Talk:American Servicemembers' Protection Act

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Surely for the ICC to be both fair and effective, all peoples should be subject to the court itself. I don't see how having such an Act to provide Americans with immunity helps the ICC's credibility or indeed the American's respect and responsibility in times of war.

For the ICC to be fair and effective is not America's responsibility or problem. Americans that commit war crimes have been and are dealt with by American military justice.
Non-Americans might argue that this is only the official propaganda line of the American military, and that recent examples seem to indicate that this happens only in cases of major international outrage. -- Marcika 16:02, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
The most fundamental issue isn't even about whether the US is policing itself properly - the fact is that the way it behaves helps set a lead globally, and wilfully undermining international law and cooperation in the pursuit of justice is hardly a Christian thing to do. Rd232 21:33, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Actually, this is not a general discussion board - if there isn't a specific point about how the article should be changed/developed, let's leave this discussion. Rd232 21:35, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)

[edit] So who's included?

The article mentions that the weapon embargo includes ICC signatories, but excludes

  • NATO members
  • Australia
  • Israel
  • Taiwan
  • Major non-NATO allies
  • Countries which entered into an agreement with the United States

So who's left? It seems rather pointless, if Mongolia, Switzerland and Tajikistan are the only non-African countries that ASPA allows the embargo of weapons-trade to... Ojw 21:10, 7 October 2005 (UTC)