Thai Times

Covering the Thai Renaissance
Friday, Nov 14, 2025

The ICC's Revenge on Behalf of Drug Dealers, Against Philippine President Duterte, Who Fought Them and Saved 100 Million Filipinos from the Drugs-Death Industry—ignoring the fact that every victory comes at a cost

The arrest of Philippine President Duterte—whose war on drug dealers, like any war, came with the unfortunate collateral tragedy of innocent lives too—demonstrates that the ICC in The Hague does not serve the public interest. Instead, it is taking revenge on behalf of criminals and terrorists who commit crimes against humanity, punishing the heroic leaders who fight them efficiently and successfully.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs was indeed a decisive, hardline measure. But we cannot ignore that his controversial actions saved nearly eighty million Philippine citizens’ lives—a saving that couldn’t come without a cost.

Yes, over six thousand people lost their lives in the process, and some of them, unfortunately, were probably innocent. However, in retrospect, this difficult, calculated sacrifice neutralized a drug menace that would have otherwise devastated the entire nation.

Duterte made the tough call to risk a relatively small number of lives to secure the safety and well‐being of millions—the vast majority of his people. His unwavering actions and bold decision-making exemplify the kind of leadership essential in times of catastrophic national crisis.

We do it all the time too. We often sacrifice the lives of thousands of our own soldiers to save our nation and protect millions of our citizens. And we sadly pay this price. No one would think to charge Winston Churchill with war crimes against humanity for sacrificing the lives of brave and heroic British soldiers who saved Europe in World War Two.

Churchill was a hero, despite his responsibility for sacrificing the lives of the best British soldiers, because of the good that this necessary evil deed did for Great Britain and the whole world.

Likewise, such an action is justified in the fight against widespread, devastating crimes that have claimed millions of lives—such as combating drug cartels and drug dealers who poison millions in Mexico, the United States, and El Salvador. This is exactly what President Duterte successfully did in the Philippines.

This is not a crime against humanity; it is a fight against criminals who commit crimes against humanity. In this important war, as with any war, an unfortunate and inevitable price must be paid. Duterte is not a criminal but a hero who saved the great Philippine nation and millions of its citizens.

Protecting a nation’s future and millions of citizens inevitably comes at an unfortunate cost—a cost that, in this case, traditional humanitarian approaches simply cannot avoid.

The constant problem with the International Criminal Court is that it focuses solely on the loss of those six thousand lives, ignoring the millions of lives saved. True justice must weigh the overall damages against the benefits rather than adopt a one-sided view that fails to acknowledge the full impact of such a tough, transformative policy.

That’s the difference between a leader and a bureaucratic officer in the ICC—an officer who is never tasked or qualified to save a country, a city, or even the justice he fails to balance and represent.

The sickness of the ICC is that it has made it all too easy for an officer, who has never accomplished anything meaningful in his life, to blame a leader who saved the lives of millions, simply because the execution wasn’t absolutely perfect and came at a cost.
Newsletter

Related Articles

Thailand to Abolish Levies and Raise Quota for U.S. Feed Corn Imports to One Million Tons
0:00
0:00
Open
Thailand to Abolish Levies and Raise Quota for U.S. Feed Corn Imports to One Million Tons
0:00
0:00
Close
Thailand to Abolish Levies and Raise Quota for U.S. Feed Corn Imports to One Million Tons
Thailand Suspends Implementation of Enhanced Ceasefire with Cambodia After Landmine Blast
Thailand Calls Emergency NSC Meeting as Cambodia Peace Deal Stalls After Border Blast
Thailand Expands G2G Food-Security Ties with Singapore via Rice Deal
Thailand Halts Trump-Backed Peace Accord with Cambodia After Border Mine Blast
Thailand’s New Central Bank Governor Makes Personal Media Outreach on Day One
Thailand Suspends Trump-Brokered Peace Accord with Cambodia after Border Landmine Blast
Thailand Suspends Trump-Supported Peace Deal With Cambodia After Border Mine Blast
Thailand Says Some Cambodian POWs Do Not Wish to Return as Release Nears
Thailand Emerges as Southeast Asia’s Largest Premium SVOD Market Amid Government Incentives
Thailand Showcases Inclusive Tourism Vision at WTM 2025 ‘Destinations with Heart’ Summit
Thailand and Cambodia Sign Enhanced Peace Accord After Deadly Border Clashes
Netflix Thailand Unveils Retro Audio ‘Cassette’ Recap of ‘Stranger Things’ Ahead of Final Season
Thailand and Cambodia Lock Horns Over Koh Kood as Energy Stakes Rise
China-Thailand Nature Education Centre Opens in Phang Nga to Boost Mangrove Conservation
Thailand Unveils “Healing Is the New Luxury” Campaign to Redefine Travel
Thailand Introduces 10,000-Baht Fine for Drinking During Banned Hours
Thailand’s Foreign Minister Unveils Diplomacy Overhaul to Reclaim Global Position
Thailand Enforces Stricter Alcohol Controls with Fines for Afternoon Drinking
Apple to Pay Google About One Billion Dollars Annually for Gemini AI to Power Next-Generation Siri
Thailand Injects 5 Billion Baht to Boost Industrial Competitiveness
Thailand Unveils “Healing is the New Luxury” Campaign at WTM 2025 to Elevate Wellness Tourism
Thailand Eases Drone Flight Restrictions Nationwide Under Updated Regulatory Framework
On the Road to the Oscars? Meghan Markle to Star in a New Film
AI Researchers Claim Human-Level General Intelligence Is Already Here
Thailand Welcomes 26.9 Million Foreign Tourists by Early November, Yet Sees Decline From Last Year
Miss Universe Thailand Director Nawat Itsaragrisil Issues Apology After On-Stage Confrontation
Miss Universe Mexico Contestant Walks Out After Host Calls Her “Dummy” at Thailand Pre-Pageant Event
TMD Alerts Heavy Rain Risk Across Thailand as Typhoon Kalmaegi Approaches Vietnam
Thailand’s Loy Krathong and Yi Peng Festivals Illuminate the Night with Water and Sky Ceremonies
Thailand’s Oil Fuel Fund Targets Debt-Free Status by 2029 Amid Price-Cap Reforms
Thailand’s Tourism Industry Drives 12 % of GDP, Focuses on Sustainable Growth and Authentic Experiences
Thailand’s Creative Production Boom: $1.4 Billion Market and ‘The White Lotus’ Signal Rise of Thai Content Hub
Thai Pageant Director Nawat Itsaragrisil Apologises After Public Reprimand of Miss Mexico
Miss Universe Owner Raúl Rocha Curtails Thai Director’s Role After Public Confrontation with Miss Mexico
Miss Mexico Fátima Bosch Escalates Row with Miss Universe Thailand Director Amidst Pre-Event Meeting
Thailand Accelerates Climate Commitment with NDC 3.0 Targeting Net-Zero by 2050
Thailand Seeks Upgraded Trade Framework with U.S. Following Trump-Mediated Border Peace Deal
Miss Universe Contestants Stage Walk-out in Bangkok Amid Sponsorship Dispute
Diplo Says He Dated Katy Perry — and Justin Trudeau
Dick Cheney, Former U.S. Vice President, Dies at 84
Thai Prime Minister Reassures China of No Casino Legalisation to Protect Tourism Ties
Thailand Secures MotoGP Hosting Rights for Five More Years to 2031
Thailand’s Manufacturing Expansion Hits 29-Month High in October
Chevron Appoints ABL for Major Offshore Platform and Rig Services in the Gulf of Thailand
Chinese EV Brands Surge Past Eighty Percent Share in Thailand Amid Global Expansion
Hungary Reaffirms Support for Thailand with Focus on Education and Investment
Erling Haaland’s Remarkable Run: 13 Premier League Goals in 10 Matches and Eyes on History
Thailand Asserts ‘No-Casino’ Policy After High-Level Talks with China
Thailand Hosts Miss Universe 2025 Amid Diplomatic Ripple for Cambodia’s Entry
×