George Clooney is still expected to attend a star-studded June 15 fundraiser for Joe Biden’s re-election campaign, even after a report raised questions about the actor’s call to the White House last month to complain about the president criticizing work his wife was involved in — the International Criminal Court issuing arrest warrants against Israeli leaders for the war in Gaza.
The Washington Post, which reported on Clooney’s call to the White House, said there were concerns among some Biden campaign officials that the actor would drop out of the marquee event in Los Angeles, which is also expected to include former president Barack Obama, late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel and actor Julia Roberts. For weeks, the campaign also had been running a contest for supporters to win an all-expenses-paid trip to Los Angeles to meet Obama, Clooney and Roberts at the event.
But Clooney should be there, and the Biden campaign disputed the idea that there were worries the actor would choose to skip the event, the Washington Post said.
But Clooney, as well as the Biden re-election campaign, may still need to address criticism that the Academy Award-winning actor, who donated $500,000 to Biden’s campaign in 2020, was able to get access to a top White House official in order to lodge his complaints.
In his phone call with Steve Ricchetti, counselor to the president, Clooney also expressed concerns that the Biden administration was initially open to imposing sanctions on the ICC over its decision to seek arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, the Washington Post reported. Clooney was “upset” because his wife, a human rights attorney, could be subject to penalties, the Washington Post said.
Clooney reportedly made the call to Ricchetti after Biden denounced ICC prosecutors for seeking arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant. Clooney, a longtime supporter of Democratic candidates and causes, was especially taken aback by the president using the word “outrageous” to describe the ICC’s move.
On May 20, Karim A. A. Khan, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, announced that he was seeking to charge three top Hamas leaders, as well as Netanyahu and Gallant, with war crimes and crimes against humanity, related to Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attack on Israel and Israel’s response.
Amal Clooney was among a group of U.K.-based international law experts who gave their unanimous approval to Khan to seek the arrests warrants for leaders on both sides.
“The attacks by Hamas in Israel on Oct. 7 and the military response by Israeli forces in Gaza have tested the system of international law to its limits,” Amal Clooney, a human rights attorney, and other legal advisors wrote in an op-ed published by the Financial Times. The panel of lawyers and former judges said they had been approached by Khan to advise on the warrant applications.
The panel of legal experts said it unanimously agreed that the prosecutor’s evidence “provides reasonable grounds” to believe that Netanyahu and Gallant “have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity.” More than 36,000 people, including some 15,000 children, have been killed in Gaza since Israel launched its military operations, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.
The legal experts also said there were grounds to believe that Hamas’ most senior leaders — Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Deif and Ismail Haniyeh — “have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity” for killing more than 1,200 people on Oct. 7, for taking at least 245 hostages and for “acts of sexual violence committed against Israeli hostages.”
Biden, along with other top Democratic and Republican leaders, objected to the ICC’s move to charge both Israeli and Hamas leaders. He suggested it placed the leaders of a democratic nation, responding to a brutal terrorist attack, on an equal footing with the organization that launched the attack and whose goal is to eradicate that nation, the Washington Post reported.
“The ICC prosecutor’s application for arrest warrants against Israeli leaders is outrageous,” Biden said in a statement. “And let me be clear: whatever this prosecutor might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security.”
Biden’s administration also initially signaled a willingness to work with Congress to punish the ICC, including the possibility of imposing sanctions on the organization, the Washington Post said. On Tuesday, the House passed legislation that would impose sanctions.
But the White House has since voiced opposition to sanctions, saying they were “not the right answer” and an “overreach,” the Washington Post reported.
In a statement, the White House said it opposes the legislation because it “could require sanctions against court staff, judges, witnesses, and U.S. allies and partners who provide even limited, targeted support to the court in a range of aspects of its work.”