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Congress To Track Evidence of Russian War Crimes in Ukraine

Congress is tracking and codifying evidence of Russian war crimes in Ukraine, a move meant to set the stage for future legal proceedings against Moscow’s army and Russian president Vladimir Putin.

“We are putting Russian troops on notice that the deliberate rape, torture, and slaughter of civilians in Ukraine will not go unanswered,” Rep. Michael McCaul (R., Texas), the incoming head of the House Foreign Relations Committee, told the Washington Free Beacon following the passage this week of legislation he helped craft. The bill, included in the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), a yearly spending bill, is among the first official efforts by U.S. lawmakers to document crimes being committed on the battlefield in Ukraine.

McCaul says the legislation will help America prosecute Russian soldiers in a future war crimes tribunal. Ten months into the unprovoked war that has galvanized Western nations against Russia, more than 6,490 Ukrainian civilians have been killed, another 9,972 have been injured, and 6.6 million displaced, according to official estimates. Human rights organizations allege somewhere around 50,000 war crimes committed by Russian forces, including the bombings of hospitals and schools, as well as gang rapes and other forms of sexual assault.

“Blood is on Vladimir Putin’s hands, and the world is watching,” McCaul said. “These thugs have kidnapped hundreds of thousands of innocent Ukrainian children and must be held accountable.”

The Ukraine Invasion War Crimes Deterrence and Accountability Act requires the president to report to Congress on all “atrocities committed” since February 2022, when Russia launched its unprovoked invasion. The White House will have 90 days to produce and furnish this report to Congress.

It will include information on U.S. efforts to “collect, analyze, and preserve evidence related to war crimes and other atrocities committed during the invasion,” according to the legislation. The White House must also detail how it can use this information for a domestic, foreign, or international court tribunal related to these crimes.

The legislation focuses on some of the worst alleged Russian war crimes. It refers to Russia’s war as a “premeditated, unprovoked, unjustified, and unlawful full-scale invasion of Ukraine.” Congress wants to document Moscow’s deliberate targeting of civilians, including attacks on hospitals, schools, and shelters, such as one bombing of a Mariupol-based theater that was serving as a shelter and was explicitly labeled as containing children.

Other crimes of interest to Congress include “unlawful civilian deportations,” “the taking of


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