When the international criminal court issued arrest warrants for Israeli officials in November, the response from the country’s government was all too familiar. The prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, rejected outright the warrants for alleged war crimes in Gaza against him and the former defence minister Yoav Gallant, calling them “an antisemitic decision”. The ultranationalist national security adviser, Itamar Ben-Gvir, declared that the court had shown “once again that it is antisemitic through and through”. And the transport minister, Miri Regev, chimed in, claiming: “This is modern antisemitism in the guise of justice.”
The attempt to call out words losing their meaning here is a little ironic when you put alleged in front of war crimes in this context.
I understand that in cases where you would want to avoid being sued but in this case: "rejected outright the warrants for alleged war crimes"
The warrant is for war crimes, the warrant is not alleging, the warrant is accusing, therefore you can safely claim he was issued a warrant for war crimes without trying to do this did they or didn't they bullshit the media keeps on doing.
There is enough public evidence to wrap this shit up in seconds.
No, the warrant is for alleged war crimes, because "innocent until proven guilty" and the secound part can only happen in the courtroom.
Sadly, since the ICC does not judge in absence of the accused, we will likely never hear the final verdict, so the "alleged" part is here to stay.
That does make sense, I was worried I was thinking about it oddly but I guess that does make sense.