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73

THE DEFINITION OF THE CRIME OF AGGRESSION…

Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, “[t]he amending agreement does not

bind any State already a party to the treaty which does not become a party to the

amending agreement; article 30, paragraph 4(b), applies in relation to such State”.

Article 30, paragraph 4(b) provides that “[w]hen the parties to the later treaty do not

include all the parties to the earlier one … (b) as between a State party to both treaties

and a State party to only one of the treaties, the treaty to which both States are parties

governs their mutual rights and obligations”.

34

Article 121(5) of the Rome Statute,

which regulates the entry into force of the aggression amendments,

35

does not change

this general regime provided for in the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.

84 states of the then 111 States Parties participated at the Review Conference

in June 2010. As described above, the general jurisdictional scheme contained in the

Rome Statute has been substantially changed with regard to the crime of aggression.

36

According to article 5(2) of the Rome Statute, the States Parties agreed, in advance, with

“setting out the [new] conditions under which the Court shall exercise jurisdiction”

with respect to the crime of aggression. Thus, article 5(2) only envisaged that the

conditions for the exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction over the crime of aggression will

be different from the general jurisdictional scheme provided for in the Rome Statute as

adopted in 1998: article 5(2) just expressly anticipated this

process

of defining the crime

of aggression and “setting out” the special conditions for the exercise of jurisdiction

over this crime and implicitly obliged States Parties to proceed accordingly,

without any

specification

as to the concrete content of the definition and the amended jurisdictional

scheme. In my opinion, neither this provision, nor article 12(1), can be regarded as

the substitution of the consent of individual States Parties with the

concrete

definition

of the crime and the concrete modified conditions for the exercise of the Court’s

jurisdiction over the crime of aggression as adopted at the Review Conference.

Therefore, the States Parties which have not accepted the aggression amendments

34

Olivier Corten, Pierre Klein (eds.): The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties: A Commentary,

Vol. II, pp. 983-984 (commentary to article 40, paragraph 4 of the Vienna Convention: “18. Once the

amending agreement comes into force, the contractual relations between States that have become parties

to the amending agreement are governed by the initial treaty text as amended. The relations between

States that have not adhered to the amendment continue to be governed by the initial treaty. The

relations between the parties to the original treaty and the parties to the amended treaty are governed

by the text of the initial unamended treaty. 19. If all the parties to the initial treaty do not become

parties to the amending agreement, the consequences concerning its application are indentical to those

of an agreement

inter se

as provided for in Article 41. Article 40 does not, in effect, demand that all

parties to the initial treaty agree to the amendment as it has been formulated. This is in keeping with

the international law principle according to which States cannot be bound without their consent.”).

35

See

i.a.

operative paragraph 1 of the resolution RC/Res.6.

36

I.a.

article 15bis(5) amends article 12 paragraph 2 of the Rome Statute by excluding the Court’s

jurisdiction over acts of aggression committed by third-state nationals or committed on the territory

of such third states; article 15(bis)(4) allows a State Party to submit an express declaration in order

to exclude the Court’s jurisdiction over acts of aggression in which it might become involved as an

aggressor state. See Andreas Zimmermann,

op. cit.

sub 6, p. 221.