JohnRawls wrote:You are comparing to a time when the international system didn't exist yet in the form it does now. Shall we punish the Italians for what the Roman empire did?
The line of logic you're following here leads to the understanding that as Israel doesn't recognize the court and thus the court can never find Israel guilty, Israel's actions can never be war crimes.
A court doesn't magically make an act. A man can commit murder without being convicted of murder or even being acquitted of murder. The murder still happened. The victim is still dead. The court saying whether the man did the murder or not is independent of the man being a murderer, of being guilty of having murdered.
No court has punished Julius Caeser for the Celtic Holocaust. It still happened. The people were still killed. The same applies to any person or state.
JohnRawls wrote: Reality is that as long as the bombings or strikes are semi-proportional (reads as you don't kill 10 thousand civilians for 1 person while using unguided weapons or weapons of mass destruction) then it is more or less not a war crime if you were hitting a military target.
An answer that gets closer to the fundamental truth of the Western led order is "what makes a particular strike a war crime or not is the identity of the perpetrator. our allies? Not a war crime. Our enemies? War crime."