prevent and to punish.
Article VII
Genocide and the other acts enumerated in article III
Article II
shall not be considered as political crimes for the purpose
of extradition.
In the present Convention, genocide means any of
he following acts committed with intent to destroy, in
The Contracting Parties pledge themselves in such
vhole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious
cases to grant extradition in accordance with their laws
,roup, as such:
and treaties in force.
(a) Killing members of the group;
Article VIII
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members
of the group;
Any Contracting Party may call upon the competent
organs of the United Nations to take such zction under
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
the Charter of the United Nations as they consider
ife calculated to bring about its physical destruction in
appropriate for the prevention and suppression of acts
vhole or in part;
of genocide or any of the other acts enmmerated in
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births
article III.
within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to
Article IX
nother group.
Disputes between the Contracting Parties relating to
the interpretation, application or fulfilment of the
Article III
present Convention, including those relating to the
The following acts shall be punishable:
responsibility of a State for genocide or for any of the
other acts enumerated in article III, shall be submitted
(a) Genocide;
to the International Court of Justice at the request of
(b) Conspiracy to commit genocide;
any of the parties to the dispute.
45
Article X
sixteen, the Convention shall cease to be in force as
from the date on which the last of these denunciations
The present Convention, of which the Chinese, English,
shall become effective.
French, Russian and Spanish texts are equally authentic,
shall bear the date of 9 December 1948.
Article XVI
Article XI
A request for the revision of the present Convention
The present Convention shall be open until 31 De-
may be made at any time by any Contracting Party by
cember 1949 for signature on behalf of any Member of
means of a notification in writing addressed to the
the United Nations and of any non-member State to
Secretary-General.
which an invitation to sign has been addressed by the
The General Assembly shall decide upon the steps, if
General Assembly.
any, to be taken in respect of such request.
The present Convention shall be ratified, and the
Article XVII
instruments of ratification shall be deposited with the
Secretary-General of the United Nations.
The Secretary-General of the United Nations shall
After 1 January 1950, the present Convention may
notify all Members of the United Nations and the non-
be acceded to on behalf of any Member of the United
member States contemplated in article XI of the follow-
Nations and of any non-member State which has re-
ing:
ceived an invitation as aforesaid.
(a) Signatures, ratifications and accessions received
Instruments of accession shall be deposited with the
in accordance with article XI;
Secretary-General of the United Nations.
(b) Notifications received in accordance with ar-
ticle XII:
Article XII
(c) The date upon which the present Convention
Any Contracting Party may at any time, by notifi-
comes into force in accordance with article XIII;
cation addressed to the Secretary-General of the United
(d) Denunciations received in accordance with arti-
Nations, extend the application of the present Conven-
cle XIV;
tion to all or any of the territories for the conduct of
(e) The abrogation of the Convention in accordance
whose foreign relations that Contracting Party is res-
with article XV;
ponsible.
(f) Notifications received in accordance with ar-
Article XIII
ticle XVI.
On the day when the first twenty instruments of
Article XVIII
ratification or accession have been deposited, the Sec-
retary-General shall draw up a procès-verbal and trans-
The orignal of the present Convention shall be deposited
mit a copy thereof to each Member of the United Nations
in the archives of the United Nations.
and to each of the non-member States contemplated in
A certified copy of the Convention shall be transmitted
article XI.
to each Member of the United Nations and to each of the
The present Convention shall come into force on the
non-member States contemplated in article XL
ninetieth day following the date of deposit of the twentieth
instrument of ratification or accession.
Article XIX
Any ratification or accession effected, subsequent to
The present Convention shall be registered by the
the latter date shall become effective on the ninetieth
Secretary-General of the United Nations on the date
day following the deposit of the instrument of ratifica-
of its coming into force.
tion or accession.
Article XIV
17. Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory
The present Convention shall remain in effect for a
Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes against
period of ten years as from the date of its coming into
Humanity
force.
It shall thereafter remain in force for successive
Adopted and opened for signature, ratification and accession by
General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXII) of 26 November 1968
periods of five years for such Contracting Parties as
have not denounced it at least six months before the
ENTRY INTO FORCE: 11 November 1970, in accordance with article
expiration of the current period.
VIII.
Denunciation shall be effected by a written notifi-
cation addressed to the Secretary-General of the United
PREAMOLE
Nations.
The States Parties to the present Convention,
Article XV
Recalling resolutions of the General Assembly of the
If, as a result of denunciations, the number of Parties
United Nations 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 170 (II)
to the present Convention should become less than
of 31 October 1947 on the extradition and punishment
46
33
IMPLEMENTING LEGISLATION
Diric CONGRESS
2D SESSION
S. 3155
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
MARCH 17, 1070
Mr. Huan Scorr (for himself and Mr. JAVITS) introduced the following bill;
which was read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary
A
BILL
To implement the Convention on the Prevention and Punish-
inent of the Crimo of Genocide.
1
- Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representa-
2 tives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
3 That (a) title 18, United States Code, is amended by adding
1 after chapter 50 the following new chapter:
5
"Chapter 50A.-GENOCIDE
"Sec,
"1001, Definitions.
"1002. Genocide.
6 "§ 1091. Definitions
7
"As used in this chapter-
8
" (1) 'National group' means a set of persons whose
I identity as such is distinctive in terms of nationality or
2 forming the population of the nation of which it is 1 part
2 yiable entity.
3 or from the groups or sels of persons forming the interna-
3
" (6) 'Children' incans persons who have not attained
4 tional community of nations.
1 the ago of cighteen and who are legally subject to the care,
5
" (2) 'Ethnic group' means a set of persons whose
5 custody, and control of their parents or of an adult of the
6 identity as such is distinctive in terms of its common cultural
6 group standing in loco parentis.
7 traditions or heritage from the other groups or sets of persons
7 "§ 1092. Genocide
S forming the population of the nation of which it is a part or
8
" (n) Whoever, being n national of the United States
9 from the groups or sets of persons forming the international
9 or otherwise under or within the jurisdiction of the United
10 community of nations.
10 States, willfully without justifiable cause, commits, within
11
" (3) Racial group' means n set of persons whose iden-
11 or without the territory of the United States in time of
12 lity as such is distinctive in terms of race, color of skin, or
12 peace or in time of war, any of the following nots with the
J3 other physical characteristics from the other groups or sets
13 intent to destroy by incons of the commission of that net,
11 of persons forming the population of the nation of which
14 or with the intent to carry out a plan to destroy, the whole
15 it is a part or from the groups or sets of persons forming
15 or a substantial part of a national, cilmic, racial, or religious
16 the international community of nations.
16 group shall be guilty of genocide:
17
(4) 'Religious group' means a sct of persons whose
17
" (1) kills members of the group;
18 identity as such is distinctive in terms of its common reli-
18
" (2) causes scrious bodily injury to members of the
19 gious creed, beliefs, doctrines, 01 rituals from the other
19
group;
20 groups or sets of persons forming the population of the na-
20
" (3) causes the permanent impairment of the incn-
21 tion of which it is a part or from the groups or sets of
21
tal inculties of members of the group by means of tor-
22 persons forming the international community of nations.
22
ture, deprivation of physical or physiological needs, sur-
23
" (5) 'Substantial part' means n part of the group of
23
gical operation, introduction of drugs or other foreign
21 such numerical significance that the destruction or loss of
24
substances into the bodies of such members, or subject
1 section, and one or more of such persons does any not to
2
to permanently impair the niental processes, or nervous
2 effect the object of the conspiracy, each of the parties to such
3
system, or motor functions of such inctubers;
3 conspiracy shall be fined not more than $10,000 or impris-
4
(4) subjects the group to cruel, unusual, or inhu-
4 oned not more than five years or both.
5
mane conditions of life calculated to bring about the
5
(c) The offenses defined in this section, wherever
6
physical destruction of the group or a substantial part
6 committed, shall be deemed to be offenses against the United
7
thereof;
7 States.'
S
(5) imposes measures calculated to provent birth
8
(b) The analysis of title 18, United States Code, is
9
within the group as a means of effecting the destruction
9 amended by adding after the item for chapter 50 the follow-
10
of the group ns such; or
10 ing new item:
11
" (6) transfers by force the children of the group
"50A. Genocide
1001".
12
to another group, as n means of effecting the destruction
11
Sec. 2. The remedies provided in this Act shall be the
13
of the group ns such.
12 exclusive means of enforcing the rights based on it, but
14
" (b) Whoever is guilty of genocide or of an attempt to
13 nothing in the Act shall be construed ns indicating an intent
15 commit genocide shall be fined not more than $20,000, or
14 on the part of the Congress to occupy, to the exclusion of
10 imprisoned for not more than twenty years, or both; and if
15 State or local laws on the saine subject matter, the field in
17 death results shall be subject to imprisonment for any term
10 which the provisions of the Act operate nor shall those pro-
18 of years or life imprisonment. Whoover directly and publicly
17 visions be construed to invalidate a provision of State law
10 incites another to commit genocido shall be fined not more
18 unless it is inconsistent with the purposes of the Act or the
20 than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, 01' both.
19 provisions of it.
21
" (c) The intent described in subsection (n) of this
20
SEC. 3. It is the sense of the Congress that the Secretary
22 section is a separate element of the offenso of genocide. It
21 of State in negotiating extradition treaties or conventions
23 shall not be presumed solely from the commission of the act
22 shall reserve for the United States the right to refuse extra-
24 charged.
23 dition of n United States national to n foreign country for nn
25
" (d) If two or more persons conspire to violate this
24 offenso defined in chapter БОЛ of title 18, United States
CONVENTION OF THE PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME
2 United States, and
GENOCIDE
3
(n) where the United States is competent to prosc-
Adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations ;
0 December 1018
1
cuto the person whose surrender is sought, and intends
Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article X
5
to exercise its jurisdiction, or
G
(b) where the person whose surrender is sought has
7
already been or is nt the time of the request being prosc-
8
cuted for such offenso.