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War Crimes
Concept

War Crimes

Violations of the laws of war under the Geneva Conventions and Rome Statute.

Last refreshed: 30 March 2026

Key Question

Are Israeli operations in Lebanon crossing the line into war crimes?

Latest on war crimes

Common Questions
What are war crimes?
War crimes are serious violations of International humanitarian law committed during armed conflict. Prohibited acts include deliberate attacks on civilians, torture, hostage-taking, and destruction of civilian infrastructure, defined under the Geneva Conventions and Rome Statute.Source: Geneva Conventions / Rome Statute
Are Israeli strikes in Lebanon war crimes?
International bodies including the UN have raised concerns. Strikes on Bchamoun, outside evacuation zones, killed civilians including a child. Israel Katz's Litani River seizure declaration drew a UN warning. Israel contests that its operations violate international law.Source: United Nations
What is the difference between a war crime and a crime against humanity?
War crimes occur in armed conflict and violate laws governing how wars are fought. Crimes against humanity are widespread or systematic attacks on civilian populations and can occur outside conflict. Both fall under ICC jurisdiction but require different contextual elements.Source: Rome Statute
Can the ICC prosecute commanders for Lebanese civilian deaths?
The ICC has jurisdiction over war crimes in territories of member states. Palestine is a member; Israel is not. The Court has opened investigations into conduct in Palestinian territories. Jurisdiction over Lebanon-based operations would require a Security Council referral or territorial link.Source: Rome Statute
What did the UN say about Israel Katz's Litani River declaration?
The UN described Israel Katz's declaration that the IDF would seize all territory south of the Litani River as "very much concerning" under international law, flagging potential violations of occupation law and proportionality.Source: United Nations

Background

War crimes are acts that violate the Geneva Conventions and customary International humanitarian law during armed conflict. Codified across four conventions (1949) and their Additional Protocols, prohibited acts include deliberate attacks on civilians, torture, hostage-taking, and destruction of civilian infrastructure. The Rome Statute (1998) gave the International Criminal Court jurisdiction to prosecute individuals, shifting accountability from states to commanders and political leaders.

In the Lebanon theatre of the Iran-related conflict, war crimes allegations have become central to international legal debate. Israel Katz, Israeli Defence Minister, declared the IDF would seize and hold all territory south of the Litani River, nearly 10% of Lebanese land, drawing a UN warning the rhetoric was "very much concerning." Israeli strikes on Bchamoun, outside evacuation-order zones, killed three people including a three-year-old girl.

The gap between allegation and prosecution remains the defining tension. The ICC lacks enforcement powers; states must arrest suspects voluntarily. Amnesty International and the United Nations document patterns, but accountability depends on political will. Whether legal frameworks constrain modern military conduct, or merely record its violations, sits unresolved.