Audience publique tenue le jeudi 19 septembre 1996, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix, sous la présidence de M. Bedjaoui, président

Document Number
090-19960919-ORA-01-00-BI
Document Type
Incidental Proceedings
Number (Press Release, Order, etc)
1996/14
Date of the Document
Bilingual Document File
Bilingual Content

Non-Corrigé

Uncorrected

CR 96/14

International Court Cour internationale
of Justice de Justice

THE RAGUE LA RAYE

YEAR 1996

Public sitting

held oD T.hursday 19 September 1996, at 10 a.m., at the Peace Palace,

PresideDt Bedjaoui presiding

iD the case coDcerniDg Oil Platforms

(Islamic Republic of Iran v. UDited States of America)

Preliminary Objection

VERBATIM RECORD

ANNEE 1996

Audience publique

tenue le jeudi 19 septembre 1996, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix,

sous la présidence de M. Bedjaoui, Président

en l'affaire des Plates-formes pétrolières

(République islamique d'Iran c. Etats-Unis d'Amérique)

ExceptioD préliminaire

COMPTE RENDU - 2 -

Present: President Bedjaoui
Vice-President Schwebel

Judges Oda
Guillaume
Shahabuddeen
Weerarnantry

Ranjeva
Herczegh
Shi
Fleischhauer
Kororna

Vereshchetin
Ferrari Bravo
Higgins
Parra-Aranguren

Judge ad hoc Rigaux

Registrar Valencia-Ospina - 3 -

Présents M. Bedjaoui, Président
M. Schwebel, Vice-Président

MM. Oda
Guillaume
Shahabuddeen
Weeramantry

Ranjeva
Herczegh
Shi
Fleischhauer

Koroma
Vereshchetin
Ferrari Bravo
Mme Higgins,
M. Parra-Aranguren, juges

M. Rigaux, juge ad hoc

M. Valencia-Ospina, Greffier - 4 -

The Government o:E tb.e Islamic Republic o:E IraD. is represented by:

Mr. M. H. Zahedin-Labbaf, Agent of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the
Iran-O.S. Claims Tribunal,

as Agent;

Mr. S. M. Zeinoddin, Head of Legal Affairs, National Iranian Oil Company,

Mr. James R. Crawford, Whewell Professer of International Law, University of

Cambridge, Member of the International Law Commission,

Mr. Luigi Condorelli, Professer of International Law, University of Geneva,

Mr. Rodman R. Bundy, Avocat à la Cour de Paris, Member of the New York Bar,
Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

as Counsel and Advocates;

Mr. Derek W. Bowett, C.B.E., Q.C., F.B.A., Whewell Professer of
International Law, Emeritus, University of Cambridge,

Dr. N. Mansourian, Legal Advisor, Bureau of International Legal Services of
the Islamic Republic of Iran,

Dr. M. A. Movahed, Senior Legal Advisor, National Iranian Oil Company,

Dr. H. Omid, Legal Advisor, National Iranian Oil Company,

Dr. A. A. Mahrokhzad, Legal Advisor, National Iranian Oil Company,

Mr. David S. Sellers, Solicitor, Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

Ms Loretta Malintoppi, Avocat à la Cour, Frere Cholmeley, Paris

as Counsel.

T.he Government of the United States o:E America is represented by:

Mr. Michael J. Matheson, Acting Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State,

as Agent;

Dr. John H. McNeill, Senior Deputy General Counsel, U.S. Department of
Defense,

Professer Andreas F. Lowenfeld, Rubin Professer of International Law, New
York University School of Law, - 5 -

Le Gouvernement de la République islamique d'Iran est représenté par :

M. M. H. Zahedin-Labbaf, agent de la République islamique d'Iran auprès du
Tribunal des réclamations Etats-Unis/Iran,

comme agent;

M. s. M. Zeinoddin, chef du service juridique, National Iranian Oil Company,

M. James R. Crawford, professeur de droit international, titulaire de la
chaire Whewell à l'Université de Cambridge,

M. Luigi Condorelli, professeur de droit international à l'Université de
Genève,

M. Rodman R. Bundy, avocat à la Cour, Paris, membre du barreau de New York,
cabinet Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

comme conseils et avocats;

M. Derek w. Bowett, C.B.E., Q.C., F.B.A., professeur émérite de droit
international, ancien titulaire de la chaire Whewell à l'Université de
Cambridge,

M. N. Mansourian, conseiller juridique, bureau du service juridique
international de la République islamique d'Iran,

M. M. A. Movahed, conseiller juridique principal, National Iranian Oil
Company,

M. H. Omid, conseiller juridique, National Iranian Oil Company,

M. A. A. Mahrokhzad, conseiller juridique, National Iranian Oil Company,

M. David S. Sellers, solicitor, cabinet Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

Mme Loretta Malintoppi, avocat à la Cour, cabinet Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

comme conseils.

Le Gouvernement des Etats-Unis d'Amérique est représenté par :

M. Michael J. Matheson, conseiller juridique en exercice du département

d'Etat des Etats-Unis,

comme agent;

M. John H. McNeill, conseiller juridique principal adjoint du département de
la défense des Etats-Unis,

M. Andreas F. Lowenfeld, professeur de droit international, titulaire de la
chaire Rubin à la faculté de droit de l'Université de New York, - 6 -

Mr. John R. Crook, Assistant Legal Adviser for United Nations Affairs,
U.S. Department of State,

Dr. Sean Murphy, Counselor for Legal Affairs, United States Embassy, The

Hague,

Mr. Jack Chorowsky, Special Assistant to the Legal Adviser, United States

Department of State

Commander Ronald D. Neubauer, JAGC, United States Navy,

as Counsel and Advocates;

Mr. Allen Weiner, Attache (Office of the Legal Counselor), United States
Embassy, The Hague

as Counsel. - 7 -

M. John R. Crook, conseiller juridique adjoint pour les questions concernant

l'Organisation des Nations Unies au département d'Etat des Etats-Unis,

M. Sean Murphy, conseiller pour les affaires juridiques à l'ambassade des
Etats-Unis aux Pays-Bas,

M. Jack Chorowsky, assistant spécial du conseiller juridique du département
d'Etat des Etats-Unis,

Le capitaine de frégate Ronald D. Neubauer, Judge Advocate General's Cor,ps,

de la Marine des Etats-Unis,

comme conseils et avocats;

M. Allen Weiner, bureau du conseiller juridique, attaché à l'ambassade des
Etats-Unis aux Pays-Bas,

comme conseils. - 8 -

The PRESIDENT: Today the Court will resume its public hearings on

the preliminary objection of the United States of America in the case

concerning Oil Platfor.ms (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of

America). I now call upon the distinguished Agent of the Islamic

Republic of Iran, Mr. Mohammed Hussein Zahedin-Labbaf, to open the

pleadings on behalf of his Government.

Mr. ZAHEDIN-LABBAF:

In the Name of God the Merciful and Compassionate.

1. Mr. President, Members of the Court, it is an honour and

privilege for me to appear before the Court today in this important case

as Agent of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

2. This case concerns violations by the United States of provisions

of a bilateral treaty between Iran and the United States, the 1955 Treaty

of Amity. These violations of the Treaty of Amity occurred when in

October 1987 and April 1988 US naval forces attacked and destroyed three

sets of Iranian commercial oil installations situated on Iran's

continental shelf in the Persian Gulf and owned and operated by the

National Iranian Oil Company.

3. In bringing this case before the Court, Iran submits that each of

these attacks constituted a serious violation by the United States of

important provisions of the Treaty of Amity, and that the Court's

jurisdiction to rule on such claims is firmly established by

Article XXI (2) of the Treaty - the Treaty•s compromissory clause.

4. The United States, in contrast, has objected to the Court's

jurisdiction in this case. It contends that the 1955 Treaty of Amity is,

contrary to its title, exclusively concerned with commercial matters, and

is not designed to deal with the use of armed force by one of the parties

against installations of the ether.

CR 96/14 - 9 -

5. Starting from this premise, the United States has taken the

position that the case that Iran has introduced is essentially a case

arising under the United Nations Charter, and that what Iran is trying to

do is to obtain a general condemnation of the United States for its role

in the Iran-Iraq war. The United States argues that it is not the role

of the Court to be dragged into disputes of this kind between two

parties.

6. It has to be said at the outset, Mr. President, that this is a

complete mischaracterization of Iran's case.

7. Let there be no further misunderstandings. While it is of course

a matter of public knowledge that Iran has a long list of complaints for

the wrongs done and sufferings caused by the United States during the

Iran-Iraq war, such matters are not before the Court in this case. What

Iran has brought before the Court is a purely legal case arising out of

very particular incidents - and one that is grounded in specifie

provisions of the Treaty of Amity which Iran maintains the United States

has breached by attacking the ail platforms. The provisions at issue

include Article I, which provides that there shall be firm and enduring

peace and sincere friendship between the parties; Article IV, which sets

forth a standard of fair and equitable treatment by one party to the

nationals and companies of the other, and to their property and

enterprises; and Article X, which provides for freedom of commerce and

navigation.

8. In Iran's view, the United States' attacks on the platforms

violated each of these provisions. Accordingly, Iran's case entails not

only a claim for satisfaction in the form of a declaration stating that

the United States violated its treaty obligations in destroying the

platforms, but also compensation for the substantial damages that Iran

CR 96/14 - 10 -

suffered as a result of the destruction of commercial installations

belonging to the National Iranian Oil Company, a joint-stock company

organized and existing under the commercial laws of Iran.

9. Representatives of the National Iranian Oil Company are here

today as part of Iran•s delegation. With the Court•s leave, I will ask

the head of the National Iranian Oil Company's Legal Affairs Department,

Dr. Zeinoddin, to follow me. Dr. Zeinoddin will describe for the Court

the commercial nature of the platforms and their economie importance to

Iran. He will also describe the heavy financial, commercial and economie

consequences of the US attacks to Iran•s oil industry.

10. In an effort to support its assertion that the Treaty of Amity

is exclusively a commercial treaty and therefore has no role to play in

connection with the claims that Iran has introduced, the United States

has also argued that the Treaty was designed to protect US commercial

(and particularly oil) interests in Iran and that this shows that its

abject and purpose was solely commercial. The United States ignores what

the Treaty says. It is a treaty of amity. It contains a specifie

obligation in Article I concerning firm and enduring peace and sincere

friendship and this language has implications far beyond the purely

commercial sphere. But the United States also ignores the importance of

the Treaty in its historical context. While I will leave to Iran•s

Counsel a detailed explanation of how the United States' contentions are

misconceived from the historical point of view, let me make the point now

that the international oil industry has as much a strategie component as

a commercial one. If one aspect of the 1955 Treaty of Arnity was to

protect US oil interests in Iran, as the United States maintains,

nonetheless the Treaty had as much a strategie importance as a commercial

one. And it will be seen that the history of the Treaty bears this out.

CR 96/14 - 11 -

~1. To the extent that the Treaty also addressed commercial matters,

it is Iran's position that the platforms attacked by the United States

were commercial installations. It is also Iran's position that these

installations were either engaged in the production of oil and gas when

they were destroyed or were in the process of being repaired - after

earlier Iraqi attacks - so that production could resume. The oil

produced from these platforms was vital to Iran's economy. These were in

no way military facilities. Indeed, as Dr. Zeinoddin will explain, these

installations were wholly inappropriate for use as military installations

of the kind alleged by the United States. It is equally undeniable that

Iran suffered commercial damage as a result of the attacks. In such

circumstances, the US attacks must give rise to a question of

interpretation and application of the Treaty.

~2. To place these issues in perspective, Mr. Bundy - following

Dr. Zeinoddin - will examine the historical background to the Treaty and

will show that the Treaty was clearly intended to have both strategie and

commercial importance. Mr. Bundy will also examine the development of

the platforms in the context of the Treaty, as well as those particular

aspects of the background to the US attacks and of the attacks themselves

which have a special relevance to the issues confronting the Court.

~3. In making this factual presentation, Iran is mindful, of course,

that the Court has separated the jurisdictional phase of the case from

the merits, and that these proceedings are devoted to the preliminary

objection on jurisdiction, without the need to decide at this stage

whether or not the US attacks actually constituted breaches of the

Treaty. For this reason, we will attempt to confine our presentation to

issues that are relevant to the Court's jurisdiction, and will enter into

ether matters only in so far as they are actually necessary in order to

Π96/~4 - ~2 -

make the case as a whole more easily understood. As to any ether facts

relating to the merits, Iran respectfully reserves its right to address

these issues as appropriate at a subsequent stage of the proceedings. It

is at that stage of the proceedings that Iran will answer the multitude

of false accusations made by the United States beth in its written and

its oral pleadings concerning alleged Iranian actions in the Persian

Gulf. Iran will restrict itself now to denying such accusations. But it

is important to stress one point, however obvious - that it is Iran which

accepts the jurisdiction of the Court in this case. It is the United

States which does not want such issues to be discussed on the merits, and

which seeks, in introducing such issues in the jurisdiction phase - where

they are strictly irrelevant - to avoid a full and proper analysis of the

merits.

14. Because this is the jurisdictional phase, Iran•s counsel will

focus on the legal aspects of the United States' preliminary objection.

Following Mr. Bundy, Professer Condorelli will examine the specifie

provisions of the Treaty invoked by Iran in order to demonstrate that a

genuine dispute as to their interpretation and application exists between

the Parties. Professer Crawford will then show that the legal

requirernents for the Court•s jurisdiction under the compromissory clause

of the Treaty have been satisfied and that the United States• objection

must therefore fail.

~5. Iran brings this case in full confidence that the Court is a

court of law and that the Parties come before it as equals to seek

justice. For years, the United States and us companies have relied on

the Treaty of Amity as claimants before the Iran-United States Claims

Tribunal, United States courts and ether tribunals. The United States

has relied on it also in this Court. New, as Respondent, the United

CR 96/~4 - 13 -

States seeks to avoid recourse to the Treaty. But international law is

not a one-way street, Mr. President, and it is in this spirit of equality

that Iran submits its claims to the Court.

16. Before calling upon Dr. Zeinoddin, I would like to end by making

three points. First, as I have pointed out, Iran suffered severe

financial and commercial damage as a result of the destruction of its oil

platforms at the hands of US naval forces in October 1987 and April 1988.

It should be remembered that these damages were inflicted at a critical

stage of Iran•s history and at a time when Iran•s territorial integrity

was at risk due to an illegal aggression and invasion.

17. In this context, let no one forget the findings of the

Secretary-General of the United Nations: that this war - which caused

the loss of hundreds of thousands of Iranian lives and hundreds of

millions of dollars of damage to Iran's economy - was begun by an illegal

invasion followed by continuous occupation of Iranian territory during

the conflict. The Secretary-General held that such actions entailed the

full responsibility of Iraq for the conflict.

18. The Secretary-General's Report began by noting that:

"the war between Iran and Iraq, which was going tc be waged for
so many years, was started in contravention of international
law, and violations of international law give rise to
responsibility for the conflict".

It went on to note that the specifie concern of the international

community in this context was "the illegal use of force and the disregard

for the territorial integrity of a Member State". The Report found that

the "outstanding event" under these violations was

"the attack of 22 September 1980 against Iran, which cannet be

justified under the Charter of the United Nations, any
recognized rules and principles of international law or any
principles of international morality [and thus] entails the
responsibility for the conflict" .

CR 96/14 - 14 -

The Report pointed out that Iraq's explanations for its actions on 22

September 1980 "do not appear sufficient or acceptable to the

international community" and added that Iraq•s aggression against Iran

"which was followed by Iraq•s continuous occupation of Iranian territory

during the conflict" was "in violation of the prohibition of the use of

force, which is regarded as one of the rules of jus cogens" 1• It is

against this background that the US attacks on Iran's oil platforms must

be considered.

19. The second point I want to make concerns the United States•

characterization of the dispute before the Court, which in many ways

ignores the Secretary-General's findings. The Agent of the United States

characterized the dispute before the Court as involving: "combat

operations" and described these attacks as "part of a series of hostile

engagements between United States and Iranian forces that occurred during

the course of an international armed conflict" {CR 96/13, p. 61). It was

actually suggested that such a characterization of the dispute before the

Court was accepted by Iran. Mr. President, Members of the Court, Iran

vigorously contests this characterization of the dispute for a number of

reas ons

1. This characterization ignores the fact that Iran was acting in

self-defence in the face of an aggressor who was illegally

occupying part of its territory.

2. It ignores the fact that the United States had as a minimum, beth

under the Treaty of Arnity and under international law, a duty of

strict neutrality in such a situation. There was at no stage a

state of armed conflict between Iran and the United States.

1See Further Report of the Secretary-General on the Implementation of Security
Council resolution 598 (1987), 9 December 1991 (S/23273), para. 5 (Iran's Memorial,
Exhibi t 42) .

CR 96/14 - 15 -

3. It implies that the attacks on the platforms were a part of a

series of hostile engagements between Iranian and United States

forces, whereas it is Iran's position that these were unprovoked

attacks on civilian and commercial facilities.

In short, Iran disputes not only the United States' version of these

events but also the United States' characterization of the dispute before

the Court. Iran's claim, by contrast, relates only to the specifie United

States attacks on the specified civilian facilities.

20. The third point I want to make before concluding is a more

cheerful one. Iran is pleased to note the United States' announcement

that it is willing to appear in this Court on the merits in the event

that the Court finds that it has jurisdiction (CR 96/12, pp. 13 et seq.).

It is true that the United States made this announcement this week in

terms which appeared to threaten the Court with onerous evidentiary

proceedings which would tax its limited resources. In addition, the

intention of the United States to produce vast quantities of evidence was

made with a view to deterring the Court from hearing any evidence at all.

But that aside, Mr. President, this is a court of justice, to which

parties to the Statute are entitled to come. The Court, while no doubt

pleased that beth Parties are ready to resolve their disputes on the

merits by the submission of evidentiary materials, will not be deterred

by the prospect that it has to do justice in respect of their dispute.

That is its function. And it is no more inappropriate for Iran to bring

this dispute under the Treaty of Amity than it was for Iran to bring the

Aerial Incident case, which Iran is pleased to record was settled

amicably.

21. Mr. President, Members of the Court, Iran was one of the early

members of beth the League of Nations and the United Nations. Iran

CR 96/14 - J.6 -

remains deeply committed to the principles of those bodies, to the rule

of law and to the peaceful settlement of disputes. Iran has show.n this

through the establishment of the Algiers Declarations, by its compliance

with the Judgement of the Court in the Diplomatie and Consular Staff case

as a result of which that case was withdraw.n from the Court, and through

the work of the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal. Such actions show a

firm commitment to the obligation to settle disputes peacefully and a

strong confidence in the rule of law. It is with such commitment and

such confidence that Iran has submitted this case to yeu.

Mr. President, that concludes my opening statement. I would ask yeu

to call upon Dr. Zeinoddin, who will continue with the next part of

Iran' s presentation. Thank yeu.

The PRESIDENT: Thank yeu very much, Mr. Mohammed Hussein

Zahedin-Labbaf. I now give the floor to Dr. Zeinoddin.

Mr. ZEINODDIN:

J.. Mr. President, Distinguished Members of the Court, it is my task

to assist the Court in describing the commercial significance of this

case to Iran. The National Iranian Oil Company is a commercial entity

formed under the commercial code of Iran for commercial purposes and in

which the Government is the shareholder. The National Iranian Oil Company

is responsible for the exploration, production and marketing of all of

Iran•s cil, activities which entailed the construction and use of the

platforms which were attacked by the United States• military forces on

J.9 October 1987 and J.8 April 1988.

2. The Court will not need reminding that cil is the life blood of

Iran's economy, and these platforms were of a vital commercial and

economie importance to Iran. Their purpose was to gather cil from a

CR 96/14 - 17 -

series of inter-connected oil wells drilled into the underlying oil

fields. The oil would then be pumped from the platform by undersea

pipeline to the nearest facilities for the storage and/or loading onto

tankers for sale on the world's markets. The platforms were complex

structures containing sophisticated equipment representing hundreds of

millions of dollars worth of investment. Between them, the platforms hit

and destroyed by the United States had an oil production capacity of over

500,000 barrels of oil per day, and were the sole means available for

exploiting the underlying oil field reserves. Thus, any damage to or

destruction of such platforms would be certain to cause substantial

lasses, not only in internai costs of new investment to rebuild the

platforms, but also in loss of revenues due to the disruption of oil

experts, possible, or rather inevitable, damage to the underlying oil

reserves, and environmental damage including a huge discharge of oil into

the sea. In the event, the cost of rebuilding only one of these platforms

amounted to over 500 million dollars.

3. The commercial importance of these platforms is borne out by

briefly recalling the history of their development. These platforms_, as

well as ether Iranian offshore platforms in the Persian Gulf had been

built, and the underlying oil fields exploited, through joint venture

agreements entered into between the National Iranian Oil Company and

foreign, principally United States~oil companies, in the late 1950s and

early 1960s following the signing of the Treaty of Amity.

4. The joint exploitation of the oil fields continued right up until

the Islamic Revolution. During the Revolution, the foreign oil companies

who were involved in joint venture agreements with the National Iranian

Oil Company left Iran and were not in a position to resume their

activities under these agreements. Nevertheless, they were able to make

CR 96/14 - ~8 -

claims, for hundreds of millions of dollars, for their lest interests.

As Mr. Bundy will explain in more detail after I have spoken, many of

these claims were presented before the Iran-United States Claims

Tribunal. It is significant that in bringing these claims the United

States companies relied on provisions of the Treaty of Amity in arder to

justify their claims, alleging that the events surrounding the Islamic

Revolution amounted to an unlawful taking and requesting compensation

under the terms of Article IV (2) of the Treaty of Amity. The companies

also produced affidavits by United States officials who were involved in

the negotiation of the Treaty to the effect that the Treaty was in part

specifically designed to protect oil interests, in particular, United

States oil investments in Iran. The huge size of the United States

companies' claims in these cases also emphasizes the commercial value of

the platforms in question, and of the underlying oil fields. The

National Iranian Oil Company eventually paid in the arder of hundreds of

millions of dollars in settlement of the United States oil companies'

claim relating to two of the platforms in question in this case.

s. Following the Revolution, and the departure of the oil companies,

the National Iranian Oil Company continued to exploit the oil fields and

to use the oil platforms for the production of oil, i.e., for commercial

purposes. This situation remained unchanged during the war imposed upon

Iran by Iraqi aggression. Indeed, these offshore fields had a particular

economie importance during the war because many of Iran's mainland

oilfields were close to the frontline and were thus exposed to the

calamities of the war and continued bombardment. Moreover, several of

Iran's main cil facilities and export centres, old and new, such as

Bandar Imam, Abadan, and Kharg Island in the same region were subject to

constant attack. However, the platforms at issue in this case were

CR 96/~4 - l9 -

farther from the frontline and were thus relatively secure - at least

during the early years of the war.

6. It was no doubt with these considerations in mind, and in an

effort tc internationalize the conflict, and to attempt ta destroy the

basis of Iran's economy - its ail, that Iraq began in 2986 to 1987 ta

carry out indiscriminate attacks throughout the Persian Gulf on all kinds

of shipping, but in particular against any facility that was connected in

any way with Iran's ail industry. Iraq's capacity tc make such long­

range attacks far dawn the Persian Gulf to where the cil platforms at

issue were located had also increased. Because of their critical

importance to the economy of the country, these platforms were an obvious

target, particularly in view of their inability to defend themselves

against any military attacks. Small security forces were put on the

platforms in an effort ta provide sorne moral comfort for the ail company

personnel working there, and ta help them evacuate in the event of Iraqi

attack. However, such measures were necessarily very limited. As I

mentioned, the platforms were extremely vulnerable. They are static,

basically unable to defend themselves, and highly dangerous for obvious

reasons - the presence of cil and gas in substantial quantities on the

platforms themselves.

7. Despite Iraqi attacks on individual platforms, and the danger to

personnel, the National Iranian Oil Company exerted every possible effort

tc repair the platforms and tried strenuously ta keep them in production

because of their vital economie importance.

8. It was against this background that the first attack by the

United States military forces took place on l9 October 1987, against two

platform complexes in the Reshadat field. This attack effectively put an

end to production from bath the Reshadat and Resalat fields. The second

CR 96/14 20 -

attacks took place on 18 April 1988 against the Salman complex and

against the Central Nasr production platform. In each of these attacks,

the platforms were bombarded by massed United States naval forces. In

two of the attacks, United States forces then boarded the platforms to

lay explosives in order to complete the destruction. The people on the

platforms simply had_no way to defend themselves against such force. The

attacks in fact caused loss of life and injuries to personnel stationed

on the platforms. They also caused massive economie damage to Iran, not

only in the immediate loss of oil revenues, but also in the huge costs of

rebuilding the platforms, costs which are still being felt by Iran today.

9. The United States has tried to justify the first attack against

the Reshadat platform on the basis of an alleged Iranian missile attack

against the Sea Isle City, a vessel stationed in Kuwaiti waters, seme

four days earlier. And the second attacks, on 18 April 1988, were

allegedly a reprisal against the fact that the Samuel B. Roberts, a

United States military vessel, hit a mine in the Persian Gulf east of

Bahrain sorne days earlier. Iran will not address these allegations in

detail because they are essentially matters for the merits. However, I

will make a few brief points in response to the United States' allegation

that these platforms were sorne kind of military installations. While

this is also a matter for the merits, I want to explain to the Court why

such a contention, which Iran of course denies, is on its face

implausible. Such platforms are quite small, and are packed with complex

equipment. As a general rule, they were operated by 10-15 oil company

personnel - technicians, drilling experts and so on, responsible for

maintenance and repair work. It is not feasible to install missiles or

any ether kind of sophisticated military equipment on such small areas,

and totally impractical to use them as a base for attacks. The very idea

CR 96/14 - 21 -

is absurd not because of physical limitations of the platforms and their

extreme vulnerability, but also because of the high level of danger that

would be involved in having any kind of explosive material on such

platforms. The small number of security personnel posted on these

platforms were simply there to act as look-cuts to provide early warning

of attacks and to provide sorne comfort and support to the oil company

personnel in the light of Iraqi attacks. These platforms could not

possibly be used for any military purposes of the kind contended by the

United States.

10. In short, these platforms were not and could not be military

installations. They were used for commercial purposes, and this is just

one of the reasons why Iran contends that these attacks were not carried

out by way of lawful self-defence, but were designed to cause the maximum

financial, commercial, and economie damage to Iran.

11. Mr. President, Members of the Court, I have referred to certain

facts from the perspective of the company who owned and operated these

platforms, and I have tried to emphasize the commercial significance of

these platforms, the nature of the activities carried out on them, and

the enormous magnitude of the damage suffered by the Iranian oil

industry. In Iran's view, these matters only confirm the applicability

of the Treaty of Amity to this dispute.

12. Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Court, that is all I

wanted to say with regard to the background to this case. I will now

hand over to Mr. Bundy who will present you with a more detailed

appreciation of the facts and of their relevance to the issues of

jurisdiction currently before you. Thank you.

The PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Mr. Zeinoddin. I now give the

floor to Mr. Rodman Bundy.

CR 96/14 - 22 -

Mr. BONDY:

THE FACTS RELEVANT TO JURISDICTION

Introduction

Mr. President, Members of the Court, may it please the Court. I am

honoured to appear before you today on behalf of the Islarnic Republic of

Iran in this important case.

Now, as Iran•s Agent has explained to you, my task is to lay before

you the factual considerations which are relevant to the question of

jurisdiction. I stress the word "jurisdiction" because the nature of

these proceedings is such that it is neither necessary, nor appropriate,

for me to trespass on to the merits.

OUr distinguished opponents have shown no similar reservations about

discussing the merits. Commander Neubauer presented the views of the

United States at sorne length and in sorne detail on several issues of fact

relating to the Iran-Iraq war and the attacks on the platforrns.

Professer Lowenfeld argued that Iran could not rely on Article X (1)

of the Treaty of Amity, which provides, as you know, for freedom of

commerce and navigation, because "whatever their normal function, the oil

platforrns involved in the present case were being used ... for guiding

arrned attacks on shipping in the Gulf - hardly a commercial activity"

(CR 96/12 p. 55).

Mr. Matheson added that the Court's decision in the Nicaragua case

on the same freedom of commerce clause that appears in the Treaty of

Amity has no application here because "we are dealing with platforrns that

have no relationship to maritime commerce and were in fact being used for

military purposes" (CR 96/13, p. 63). And Dr. Murphy made the same

point. He asserted that the platforms and the oil facilities attacked by

CR 96/14 - 23 -

the United States in this case had no linkage tc maritime commerce unlike

the installations that were subject tc attack in the Nicaragua case (CR

96/~3, pp. 42-42).

Mr. President, Members of the Court, those kinds of issues are

clearly matters for the merits. They are squarely in dispute between the

Parties and they have not been proved by the United States. Sc it is no

use, I would submit, for Mr. Chorowsky tc try tc reassure us that the

United States has not asked the Court tc resolve any factual issues which

are in dispute and which are at the heart of the merits, for that is

precisely what the United States has done (CR 96/~3, pp. 54). As the

example I have just cited sc clearly shows, in order to support its

preliminary objection the United States asks the Court tc assume, despite

the evidence tc the contrary, that the platforms were not engaged in

commercial activities, but rather were being used as bases tc attack

neutral shipping when they were destroyed by the United States. New we

will prove that that was not the case, but we will do so at the

appropriate time - which is at the merits.

Elsewhere, the United States asks the Court to accept that the

attacks on the platforms were part of a series of hostile engagements

between Iran and the United States which constituted armed conflict

(CR 96/23, pp. 25-62). As Iran's Agent has stated, Iran disagrees.

There was no state of armed conflict between Iran and the United States

and Iran had absolutely no desire tc engage US forces. If anything, the

evidence that has already been produced in the written submissions

demonstrates that Iran sought to avoid confrontation with the

United States (Iran•s Memorial, Exhibits 44 and 55). It was the

United States which attacked and destroyed a defenceless set of

CR 96/24 - 24 -

commercial oil platforms. This was not "armed conflict". And if it was

an "engagement", it was a singularly unilateral one.

Now, although there are many such issues that have been raised by

our opponents, I do not intend to follow them down the same factual

paths. This is not because Iran does not wish to take up these issues on

the merits or accepts what the United States has to say about them, but

rather out of deference to Article 79 (5) of the Rules of Court - a

provision which Mr. Chorowsky neglected to mention in his exposé on

Article 79 the other day. It provides, as the Court is well aware, that

statements at these hearings should be confined to matters that are

relevant to the preliminary objection. So, accordingly, I shall

concentrate on the factual issues which Iran believes to be genuinely

relevant to the question of jurisdiction, and I shall comment on other

factual matters only to the extent that it is necessary to restore sorne

balance to what the United States has said.

* * *

As the Court is aware, Iran's claims relate to the destruction by

the United States in October 1987 and April 1988 of several oil platforms

which, as Dr. Zeinoddin has explained, were owned and operated by the

National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) . These platforms were engaged in the

commercial production of oil and gas from Iran's continental shelf when

they were attacked. Now I will be explaining in due course the layout of

the platforms and the installations. But only two of those

installations, platform R7, in the Reshadat complex and the control room

at the Salman complex were undergoing repairs at the time they were

attacked. These were repairs that were necessitated by earlier Iragi

bombardments. The other platforms were operational. Iran maintains that

CR 96/14 - 25 -

these attacks of the United States breached specifie provisions of the

1955 Treaty of Arnity between the two countries.

Aside from taking issue with the commercial nature of the platforms,

the essence of the United States' objection is that there is no

connection, no connection whatsoever, between the Treaty and Iran's

claims. This argument resurfaces repeatedly throughout the preliminary

objection and we have heard it again in the first round presentation of

our distinguished opponents. Let me quete one of the ways in which the

United States characterizes this assertion and this is from the

preliminary objection:

"Iran•s efforts to recast the 1955 Treaty addressing purely
commercial and consular matters, as addressing the fundamental

issues of war and peace fly in the face of the ter.ms of the
1955 Treaty and its history as well as the jurisprudence of the
Court." (Preliminary Objection, para. 3.0~; emphasis added.)

New, it will fall to my colleagues, Professors Condorelli and

Crawford, to demonstrate the fallacies of this argument based on the

ter.ms of the Treaty and the Court's jurisprudence. In so far as the

facts are concerned, what I propose to do is to test the United States'

contentions against the historical background of the case, including the

history of the Treaty. In Iran's submission, this analysis will support

the following four propositions:

(i) contrary to the United States' assertion, the Treaty of Amity was

not solely concerned with commercial or consular matters, but it

had a far wider strategie importance of which the undertaking to

maintain peaceful and friendly relations was an essential element;

(ii) the off-shore oil installations which the United States destroyed

in this case represented precisely the kind of facilities that the

Treaty was designed to protect;

CR 96/14 - 26 -

(iii) the oil platforms in question were engaged in commercial

operations when they were destroyed and fell squarely within the

scope of the Treaty•s provisions even under the United States'

reading of the Treaty; and

(iv) the United States' attacks on the platforms consequently give rise

to fundamental questions relating to the interpretation and

application of the Treaty, and this is true whether these attacks

are viewed in isolation or in the overall context of the

United States' conduct in the Persian Gulf during the Iran-Iraq

war.

In order to place these matters in perspective, it may assist the

Court if I adopt a generally chronological approach to the facts. This

involves focusing on four main series of events:

(i) first, I shall examine the factual context within which the Treaty

of Amity was signed in ~955. For it is this context which sheds

light on the object and purpose of the Treaty's individual

provisions;

(ii) second, I shall review the subsequent development of Iran•s

off-shore oil industry, including the platforms that are the

subject of these proceedings. It will be seen that one of the

purposes of the Treaty was to encourage and protect this

development, not solely for commercial purposes as the

United States would have the Court believe, but also for

fundamental political and strategie reasons;

(iii) the third section of my presentation will address very briefly,

and I assure the Court it will be brief, on sorne of the background

facts relating to the Iran-Iraq war. While I do not propose to

treat these matters in detail whatsoever, it is necessary to touch

CR 96/~4 - 27 -

on certain events in order to correct the highly coloured version

of the facts presented by the United States at these hearings;

(iv) finally, I shall say a few words about the attacks themselves and

the United States' alleged justification for them.

Once again, I stress that in undertaking this exercise my purpose is

not to examine whether the United States actually breached the provisions

of the Treaty. This is clearly reserved for the merits. Rather, my

intention is to show that there are genuine questions, genuine questions

of interpretation and application of the Treaty sufficient to vest

jurisdiction in the Court under the terms of the Treaty's compromissory

clause.

* * *

Now with that introduction, Mr. President, let me turn to:

1. T.he .fact:ua1 backgroUZld wi t:hin w.hicb t:he Treat:y o.f Ami t:y was signed

In his intervention on Tuesday, Mr. Crook conveyed the impression

that there was nothing particularly remarkable about the signing of the

Treaty of Amity in 1955. He claimed that it had a purely commercial,

practical character and that there were no high politics or strategy

involved (CR 96/13, pp. 8, 10). With due respect, this account of the

historical context in which the Treaty was signed does not do justice to

the very important and real political and strategie interests that were

at stake at that time.

The Treaty of Amity was signed on 15 August 1955 during what was a

highly sensitive period for Iran and the United States in their

relations, when fundamental strategie questions were as important as if

not more important than commercial considerations. Contrary to Mr.

Crook's suggestion, shortly before the Treaty there had been in fact a

fundamental shift in the Parties' political relations, and this played a

CR 96/14 - 28 -

key role in the political background of the Treaty. It was not simply

that the Shah needed a beost to his régime, as Professer Lowenfeld

suggested the ether day (CR 96/12, p. 53). Rather, it was that the

United States was intent on strengthening its relations with Iran across

the board, as a result of changes in the Iranian Government that had

happened shortly before the onset of the Cold War. Any proper

interpretation of the Treaty cannet be divorced from this particular

context.

Four years earlier in 1951, the Iranian Parliament, with the support

of Dr. Mossedegh's National Front, had passed an act nationalizing Iran's

oil industry, which up to that point, as the Court will be aware, had

been exclusively owned and operated by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.

This event provoked a serious international crisis which involved the

United States and other countries.

The Court will be aware of the political events that followed these

developments, particularly in view of the fact that proceedings were

brought before the Court in 1951 relating to the nationalization of the

Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. As has been acknowledged by US officials, in

August 1953 Dr. Mossedegh was deposed as a result of a coup organized and

financed by the CIA - about as drastic a shift in relations as one can

imagine - and the United States was well on its way to establishing a new

relationship with Iran under the Shah that would form one of the

cornerstones of its foreign policy for the next twenty-five years.

In addition to reinstating the Shah, the United States had two main

objectives. The first was to prevent Iran from falling under the Soviet

Union's sphere of influence during a particularly sensitive period of the

Cold War. The second was to develop Iran's oil industry, but not simply

for commercial purposes, but also for fundamental political and strategie

CR 96/14 - 29 -

reasons which included the need to provide for a flow of income to the

Shah in order to prop up his régime and to ensure a secure source of oil

to the West. These two policies were interrelated, and each was based on

its own set of political considerations and each was served by the

signing of the Treaty of Amity.

To this end, the United States embarked on three initiatives.

First, in 1954, several major US oil companies became involved for the

first time in Iran's oil industry through participation in a new

"Consortium Agreement" with NIOC. This Agreement replaced the old

arrangements that had previously existed under the Anglo-Iranian Company,

and subsequently, ether cil agreements were signed between NIOC and US

oil companies including the agreements that led to the construction of

the platforms at issue in this case. Second, the United States took the

lead in the creation of the Baghdad Pact - otherwise known as CENTO - a

strategically oriented military alliance between Iran, Iraq, Turkey and

Pakistan which was created in 1955 and which Iran adhered to later in the

year. Third, in August 1955, amidst these events the United States

cemented relations with Iran by signing the Treaty of Arnity, the

negotiation of which had actually started in July 1954. It was no

accident that these three events coincided.

With respect to the Consortium Agreement, it represented one of the

most important oil agreements in the world. While the Anglo-Iranian Oil

Company had previously held concessionary rights over virtually all of

Iran's oil industry, these interests had been transferred to NIOC as a

result of Iran's nationalization policy, and a consortium of

international cil companies, in which American companies commanded a 40%

share, was formed for the purpose of purchasing Iranian oil at favourable

priees and operating the oil industry.

CR 96/14 - 30 -

One of the ironies of this case is that for several years during the

1980s, NIOC and most of the major oil companies that were parties to the

Iranian oil agreements were engaged in litigation relating to these

agreements, and this was litigation that was heard just down the hall.

In all of these cases, all of them, the oil companies stressed the

linkage between the signing of the Treaty of Amity and the development of

Iran's oil industry in the 1950s.

In particular, the companies were at pains to show that one of the

purposes of the Treaty was to protect US oil investments especially after

the signing of the Consortium Agreement in 1954. The Court will find, as

Dr. Zeinoddin has mentioned, in Iran's written pleadings affidavits

prepared by two of the US negotiators of the Treaty and they expressly

confirm that the Consortium Agreement was an important part of the

political background of the Treaty negotiations (Exhibit 5 to Iran•s

Observations).

The oil companies were correct, Mr. President: one of the purposes

of the Treaty was to provide for the protection of investment in Iran's

oil industry. But that does not mean that the Treaty was exclusively

concerned with commercial matters as our distinguished opponents would

have the Court believe. For oil and strategie interests go hand in hand,

and the interests of the American oil companies that were being protected

in Iran in the l950s were as much strategie in nature as commercial. In

ether words, the Treaty of Amity, as its name suggests, was designed to

deal with fundamental issues involving peace, friendship and security as

well as commercial relations.

The evidence for this conclusion is derived from official us

Government documents which have been annexed to Iran•s pleadings (see

exhibits 4-7 to Iran's Observations). As these documents show, US

CR 96/14 - 3l. -

companies at the time actually had little interest from the commercial

point of view in becoming involved in Iran's oil industry in the l.950s.

At the time, their petroleum requirements were amply covered by ether

sources of supply, and there was a reluctance of sorne of the US major oil

companies to become involved in Iran for fear of alienating ether

regional powers, such as Saudi Arabia, in which they had a significant

stake.

The US Government took a fundamentally different view. The matter

was of such importance that it was discussed at the highest levels of the

American Government. And as a result of this debate, considerable

pressure was placed on US oil companies to become involved in Iran•s oil

industry despite their reluctance to do so.

If the Court refers to Exhibit 7 to Iran's Observations, it will

find a copy of a letter dated 2S January l.954 from the Acting United

States Secretary of State to the Chairman of the Standard Oil Company of

California, which at that time, if I am correct, was the largest American

oil company, which sums up how the United States viewed the Iranian oil

situation. This was at the same time the Treaty was being negotiate~.

That letter leaves no doubt that the United States Government deemed the

participation of US oil companies in Iran's oil industry to be absolutely

essential to the security interests of the United States. Not only was

it thought that this participation would permit oil revenues to flow to

the new Iranian régime, the "friendly" Iranian régime, but it would also

contribute to protecting Western interests in the petroleum resources of

the Middle East in general.

Now the response of the American oil companies echoed the same

theme. So that when the vice-president of Standard Oil Company wrote

back to the Secretary of State, he observed that from the strictly

CR 96/l.4 - 32

commercial point of view, Standard Oil Company had no real interest in

becoming involved in Iran, but it would do so because it was conscious of

the large national security interests involved, those were the words that

he used (exhibit 7, to Iran's Observations).

Now, because the pricing mechanisms of the purchase of Iranian ail

by US companies under the Consortium Agreement would have violated

American anti-trust laws, the US Government sought a specifie anti-trust

exemption for participating companies so that they could collaborate in

the Consortium and in the development of Iran's ail industry. But as the

US national security-council noted at the time, the enforcement of

American anti-trust laws was deemed to be far less important to national

security interests of the United States when fostering development of

American companies in Iran's ail industry (Exhibit 7, p. 52 to Iran's

Observation) .

So, if it is true as the facts demonstrate, that the Treaty of Amity

was in part designed to protect US oil interests in Iran's oil industry,

then it must also be true that this was as much for strategie reasons as

commercial cnes.

*

* *

This leads me to the ether important event that affected Iran-us

relations at the time. For just as the Treaty of Amity was being

negotiated and the Consortium Agreement put into place, the United States

was also working to establish a military alliance in the region, an

alliance that came to be known as the Baghdad Pact.

As you can see from the first illustration that you will find in

your folder, the negotiation of the Baghdad Pact extended the reach of

regional security arrangements, anchored by the NATO alliance in the

CR 96/14 - 33 -

west, along virtually the entire southern flank of the Soviet Union.

These events coincided with the Berlin crisis of June 1953, the end of

the Korean War, the coming to power of a Republican administration under

President Eisenhower in Washington, and the succession to power of

Premier Kruschev in the Soviet Union - hardly a normal political

environment as Mr. Crook has sought to portray.

In April 1954, a mutual defence agreement was signed between Turkey

and Pakistan. In July 1954, negotiations comrnenced over the Treaty of

Amity. In February 1955, a further defense agreement was entered into

between Turkey and Iraq and Iran adhered to that in October 1955 thus

completing the Baghdad Pact.

And, as a matter of fact, Iran adhered ta the Baghdad Pact just two

months after it signed the Treaty of Amity. For just as the United

States was anxious to have Iran join a regional security arrangement, so

also was it intent on concluding its own Treaty of Amity with Iran ta

counter Soviet influence in the country and ta strengthen political

relations with Iran based on principles of peace and friendship. Ta the

extent that the Treaty was also expected to encourage American companies

to invest in Iran (commercial activities) this was perceived as

advantageous in that it would encourage Iranian-US interdependence and

would assist the Shah in regenerating Iran's economy, thus strengthening

his régime.

It was against this background that the Treaty of Amity came into

existence. Given the importance that Iran played in US strategie

thinking at the time, it was no accident that the Treaty of Amity

contained a separate provision not found in virtually all of the ether

United States' Friendship, Commerce and Navigation treaties: namely, the

provision that appears in the Treaty•s very first article stipulating

CR 96/14 - 34 - •.

that "there shall be firm and enduring peace and sincere friendship

between the United States of America and Iran". This particular formula

of words chosen by the parties was no accident. It was the direct

product of the historical setting in which the Treaty was signed.

And that is not to say that the protection and development of Iran's

oil industry had no commercial dimension. Clearly it did. But the

Treaty of Amity addresses both strategie and commercial matters, and oil

embodies the two. So the fact that commercial issues are also dealt with

in the Treaty hardly creates an impediment to the Court's jurisdiction in

this case, particularly when it is recalled that the oil platforms that

were attacked and destroyed by the United States were constructed for the

purpose of engaging in commercial activities and were so engaged when

they were attacked.

By stressing the supposedly "purely commercial" nature of the

Treaty, the United States really raises a false problem. At the end of

the day, the installations that the were attacked in October 1987 and

April 1988 were both strategie and commercial in nature. And they were

even linked to maritime commerce by virtue of their connection by

pipelines to storage and export facilities on Lavan and Sirri Islands

close to the Iranian mainland coast. So the dual aspect of the Treaty,

the security, peace and friendship aspect and the commercial aspect,

provides additional support for the proposition that Iran•s claims give

rise to fundamental questions of interpretation and application of the

Treaty which this Court has jurisdiction to rule on.

Mr. President, I turn now to the second part of my intervention,

which deals with the development of Iran•s off-shore oil industry,

including the platforms in question in this case.

CR 96/14 - 35 -

2. T.be àevelop.ment of Iran' s offshore industry i:ncludi:ng the platforms
i:n question

The conclusion of the Consortium Agreement and the signing of the

Treaty of Amity ushered in a new phase in the development of Iran's oil

industry. In 1957, two years after the Treaty was signed, Iran enacted a

Petroleum Act which opened up off-shore areas in Iran's continental shelf

for exploration and production by NIOC in participation with foreign oil

companies. The first off-shore agreement was signed in 1958 between NIOC

and an American oil company, AMOCO. Now, pursuant to this agreement,

four fields were discovered up here in the northern portion of the

Persian Gulf in the vicinity of Kharg Island.

This was followed, in January 1965, by the conclusion of two further

agreements between NIOC, on the one hand, and a group of oil companies

including American participants, on the ether. And these are the

agreements have a direct bearing on this case.

The first of these was a Joint Structure Agreement between NIOC and

a group headed by the Phillips Petroleum Company (American company),

pursuant to which a joint star company called IMINOCO was formed to

explore for, and exploit, petroleum resources lying further south in the

Persian Gulf. Now, it was in this area here. IMINOCO's efforts were

successful, and two significant oil fields were discovered - the Rostam

field, which was subsequently renamed Reshadat after the Revolution, and

the Rakhsh field, which is there, which was subsequently renamed Resalat

after 1979; the position of those fields within Iran's continental

shelf, which is this boundary here, can clearly be seen on the map. A

reduced version of that map is the second map in your folder. A series

of production, service and drilling platforms were constructed on both of

these fields, and commercial production began from Reshadat in 1969 and

Resalat in 1971.

CR 96/14 - 36 -

Now, I am going to place on the screen behind me a diagram of the

Reshadat and Resalat complex which is No. 3 in your folder, and with the

Court's indulgence, Mr. President, I would like to spend a few minutes

explaining how these platforms operated because this aspect of the case

has a direct bearing on the military actions that the United States took

in October 2987, because these were the installations that were attacked

on 19 October 2987. Now, as I have said, there were two main complexes,

Reshadat (R7) and Resalat (Rl), both of which consisted of three

inter-connected platforms (as a drilling platform, a service platform and

a production platform) and the two fields lay about 29 kilometres apart

from each ether. A further platform (which is labelled R4), up here,

also existed and it had drilling, service and production facilities as

well. Now, together, this series of platforms serviced a total of sorne

40 separate oil wells with a production capacity of up to 200,000 barrels

of crude oil a day - a significant commercial operation by any standard.

The only reason why this R7 platform was not producing oil in

October 2987 when it was attacked was because it had previously been

attacked by Iraqi warplanes and was in the course of being repaired. In

fact, on the day that the United States attacked the place, Iranian oil

workers were engaged in replacing a generator that had been destroyed by

the Iraqi bombardments earlier in the year.

As can be seen from the diagram, the lay-out of the facilities was

such that all of the oil produced from either Resalat, over here, or

Reshadat field here, passed through a central platform on the Reshadat

(R7) complex, before it was piped on by an undersea pipeline to the

storage and loading facilities at Lavan Island, and you will see Lavan

Island on the map that is in your folder, No. 2. So even if it was

necessary to show a link with "maritime" commerce to fall within the - 37 -

scope of Article X (l) of the Treaty of Amity, a proposition which the

United States bas advanced, but with which Iran does not agree with, and

which the language of Article X does not support - and by the way, which,

in our view, the Court in no way endorsed in the Nicaragua case - that

link nonetheless existed. These platforms were linked to loading and

storage facilities for export on Lavan Island and this can clearly be

shown on the evidence.

Because of the nature of their design, the Court will appreciate

that if the Reshadat complex was put out of action, then that would have

a knock-on effect of preventing oil pumped from Resalat over here of

being able to be shipped to the mainland because all of the Resalat

production had to pass through these platforms before being pumped on. I

mention this point because when the United States attacked these

platforms in October 1987, it concentrated its attack exclusively on

these platforms here - it did not even go after the Resalat field. The

R4 platform was not intended to be attacked but if you read the US

documents, it was spotted during the engagement and was destroyed as what

US military comrnanders called a "target of opportunity". By doing this,

by concentrating its attack on these central platforms in Reshadat, the

United States maximized the commercial damage that was inflicted on Iran,

since_production, as I have shown, was stopped from both the Reshadat and

the Resalat fields. No oil could be transmitted for export from either

field as long as the central Reshadat complex was out of action.

Mr. President, if one is trying to inflict maximum economie damage

on an adversary, this tactic makes a certain amount of sense. But when

you consider that the rationale for the United States• actions was

ostensibly to prevent the recurrence of alleged Iranian attacks against

neutral shipping, said to be emanating from these platforms, it is - 38 -

curious that the United States did not deem it necessary to destroy the

ether platforms in the complex as well, particularly those at Resalat.

On the face of it, one would have thought that it would have been equally

possible for Iran to launch so-called "attacks" from the Resalat

platforms as well, so that simply destroying the Reshadat platforms would

not solve the problem, if there really was a problem. Iran would submit

that the United States• focus on the central Reshadat platforms raises a

serious doubt as to the credibility of the United States' claims that its

actions were taken solely out of self-defence. Instead, the US attacks

had all the hallmarks of economie retaliation against Iran and certainly,

this is a plausible view of the facts, although the determination of the

issues such as these is very much a matter for the merits.

As I have mentioned, there was a second Joint Structure Agreement

signed in January 1965 which is also relevant to this case. This was

between NIOC and four US oil companies (Atlantic Refining Company, Murphy

Oil, Sun Cil and Union Oil Company of California) and these companies

formed another joint stock operation called, LAPCO, which carried out

operations which lead to the discovery of the Sassan field, which is.

right dow.n here. That field was subsequently renamed Salman - which is

what appears on your map - after the Revolution, and commercial

production started from that field in 1968.

As you can see, the Salman complex was located south of Reshadat and

Resalat and south of Lavan Island. It consisted of seven connected

platforms linked to sorne 38 wells with a production capacity of over

220,000 barrels of crude oil per day. Again, a substantial commercial

operation. A photograph of the Salman complex appears as number No. 5 in

your folder and it may give the Court an idea of the magnitude of the - 39 -

facilities that were involved. This complex was one of the installations

attacked by the US Navy in April ~988.

The ether offshore facility attacked in April ~988 was the Nasr

complex dawn here. It had been known as Sirri (after the nearby island),

that is Sirri Island there, prier to the Revolution, but it had its name

changed to Nasr. It was developed through a different set of contractual

arrangements between NIOC and the French company, Elf Aquitaine. This

field was also located within Iran's continental shelf and had a

production capacity at the time it was destroyed of roughly 100,000

barrels of crude cil per day. As the United States• own documentary

exhibits, that were attached to their preliminary objection, reveal the

Nasr platform was producing substantial quantities of crude cil when it

was destroyed.

As yeu can see from the diagram I am placing on the screen, this is

the Nasr complex, it consisted of seven multi-well platforms inter-linked

with each ether by underground pipelines. Platform A, which is this one

right in the middle, included a central production platform, a well

platform and a flare system and yeu will see that in the photograph which

appears as No. 7 in your folder, No. 6 being a reduced version of this

diagram. Once again, it was this central structure, Platform A, that was

the focus of the United States' attacks in April 1988. It is also

apparent that it was from Platform A that the cil was piped back to the

loading, storage and export facilities on Sirri Island, by virtue of an

underground pipeline, but the only difference in these facilities from

what was at stake in the Nicaragua case was the length of the pipeline.

Once again, the choice of targets by the US Navy is revealing. For

just as the oil that was produced at the Reshadat and Resalat platforms

passed through a central platform before being pumped to the export - 40 -

facilities, so also did oil produced from these seven platforms, all have

to be transferred via Platform A before making its way to Sirri Island.

Conseguently, if Platform A was knocked out of commission, as it was in

April 1988 by the United States, then no ether production from any of the

ether six platforms would have been possible, thus, again inflicting

maximum economie damage on Iran and its oil experts.

It will be a matter for the Court at the merits stage to consider

why the United States chose this central platform alone to attack, and

left the ethers untouched. But the reason why I emphasize the lay-out of

these facilities at this stage is because is sheds light on the motives

behind the United States' actions and, in our view, highlights the close

nexus that exists between Iran's claims and the individual provisions of

the Treaty. Aside from being an overtly unfriendly and unpeaceful act,

the United States' focus on the central platforms in each instance must

raise at least a legitimate issue sufficient to vest jurisdiction in the

Court as to whether that action was consistent with the United States'

obligation to Iran to guarantee freedom of commerce and navigation and to

accord fair and equitable treatment to Iran's companies and their

property.

Mr. President, that concludes the second part of my intervention,

the third and fourth parts will be somewhat shorter, but with your

permission I would suggest that, perhaps, this is the appropriate time

for the customary morning break.

The PRESIDENT: Please continue your statement until its end.

Mr. BUNDY: By 1979, each of the platforms that I have been

discussing had been producing oil in commercial quantities for several

years. The Reshadat, Resalat and Salman complexes had, in fact, been - 41 -

jointly owned as I have described by US cil companies pursuant tc

contractual arrangements which gave them a right tc a portion of the cil

produced. These contracts were scheduled tc run until roughly the end of

this century.

At the beginning of 1979, Iran underwent a fundamental political,

religious and social revolution which affected all aspects of Iranian

society. It is not necessary tc dwell at length on these matters since

they are public knowledge. Virtually all us companies departed from

Iran, and the commercial operation of the offshore oil fields which I

have described was assumed by NIOC acting alone.

Despite the fact that relations between the two countries

deteriorated, two matters during this period warrant mention at this

stage. The first is that neither Party teck any steps to terminate the

Treaty of Amity, which remained in force between the Parties - as this

Court, as well as the Iran-US Claims Tribunal, has already recognized.

The second point, is that the Parties were also able tc provide for a

mechanism for settling disputes that had arisen up through 1980 by

conclusion of the Algiers Declarations in January 1981.

One of the outcomes of the Algiers Declarations was the

establishment as everyone knows of the Iran-US Claims Tribunal. While I

do not propose tc divert this Court's attention from this case tc the

proceedings of the Tribunal, there is one aspect of those proceedings

which has a bearing on the jurisdictional issues confronting the Court

here, and which confirms the close connection that exists between the oil

platforms and the Treaty of Amity.

Following the events of 1979 and the establishment of the Tribunal,

a number of US oil companies brought claims before the Tribunal for

losses arising out of the fact that they were no longer able to operate - 42 -

in Iran under their original contractual arrangements. Amongst these

companies were the Phillips Oil Company which, I noted a few moments ago,

had been one of NIOC's partners in the Reshadat and Resalat operations,

and the four US oil companies comprising the LAPCOGroup that had made up

the foreign contingent producing oil with NIOC from the Salman field.

The claims of all of these companies were broadly similar in nature,

although the amounts ranged from hundreds of millions of dollars in the

case of the Reshadat (IMINOCO) operations to well over $ 1 billion in

connection with the Salman (LAPCO) agreement. The claimants all asked for

the value of their share of the oil from the fields that would have been

produced up until the year 2000, when the contracts were set to expire -

in other words, during and beyond the period in which the production

facilities from which that oil was supposed to be produced were attacked

and destroyed by the United States. NIOC settled all of these cases.

The practical consequence of these settlements is that the US oil

companies have all been compensated as if their contractual right to

produce oil from the platforms that had been destroyed here has been

recognized to the end of the century, while NIOC, on the ether hand, has

been deprived of the same production by virtue of the destruction of the

platforms that took place in ~987 and ~988. Whether this is "equitable

treatment" within the meaning of Article IV of the Treaty of Amity, will

be a matter for consideration at a later stage.

As part of their claims, each of the US oil companies invoked the

Treaty of Amity, particularly Article IV thereof, as providing for the

relevant standard of compensation for the Tribunal to apply. Ican

assure you, Mr. President, as someone involved in those proceedings, that

not a day of hearings went by down the hall when the US oil companies did - 43 -

not invoke the Treaty of Amity tc the offshore cil operations that are an

issue in this case.

Nor were the cil companies lacking the support of the United States

Government in making out their cases. For 1983 and l984, in anticipation

that the Tribunal would be faced with the question of whether tc apply

the Treaty of Arnity tc the cases before it, the Legal Adviser tc the

State Department, at the request of the US Congress, prepared two

memoranda supporting the applicability of the Treaty of Amity tc the cil

cases before the Tribunal. Those memoranda may be found in Exhibits 94

and 95 tc Iran's Memorial.

While there is much of interest in those documents, ·it is striking

that one of the assertions raised by the State Department in the 1983

memorandum was that Iran's conduct in allegedly ceasing cil experts from

Iran tc the United States after the Iranian Revolution violated Article X

of the Treaty of Amity, which as yeu know guarantees freedom of commerce

and navigation. This is a revelation (Exhibit 94, p. 1407 and Notes 20

and 21). Apparently, under the United States' reasoning, if Iran halted

cil experts tc the United States - including experts from the offshore

fields in issue here - then this would constitute a breach of Article X

of the Treaty of Amity. But if the United States destroys the very same

platforms that make that production possible, then this not only does not

constitute a breach according to the United States, but it does not even

give rise tc a question of interpretation and application of the Treaty

sufficient tc vest this Court's jurisdiction.

The double standards are really quite striking. When it suits its

interests, the United States has no hesitation in invoking the Treaty;

but when the tables are turned and the United States finds itself in the

position of a Respondent, its colours change and the provisions of the - 44

Treaty have no more relevance despite the fact that the very same oil

installations are involved.

In any event, Iran did not halt oil experts to the United States

after the Islamic Revolution. To the contrary, the United States

remained one of the largest purchasers of Iranian oil right up until the

time that the platforms were first attacked in October 1987. For example

on 26 October 1987, this is just one week after the US attacks on the

Reshadat complex, the White House issued a "fact sheet" documenting the

fact that US purchases of Iranian oil during the first seven months of

1987 were over $1 billion, with 600,000 barrels of oil a day, a day,

being sold to the United States during July 1987 alone (Exhibit 1 to

Iran's Observations).

Those are significant quantities of crude oil sales and they attest

to the high level of oil-related commerce that existed between the

Parties at the time the platforms were attacked. I need hardly add that

this oil was exported by tanker - in other words, by maritime commerce.

With the destruction of the platforms no further production from the

underlying fields, let alone shipments of oil to the United States or

elsewhere, was possible. Freedom of commerce - even maritime commerce -

was fundamentally impaired. Shortly afterwards, the United States

implemented a trade embargo against Iran prohibiting such sales. But at

the time the platforms were attacked, there was a substantial bilateral

trade in oil .

Mr. President, Members of the Court, Iran believes that the factual

background that I have reviewed shows very clearly that the Treaty of

Amity was designed to address beth strategie issues, such as the

obligation of peace and sincere friendship, and commerce, such as the

protection of oil and gas operations from Iran•s offshore fields. Each - 45 -

of these issues is clearly brought into play by Iran's claims, thus

demonstrating that genuine questions of interpretation and application of

the Treaty of Arnity are at issue here.

* * *

3. Background to the Attacks themselves

I would now like to turn, Mr. President, to the background events

that occurred prier to the attacks on the platforms. Ordinarily we would

not dwell on these issues because, as the United States itself admits,

they are really more properly deferred until the merits stage.

Nonetheless, the presentation of the facts that you heard on Monday

afternoon was so self-serving and selective, that sorne comment is called

for.

As to its selectivity, we find it extraordinary, as the Agent of

Iran has already indicated, that the US representatives did not refer to

perhaps the single most important fact relating to the background of the

dispute and this was the finding contained in the ~99~ Report of the

Secretary-General attributing responsibility for the Iran-Iraq conflict

on Iraq. Suffice it to recall that Iran was fully justified in adopting

measures in self-defence against Iraq's aggression. And this fact must

constantly be borne in mind in evaluating the conduct of the States

concerned which led up to the attacks on Iran's oil platforms.

The second striking aspect of the presentation made by

Commander Neubauer was his characterization of US policy with respect to

the war. In Commander Neubauer's words, "the United States desired the

war to end without victor or vanquished" (CR 96/~2, p. 25), and that

statement echoed official declarations made by the United States

Government during the war to the effect that the United States professed

to be neutral. This was an attitude which even if it had been true, - 46 -

would have ignored the fact that Iraq was the aggressor in the war and

that Iran, that was the victim of that aggression, was linked by a Treaty

of Amity to the United States.

Iran has furnished a compendium of evidence in its written pleadings

which contradicts this characterization of the US role in the war. While

I do not propose to recanvas that evidence at this juncture, let me

remind our colleagues what US Government officials themselves were saying

about the US policy of neutrality.

"The Reagan and Bush administrations supported Iraq against Iran. "

Those were the words of Henry Kissinger, the former Secretary of State

and National Security Adviser (Iran's Memorial, Exhibit 45).

"It was pretty obvious that the United States was tilting towards

Iraq." That was the conclusion of William Colby, the former Director

of the CIA (Iran's Memorial, Exhibit 51).

"We [the United States] wanted to ensure that Iran did not win the

war. In other words, we became de facto allies of Iraq. " That came

from Lawrence Korb, a former US Assistant Secretary of Defence during

the relevant period (Iran's Memorial, Exhibit 51).

There is a great deal more in the public record attesting to the

United States' support for Iraq and its predisposition to treat Iran with

hostility. And at the merits stage, evidence of this conduct will be

relevant because it will show the true purpose behind the destruction of

the platforms. And that, in turn, will show that by reference to the

actual terms of the Treaty - terms like "peace and sincere friendship",

"unreasonable measures", "fair treatment", "freedom of commerce" - that

the United States was in breach. If these Treaty concepts are to be

applied to a party's conduct, yeu cannet ignore the motive behind that

conduct and that is what gives these events their relevance. - 47 -

The third aspect of Commander Neubauer's presentation calling for

comment was his description of the "Tanker War". Although the Commander

rightly pointed out that Iraq was responsible for introducing the tanker

war to the Persian Gulf, he went on to blame Iran for interfering with

merchant shipping and for taking steps that led to the attacks on the

platforms.

Once again these allegations are all to do with the merits. For

present purposes I need only recall the words of the very influential

United States Senator, Senator Sam Nunn, who had this to say about the

Tanker War just four months before the first attack on Iran's platforms

took place in 1987. Senator NUnn stated:

"the challenges to freedom of navigation originate with
Kuwait's ally Iraq. It is difficult to justify US action
when America is indirectly protecting the interest of Iraq who
started the 'Tanker War'." (Exhibit 32 to Iran•s Memorial.)

It is also worth remembering that Kuwait, which was one of the Gulf

Co-operation Countries to which Commander Neubauer referred the ether

day, did subsequently apologize to Iran for its role during the Iran-Iraq

the war.

The final point I wish to make on these background facts concerns

the evidence that the United States claims it will produce at the merits

stage. As Iran's Agent has indicated, Iran welcomes the declaration by

the United States that it intends to appear for the merits if the case

continues, and Iran looks forward to exchanges on the evidence at that

time.

How complicated those proceedings will be remains to be seen. But

merely because significant issues of fact and law may be in dispute is

scarcely a reason for the Court to decline jurisdiction now. Iran has

every confidence that the Court is well equipped to handle issues of fact

and law, even if they are complex. - 48 -

That being said, a ward of caution should perhaps be raised with

respect to the factual allegations advanced by the United States on

Monday. We were told that the United States has "compelling" evidence on

a number of points. We were also reminded by Commander Neubauer of the

very tragic incident involving the destruction of an Iranian civilian

Airbus by and American warship, the USS Vincennes, shortly after the

second attack on Iran's oil platforms. In that incident the initial

position of the United States was also that compelling evidence existed

to show a number of things: first, that the airplane was descending in a

dive, an attacking dive on the Vincennes when it was attacked, that it

was emitting a military electronic signal rather than a civilian signal

from the aircraft itself, that it was outside its assigned air corridor

when it was shot dawn, that United States warships had not penetrated

into Iran's territorial waters when they fired the missile shooting-down

the aircraft, and that, in fact, US vessels at that time were responding

to a distress signal from a third-party merchant vessel, that allegedly

had been attacked by Iran.

Each and every one of those factual assertions was subsequently

shawn to be erroneous by United States Defense Department officiais

themselves. And I do not propose to say more about the airbus matter

because the case has been settled. But it is important to bear in mind

that what the United States says about facts cannet always be accepted at

face value without a careful examination of those facts. And that is

what we trust we will be able to pursue at the merits stage.

4. T.he Attacks on the Platfor.ms of 19 October 1987 and 18 April 1988

I now turn to the last portion of my presentation, Mr. President,

with your permission, concerning the actual attacks on the platforms of - 49 -

October ~987 and April ~988. Let me start with the attack of ~9 October

~987 on the Reshadat complex.

According to the United States, the attack on the Reshadat complex

was in response to what was alleged to be the firing of an Iranian

Silkworm missile from the Fao Peninsula that hit a US flagged merchant

vessel, the Sea Isle City, which was located just off the Kuwaiti coast

south of Kuwait City (Preliminary Objection, pp. 17-18). Now, the

following points are relevant in considering that claim. And it was an

Iranian missile that hit the Sea Isle City.

First, of course, the Fao Peninsula lies in Iraqi territory. There

was fighting there between the two countries at the time. This was Iraqi

territory.

Second, absolutely no proof has been furnished by the United States

for the allegation that it was an Iranian missile that was fired.

Third, US Government sources themselves refute the idea that Iran

had Silkworms on the Fao Peninsula from whence the missile is said to

have come. If the Court turns to illustration No. 9 in its folder, it

will see a diagram of the situation provided in an official State

Department bulletin which shows that Iran had no missiles in the area.

That diagram indicates that to the extent Iran possessed Silkworms, they

were all located near the Strait of Hormuz. Now the date of this

diagram, which has been included in Iran•s written submissions, is

October 1987, precisely the time that the United States now alleges

Iran's Silkworms were located up on the Fao Peninsula.

Fourth, the maximum range of a Silkworm, as confirmed by this State

Department map, is 85 kilometres. US weapons experts and Jane's Defence

Weekly have placed the effective range of a silkworm actually at much

lower range: usually 40 kilometres (Iran•s Observations, Annex 1, - 50 -

p. ~7). As illustration No. 10 in your folder shows, the closest point on

the Fao Peninsula to the Sea Isle City was 95 kilometres. So even on the

United States' own evidence, Iran could not have hit the Sea Isle City

with a Silkworm, if it had Silkworms in the area, which it did not.

Fifth, it is public knowledge, on the ether hand, that Iraq

possessed Silkworms, including cnes that could be launched from planes,

and which had been used against third parties earlier in the year

(Exhibit 68 to Iran's Memorial). And, of course, one should not forget

the Iraqi missile attack against the USS Stark, in which 37 American

soldiers tragically died, which illustrated the Iraqi policy of "shoot

first, identify the target later". So it was entirely piausible that the

missile attack relied on by the United States originated from Iraq. It

certainly would not have been the first time that Iraq tried to

"internationalize" the conflict, and not the last time Iraq took

aggressive measures against Kuwait.

Finally, there is the strange choice of targets by the United States

on which to mete out its revenge. For if the United States really did

consider that it was obligated to take measures out of self-defence

against Silkworm attacks, why did it not go after the missile sites

themselves? Why did it instead destroy a virtually defenceless set of

oil platforms sorne 600 kilometres away, which were in no position to put

up no resistance whatsoever? And why, as I discussed earlier, did it

concentrate only on the central platform of those facilities to the

exclusion of ethers?

On 19 October 1987, the United States launched a massive attack

against the Reshadat platform. Four of the most sophisticated destroyers

in the us Navy were deployed, together with a guided-missile cruiser, F-

14 fighters and a radar plane. The platforms had a handful of personnel - 51 -

on them who were carrying out repairs to the facilities necessitated, as

I have said, by earlier Iraqi attacks.

The personnel were given a few minutes to leave, and then firing

began. No resistance was put up. This was followed by a raiding force

from the United States warships which planted demolition charges, further

destroying the installations.

And I think it's instructive Mr. President, if I just paste-up for a

moment photographs of the platforms after their attack (11 and 12 in the

folder). As yeu can see the destruction was complete.

New, this leads me to the second series of attacks on 18 April 1988

against the Salman and Nasr platforms. The immediate precursor to this

event was the hitting of a US naval vesse!, the USS Samuel B. Roberts, by

a mine on 14 April 1988 in the Central Persian Gulf east of Bahrain

(folder No. B).

The United States has assumed the mine to be Iranian although it

never produced evidence to this effect. Four days after '· the Roberts his

the mine, United States attacked the Salman and Nasr platforms.

As described in Iran's written pleadings, the United States had in

fact been planning these military operations well before the Roberts ever

hit a mine, and they were designed to have a far wider purpose than

simply destroying the platforms in question. As the US naval commander

who led the operation has recounted, the operation - which was named

"Operation Praying Mantis" - began ten months earlier with extensive

planning in California (Exhibit 80 tc Iran's Memorial). The objectives

of the exercise, according to the US Navy, were stated tc be the

following - and, this is important - I am going to quete from an official

navy report of this incident. After the Roberts hit the mine what was

the United States Navy•s plan: - 52 -

"Sink the Iranian Saam - class frigate Sabalan or a
suitable alternative.

Neutralize the surveillance posts on the Sassan [Salman]
and Sirri [Nasr] gas/oil separation platforms and the Rahkish
Gas/cil separation platforms, if sinking a ship was not
practicable." (Ibid., p. 68.)

Note this last instruction, Mr. President. The platforms were

originally not the intended target of the US operation. The sinking of

the Iranian frigate, the Sabalan, or a suitable alternative was the main

goal. The platforms were only to be targeted "if sinking a ship was not

practicable". And not only the fact that ten months planning went into

the attacks, but also the fact that the platforms were not to be attacked

if an Iranian warship could be sunk, seriously undermine the credibility

to the US contention that it destroyed the platforms out of self-defence.

A large number of warplanes, helicopters and nine US warships were

involved in the operation, together with an aircraft carrier standing by.

The attacks on both the Salman and Nasr platforms took place

simultaneously. Once again, the Iranian personnel were given five

minutes to abandon the platforms, and in fact heavy fire from the US

warships commenced at the Salman installations even before the personnel

were able to evacuate, despite their plea to be given more time. This

was followed by the landing of marines which planted explosives on the

platforms. Once again, the Court can see photographs of the Salman and

Nasr platforms after they were attacked in its folder (Nos. ~4 and 15).

No resistance was offered by the Iranian personnel - a fact which is

not surprising given that the platforms were not military installations

and the Iranian personnel had no means to defend themselves. As the US

Commander of one of the attacks confirmed, the Nasr platform was an

active oil-producing platform when it was hit - in other words, it was a

commercial operation (Iran's Observations, Exhibit 80). - 53 -

The assault on the platforms was not the end of the engagement. The

US Navy was still on the lookout for Iranian ships which had been their

intended target in the first place. Three US warships found a lone

Iranian patrol boat, the Joshan, and it was sunk by six missiles, killing

ll Iranian sailors and injuring 33 ethers. Meanwhile, three more US

warships went after the Sabalan, but could not find it. Instead, they

discovered the Iranian frigate, the Sahand, well up the Persian Gulf in

the Strait of Hormuz, which was threatening no one. It was bombed and

sunk by US aircraft with help from nearby naval vessels. Forty-five

Iranians were killed and 87 injured. Then later the Sabalan was located

further north, and it too was bombed with still more casualties.

So there you have it, Mr. President. In one day, the United States

set out to sink one Iranian warship in reprisal for an incident that Iran

was not responsible for, but wound up destroying two sets of platforms

having an oil capacity of over 300,000 barrels of crude oil per day as

well as half of Iran's navy The US forces did not even suffer a scratch.

As was aptly summed up by the British newspaper the Guardian at the time,

"it seems as if local American Commanders were looking for a fight and

needed only the slightest pretext from the Iranians" (Exhibit 83 to

Iran•s Memorial).

* * *

5. Conclusions

Mr. President, Members of the Court. Those are sorne of the

essential facts. If it has been necessary to tackle these issues in more

detail than would ordinarily be expected during a jurisdictional hearing,

this is because there has been a need to correct the imbalance presented

by the us pleadings and to emphasize the close jurisdictional nexus that - 54 -

exists between the attacks on the platforms and the Treaty of Amity,

including the history of the Treaty.

While Iran is convinced that it can demonstrate on the merits that

the US actions constituted breaches of the Treaty of Amity, at this stage

of the proceedings it need not go sc far. The question is whether the

United States' actions give rise tc genuine questions of interpretation

and application of the Treaty. Iran submits that based on the history of

the Treaty, the development of the offshore cil platforms in issue here,

and the attacks themselves, the answer is clear. The Court has

jurisdiction.

And that concludes my remarks Mr. President. Professer Condorelli

is tc follow me, I appreciate the extra time that has been allocated to

me tc finish my presentation. Would this be an appropriate time for a

short break before Mr. Condorelli takes the floor?

The PRESIDENT: Thank yeu very much, Mr. Rodman Bundy. The hearing

is suspended for a break of 15 minutes.

TP,e Court adjourned from 1.1.50 a.m. to 12.15 p.m.

The PRESIDENT : Please be seated. I now give the floor to Professer

Luigi Condorelli tc continue the oral pleadings of Iran.

M. CONDORELLI

Introduction

Monsieur le Président, Madame et Messieurs les Juges, c'est un grand

honneur pour moi de me présenter une nouvelle fois devant votre haute

juridiction. Mon vŒu le plus sincère est de pouvoir aider la Cour à

accomplir son importante mission de régler le présent différend

conformément à la justice et au droit international. - 55 -

La tâche qui m'a été confiée est de démontrer que le différend entre

la République islamique d'Iran et les Etats-Unis, dont votre Cour est

saisie, relève bien de l'interprétation et de l'application du traité

d'amitié de 1955 entre l'Iran et les Etats-Unis (TA de 1955) et peut être

donc réglé sur sa base. Cette démonstration permettra ensuite au

prochain plaideur de la Partie iranienne, le Professeur Crawford, de

mettre en évidence que la Cour jouit de la pleine compétence pour régler

le différend au fond, conformément aux provisions du paragraphe 2 de

l'article XXI du traité d'amitié de 1955.

Mon exposé s'articulera en deux parties.

La première me permettra de présenter le traité dans son ensemble.

Je releverai d'abord qu'il s'agit d'un accord international dont il est

incontroversé qu'il est en vigueur. Je constaterai après cela que rien

ne saurait empêcher l'Iran de se prévaloir de tous les droits que le

traité lui confère, tant au moyen de ses normes matérielles que de celles

relatives au règlement des différends. Ensuite, j'identifierai les

caractéristiques générales du traité, son objet et son but, en en

analysant le texte, le préambule, ainsi que les circonstances qui ont

présidé à sa négociation et à sa conclusion. Enfin, je discuterai les

principes et méthodes à utiliser pour son interprétation.

Dans la deuxième partie de cette plaidoirie, demain matin avec votre

permission, je centrerai l'attention sur les trois articles du traité

(les articles I, IV, paragraphe 1, et X) dont l'Iran est convaincu qu'ils

sont directement pertinents afin d'évaluer l'illégalité des attaques

armées lancées par les Etats-Unis contre les plates-formes pétrolières de

la NIOC dans le golfe Persique. L'analyse permettra de constater que ces

attaques tombent effectivement dans la sphère d'application du traité,

les Etats-Unis ayant violé leurs obligations établies par les - 56 -

dispositions évoquées du traité envers l'Iran; le différend au sujet de

ces attaques, dont la Cour est saisie, porte donc justement sur

l'interprétation et l'application du traité; de ce fait, la clause

compromissoire du traité donne incontestablement à votre haute

juridiction la plénitude de la compétence pour son règlement.

PREMI:ÈRE PARTI:E

l. Le traité de 1955 était en vigueur aux moments pertinents et l'est

encore aujourd'hui

Monsieur le Président, Madame et Messieurs de la Cour, en attaquant

la première partie de ma plaidoirie, je dirai tout de suite que je

n'aurai nullement besoin de m'attarder sur la question préliminaire de

savoir si le traité d'amitié est ou non en vigueur. Il me suffit

d'observer que les Etats-Unis n'ont soulevé aucune contestation à ce

sujet, ni par écrit, ni oralement. La thèse sur laquelle les Etats-Unis

insistent tout au long de leurs plaidoiries est qu'une "reasonable

interpretation" du traité' permettrait de constater que "there is no

relationship between the Treaty and the claims contained in Iran's

Application" 2 • L'agent de la Partie adverse a parlé dans la mêmeveine

de 1' absence de "reasonable connection" {CR 96/13, p. 63) . Il est donc

évident, Madame et Messieurs les Juges, que, du fait mêmede prétendre

que le traité est inapplicable en l'espèce parce qu'il ne couvre pas la

matière objet du présent différend, les Etats-Unis admettent comme allant

de plano que par ailleurs le traité lie toujours les Parties.

Les raisons qui imposent à la Partie adverse pareille reconnaissance

sont tellement évidentes que l'on comprend aisément pourquoi nos

contradicteurs n'ont pas songé un seul instant à soutenir la thèse

1USPO, p. 32, par. 2.10.

0 USPO, p. 2, par. 4; p. 4 0,par. 3. J.S. - 57 -

contraire. C'est que depuis la révolution iranienne de 1979 la

permanence des liens conventionnels résultant du traité d'amitié de 1955

a été l'une des pièces maîtresses de la politique américaine envers

l'Iran et l'un des outils fondamentaux pour le règlement des différends

opposant les deux Parties.

En effet, dans tout le contentieux qui s'est développé entre les

Parties depuis la révolution iranienne, et notamment dans le contentieux

judiciaire, les Etats-Unis ont régulièrement fait valoir que le traité

était en vigueur, donc parfaitement applicable; et - il convient de le

souligner - ils ont toujours eu gain de cause, sans la moindre exception.

Ainsi, déjà en 1980 votre Cour leur a donné raison dans son arrêt

sur le fond de l'affaire du Personnel dip~omatique et consulaire des

Etats-Unis à Téhéran, en soulignant avec fermeté gue les dispositions du

traité «continuent à faire partie du droit applicable entre les

Etats-Unis et l'Iran» 3• Ensuite, à de très nombreuses reprises le

Tribunal des réclamations Etats-Unis/Iran a fait de même, tant avant

qu'après les faits qui sont l'objet du présent différend. Mais ce n'est

pas tout : tant avant qu'après les faits en cause, divers tribunaux

internes américains ont également reconnu que le traité est en vigueur et

qu'il continue d'être applicable dans les relations entre les parties 4 •

Une citation spécifique mérite à ce sujet la toute récente décision

du 25 avril 1996 de la United States District Court for the Southern

District of New York dans l'affaire Calgrath, qui applique une

disposition du traité pour régler un différend se rapportant à des

événements des années 1992-1995 en prenant soin d'observer que:

3
Affaire du Personnel diplomatique et consulaire des Etats-Unis à Téhéran, arrêt,
24 mai 1980, C.I.J. Recueil 1980, p. 28, par. 54.

• Mémoire de l'Iran, p. 56, par. 2.06, et note 176. - 58 -

"Although the signatories have not always lived up to the

obligations imposed by the document, the United States State
Department takes the position that the Treaty is 'in full force and
effect and (haS) not been terminated by either party ... 1 •"5

Monsieur le Président, il est extrêmement rare qu'un traité

international entre deux Etats ait formé l'objet d'un corpus

jurisprudentiel aussi fourni et cohérent, établissant sans exception sa

permanence en vigueur, et ceci malgré les tensions et les difficultés qui

ont pu caractériser les relations entre les parties pendant les derniers

temps. Et il est aussi parfaitement remarquable, que ces décisions,

toutes ces décisions, tant internationales qu'internes, ont toujours

accueilli sur cette question le point de vue officiel des Etats-Unis

d'Amérique, qui ont donc régulièrement et pleinement bénéficié - tant en

leur faveur directement qu'en faveur de leurs ressortissants - des

avantages découlant du traité.

2. Rien n'empêche l'Iran de faire valoir aujourd'hui devant la Cour tous
les droits que le traité de 1955 lui confère contre les Etats-Unis.

Il est donc indiscutable que le traité lie toujours les Parties: les

Etats-Unis ne prétendent d'ailleurs pas le contraire. Il s'ensuit

logiquement que l'Iran a le droit incontestable d'en invoquer les

dispositions à son avantage devant votre Cour.

Il convient que j'insiste sur les droits que l'Iran tire du

traité de 1955, du fait même que celui-ci est toujours en vigueur. De

toute évidence, ces droits restent intacts, même s'il est vrai qu'à un

moment donné la partie iranienne s'était efforcée de démontrer, devant le

Tribunal des réclamations Etats-Unis/Iran des différends que le traité

avait cessé d'être en vigueur à cause des violations graves dont

5
Civ.lgr5232 (MBM), Opinion Ltdand Ordernk of April 25,n ~996,Bap. S6,erus SD NY, reproduitek Agedans 95
Mealey•s International Arbitration Report, vol. ~~. Issue n° 5, p. ~-4. - 59 -

s'étaient rendus responsables les Etats-Unis dans les années 2979-2980 6•

Le Tribunal, en effet, avait réfuté la thèse iranienne, avait jugé que le

traité était resté en vigueur et avait donc consenti aux Etats-Unis de

continuer à tirer avantage de ses dispositions'. En conséquence, les

Etats-Unis ne sauraient s'opposer maintenant à ce que l'Iran bénéficie

également des droits que le traité lui accorde et qu'il exige à son tour

le respect par la Partie adverse des obligations correspondantes. Il

faut que je souligne dans ce contexte une donnée juridique importante

le préambule du traité base explicitement les relations entre les parties

sur ce qu'il appelle la "reciprocal equality of treatement".

En somme, du fait même d'être en vigueur, le traité lie également

les parties et ses dispositions doivent être respectées par chacune

d'elles de bonne foi et, j'insiste sur la formule préambulaire que je

viens de citer, "on the basis of reciprocal equality of treatement". Les

Etats-Unis, ayant toujours soutenu avec plein succès que le traité

continue d'être en vigueur, ne seraient évidemment pas recevable s'ils

prétendaient aujourd'hui le contraire devant votre Cour. Quant à l'Iran,

la thèse de !•_extinction du traité - que la partie iranienne avait jadis

avancée -n'ayant pas été retenue par la justice internationale, rien ne

saurait faire obstacle à ce qu'il retire maintenant, lui aussi, les

bénéfices découlant de l'application du mêmetraité, dont il a dû

supporter le poids sans interruption. Il va de soi que, parmi ces

bénéfices, il y a celui de pouvoir mettre en branle les procédures de

règlement des différends prévues par le traité; face à certaines

allégations de la Partie adverse prétendant que des violations du traité

d'amitié seraient imputables à l'Iran, et non pas aux Etats-Unis, il

• Iran Observations and Submission, p. 45 ss.

7 Supra, note précédente. - 60 -

convient de rappeler à toute fin utile ce que votre Cour a eu l'occasion

d'élucider en ~980 au sujet du mêmetraité, dans son arrêt sur l'affaire

du Personnel diplomatique et consulaire, c'est le paragraphe 53. Votre

Cour a dit ceci :

"De toute manière, aucune violation du traité commise par

l'une ou l'autre des parties ne saurait avoir pour effet
d'empêcher cette partie d'invoquer les dispositions du traité
relatives au règlement pacifique des différends. "8

Ce sont là des concepts juridiques de caractère élémentaire sur

lesquels il n'est pas utile d'insister encore, tant ils sont évidents.

Les Etats-Unis, d'ailleurs, se gardent bien de mettre en doute le droit

de l'Iran de tirer maintenant avantage à son tour des dispositions du

traité. Quant aux objections de la Partie adverse suivant lesquelles en

l'espèce l'invocation du traité devant vous serait tardive, je laisse sur

ce point à mon collègue le professeur Crawford le soin de les réfuter

tout à l'heure, dans le cadre de sa plaidoirie sur les aspects de

procédure de la présente affaire.

3. L'objet et le but du traité de 1955 à la l~ère des circonstances

ayant présidé à sa négociation et à sa conclusion

J'en viens maintenant au traité lui même, afin d'en identifier avant

tout les caractéristiques d'ensemble. Il s'agit là d'une question

importante, qui mérite d'être éclaircie à titre préliminaire, vu qu'elle

forme l'objet d'un désaccord fondamental entre les Parties au présent

différend.

En effet, l'Iran est convaincu que le traité a une portée bien plus

large que les seules relations strictement économiques, commerciales et

consulaires entre les Parties, puisqu'il vise également à leur imposer

Affaire du Personnel diplomatique ee consulaire des Eeaes-Unis à Téhéran, C.I.J. Recueil
1980, p. 28, par. 53). - 61 -

des obligations attenant aux relations politiques réciproques. Par

contre, la Partie adverse soutient devant la Cour que le traité serait

"purely commercial and consular"; qu'il n'aurait pour objet que des

intérêts commerciaux des ressortissants des deux pays sur le territoire

de l'autre et certaines questions consulaires; que toutes ses

dispositions seraient, encore une fois, "wholly commercial and consular",

donc inapplicables pour le règlement d'un différend portant, en

substance, sur la légalité de l'emploi de la force dans les relations

internationales.

Pourtant, le titre que les Parties ont concordé de donner au traité

est déjà un indice significatif, puisqu'il affiche que le traité ne

s'occupe pas seulement de relations économiques et de droits consulaires,

mais couvre également l' «amitié», l' "amity" c'est-à-dire les relations

amicales entre les cocontractants.

Cet indice, Monsieur le Président est remarquablement conforté par

l'analyse du préambule, préambule qui souligne avec force que le but

poursuivi par les parties en concluant le traité va bien au-delà de

l'économie, du commerce, des investissements et des relations

consulaires : les parties ont exprimé ouvertement dans le préambule

l'intention de viser plus haut et plus large, en faisant de leur traité

un instrument couvrant l'ensemble de leurs relations. En effet, le

préambule indique que l'intention à laquelle le traité répond est, en

tout premier lieu, de "emphasize", donc de consolider, renforcer,

développer les relations amicales entre les parties, ce qui de toute

évidence ne se limite pas au commerce; elles ont souhaité également

réaffirmer - je cite les mots du préambule - "the high principles in the

regulation of human affairs" (des affaires qui, me semble-t-il, ne

sauraient être entendues comme les seules affaires d'argent!) C'est - 62 -

seu~ernen après que figurent, dans le préambule, les finalités d'ordre

plus strictement économique, commercial et consu~aire.

Ces remarques concernent le but et l'objet du traité, tels qu'ils

apparaissent mis en exergue par le préambule, mais elles sont d'une

grande importance au vu du rôle primaire qu'il faut justement assigner au

préambule à fin d'identifier l'objet et le but d'un traité afin

d'interprétation, comme le consacre d'ailleurs la "Règle générale

d'interprétation" codifiée à l'article 31, alinéa 1, de la convention de

Vienne sur le droit des traités.

Il faut rappeler aussi, dans ce contexte, ce que votre Cour a

sou~igné maintes fois : il est nécessaire de prendre en considération le

préambule d'un traité international afin de déceler l'objet et le but

poursuivi par les parties contractantes et pour en interpréter les

dispositions. Ainsi, pour ne citer que deux précédents jurisprudentiels,

dans l'arrêt du 27 août 1952, dans l'affaire des Droits des

ressortissants des Etats-Unis d'Amérique au Maroc, la Cour a déclaré

qu'i~ fallait, pour interpréter les dispositions de l'acte d'Algésiras

de 1906, tenir compte des buts de ce traité, tels qu'ils sont énoncés

justement dans le préambule 9• Egalement, la Cour s'est référée au

préambule pour identifier la nature juridique et l'interprétation du

mandat de l'Afrique du Sud sur le Sud-OUest africain, dans son arrêt du

21 décembre 1962 sur les exceptions préliminaires 10•

Monsieur le Président, je n'ai pas l'intention de discuter ici la

question générale de savoir si le préambule d'un traité peut constituer à

lui seul la source d'obligations précises pour les parties; il est par

'C.I.J. Recueil 2952,p. ~96 et suiv.

" C.I.J. Recueil 2962, p. 330 et suiv. Voir aussi l'arrêt du 26 novembre ~984 dans
l'affaire des Activités militaires et paramilitaires au Nicaragua et contre celui-ci,
C.I.J. Recueil 2984, p. 428. - 63 -

contre indiscutable- selon l'enseignement de votre jurisprudence- que

le préambule est utile pour interpréter le texte du traité et pour

identifier les obligations prescrites par ses dispositions. Autrement

dit, l'Iran n'a pas prétendu et ne prétend pas maintenant que la Cour

pourrait, sur la base du seul préambule du traité, décider si les

Etats-unis ont violé ou non envers l'Iran leurs obligations

conventionnelles. En revanche, l'Iran soutient fermement qu'il y a une

parfaite correspondance entre le préambule et le texte du traité, en ce

sens que le texte reprend et traduit en obligations bien déterminées

l'ensemble des buts résultant du préambule, y compris celui relatif au

développement des relations amicales.

Il suffit d'un coup d'oeil au texte des articles du traité pour que

s'impose le constat que le traité en question n'est justement pas "purely

commercial and consular" comme le dit la Partie adverse : il faut nier

l'évidence pour ne pas voir son article premier et pour ne pas s'incliner

devant le langage parfaitement contraignant qu'il emploie lorsqu'il

prescrit que "there shall be [il ne dit pas "there should be"!] firm and

enduring peace and sincere friendship between the United States of

America and Iran". Pourtant, de par sa position prioritaire même, de par

son libellé ferme, de par sa portée large, l'article premier exprime

nettement la volonté des cocontractants de ne pas limiter la sphère

d'application du traité aux seules relations économiques, commerciales et

consulaires. Je me limite ici à cette seule observation au sujet de

l'article premier, sans anticiper sur l'examen détaillé que j'en ferai

dans la deuxième partie de ma plaidoirie, étant donné qu'il s'agit pour

le moment d'identifier exclusivement les caractéristiques d'ensemble du

traité et l'ampleur de son objet. - 64 -

Soit dit en passant, ce n'est pas seulement grâce à l'article

premier que le traité révèle sa vraie nature d'instrument conventionnel

couvrant des relations bien plus larges que celles de nature purement

commerciale. L'article II, par exemple, s'occupe de garantir, entre

autres, certains droits fondamentaux aux ressortissants de chacune des

Hautes Parties contractantes se trouvant sur le territoire de l'autre, et

ceci bien au-delà du domaine des activités économiques et commerciales

il y est question ainsi de la liberté d'association, de la liberté de

conscience et de religion, du droit de mener des activités

philanthropiques, éducatives, scientifiques, de la liberté d'information,

de communication (al. 2), ainsi que du droit de recevoir Un traitement

humain et équitable en cas d'arrestation et, plus en général, du droit de

bénéficier de la manière la plus constante de la protection et de la

sécurité (al. 4). Encore, l'article III accorde les garanties découlant

du principe du due process of law, et ceci dans tous les domaines

touchant à la vie de la personne, et non seulement en matière strictement

économique.

L'analyse que je viens de présenter a été centrée - comme il

convient- sur le texte du traité lui-même (y compris son préambule), qui

est bien évidemment décisif pour identifier sa sphère d'application. Les

éléments recueillis étayent sans l'ombre d'un doute la thèse présentée

par l'Iran et condamnent comme insoutenable, ici aussi sans l'ombre d'un

doute, la thèse des Etats-Unis relative au caractère strictement

commercial et consulaire du traité. Les choses étant donc parfaitement

claires, l'Iran n'aurait pas besoin de chercher des confirmations de sa

position dans le rappel des "circonstances dans lesquelles le traité a

été conclu", qui constituent notoirement de simples "moyens

complémentaires d'interprétation" des traités internationaux, comme - 65 -

l'exprime l'article 32 de la convention de Vienne sur le droit des

traités et comme la Cour - votre Cour - l'a rappelé à maintes occasions,

y compris tout dernièrement, dans l'arrêt du 25 février 2995, dans

l'affaire de la Délimitation maritime et des questions territoriales

entre Qatar et Bahrein, au paragraphe 40 de cet arrêt.

Toutefois, ex abundanti cautela, il est opportun de revenir

rapidement sur ce que l'Iran a déjà abondamment illustré par écrit et que

mon collègue, maître Bundy, vient de mettre au clair de façon détaillée

dans sa plaidoirie : l'analyse historique démontre parfaitement qu'en

négociant et en concluant le traité, les Etats-Unis se proposaient des

buts politiques et stratégiques d'une portée bien plus large

qu'exclusivement commerciale. Il s'agissait de mettre en place avec

l'Iran des relations spéciales, capables de l'attirer définitivement dans

l'orbite occidentale et de le soustraire à jamais à l'influence

soviétique.

L'Iran a également montré que ce contexte historique explique en

particulier pourquoi le traité contient l'article premier, obligeant les

parties contractantes à maintenir à l'avenir des relations amicales et

pacifiques : une disposition qui - comme on le verra plus tard - n'a

trouvé sa place que dans quatre traités bilatéraux d'amitié conclus par

les Etats-Unis, sur un total de plus de deux dizaines. L'Iran a souligné

en particulier, et avec force, les témoignages de source officielle

américaine indiquant que l'inclusion dans quelques-uns seulement de ces

traités bilatéraux de la clause en question n'est pas du tout "customary" - 66 -

dans la pratique conventionnelle des Etats-Unis et qu'elle a pour but de

rendre plus étroites les relations économiques entre les Etats-Unis et

les Etats concernés 11•

Ces affirmations, Monsieur le Président, ne sont pas une invention

de l'Iran : c'est le Département d'Etat des Etats-Unis d'Amérique qui les

a faites dans un document que l'Iran a produit devant la Cour, en tant

qu'annexe 10 de ses observations écrites à l'exception préliminaire des

Etats-Unis, et qui se référait au traité avec la Chine du 4 novembre 1946

(l'un des trois autres traités d'amitié dont l'article premier est le

frère jumeau de l'article premier de notre traité), un document dans

lequel tout est écrit, et il est donc - je le dis avec tout le respect -

étonnant de voir plusieurs des plaideurs de la Partie adverse s'évertuer

à affirmer, contre l'évidence probatoire, que l'article premier du traité

serait une clause de routine, qui traînerait constamment dans la plupart

des traités de ce genre .

La vérité est tout autre, Monsieur le Président : la vérité est que

les négociateurs américains avaient voulu l'inclusion dans le traité

d'amitié avec_l'Iran de cette disposition, qui est inhabituelle dans ce

genre de traités, parce qu'ils lui assignaient intentionnellement un sens

et un effet précis : celui de resserrer les liens politiques entre les

parties. Le document que je viens de citer le dit noir sur blanc: "the

inclusion of this paragraph is appropriate in view of the close political

relations between China and the United States" (c'est le document à

propos de l'accord avec la Chine). Entre autres, il résulte en

particulier des travaux préparatoires que le texte de l'article premier

du traité avec l'Iran fut proposé par les Etats-Unis et accepté par

départements od'Etattides Etats-Unisan,annexé par pl'Iranphe(pièce2~0).inVoirquaussiminfra,dumnote 39
(texte relatif) . - 67 -

l'Iran. Comment mettre en doute, face à de pareilles preuves, confortées

par les admissions explicites et officielles de la Partie adverse, que la

portée du traité d'amitié de ~955 avec l'Iran transcende les seules

relations commerciales et consulaires ?

Pourtant, les Etats-Unis essaient d'étayer contre toute

vraisemblance leur allégation suivant laquelle la portée du traité de

1955 n'irait pas au delà du domaine strictement commercial et consulaire.

Et dans leurs écritures ils ont mêmeprétendu à cette fin que l'Iran

aurait reconnu devant le Tribunal des réclamations Etats-Unis/Iran la

non-pertinence du traité au sujet des questions ayant trait à l'emploi de

la force, comme la tentative d'action de commando lancée par les

Etats-Unis en ~980 en connexion avec l'affaire du Personnel diplomatique

et consulaire des Etats-Unis à Téhéran 12• Or, l'Iran pense avoir démontré

13
dans sa plaidoirie écrite du 1er juillet 1994 que l'allégation de la

Partie adverse est erronée, puisqu'elle est basée sur une citation

amputée de la thèse iranienne de l'époque. En effet, si l'on analyse

"!•ensemble des documents de source iranienne présentés dans l'affaire

Amoco International Finance, on s'aperçoit aisément que, bien au

contraire, la partie iranienne avait soutenu devant le Tribunal que le

raid armé des Etats-Unis avait constitué une violation tellement grave du

traité de 1955, qu'il en avait engendré l'extinction. Le Tribunal avait

refusé d'admettre que le traité avait pris fin, il est donc évident que

l'Iran peut maintenant s'en prévaloir et en invoquer l'application

concernant les attaques armées américaines de 1987 et 1988 contre les

plates-formes pétrolières iraniennes puisque rien dans sa conduite

antérieure ne rend inadmissible une telle requête à votre Cour, puisque

'"USPO, p. 46, par. 3.29.

" Op. cit:.,p. 45. - 68 -

rien ne plaide dans le sens que l'Iran aurait admis devant cet autre

Tribunal que le traité n'est pas applicable dans ce genre de situations.

Je note au passage que dans leur présentation orale les plaideurs de la

Partie adverse n'ont pas repris cet argument : sans doute, la

démonstration qu'avait offerte par écrit l'Iran leur a paru convaincante.

Ce sont, Monsieur le Président, Madame et Messieurs les Juges, les

Etats-Unis en revanche qui, dans leurs exceptions préliminairesl 4,

admettent implicitement la pertinence du traité de 1955 pour évaluer des

actes d'emploi de la force! En effet, de façon incidente, la Partie

adverse accuse l'Iran d'avoir violé le principe de la liberté de

navigation (dont il est question à l'article X du traité en question), du

fait d'avoir mouiller des mines dans des eaux internationales et d'avoir

attaquer des navires marchands, au cours du conflit avec l'Iraq. Par

contre, soutient la Partie adverse, je cite : «all the action by the

United States were taken to advance freedom of navigationl 5».

Dans une phase ultérieure de la présente procédure, l'Iran aura

souhaitablement l'occasion de montrer combien, tant l'accusation lancée

contre l'Iran que l'auto-justification avancée par la Partie adverse,

sont infondées. A ce stade, il suffira de remarquer que tant l'une que

l'autre impliquent clairement la reconnaissance que le domaine

d'application du traité va bien au-delà des relations commerciales et

consulaires, puisque les Etats-Unis admettent qu'à la lumière de l'une de

ses dispositions, il est possible de qualifier de légale ou d'illégale la

force employée en l'espèce par les Etats-Unis ou l'Iran. C'est cela

exactement que l'Iran demande à votre Cour de bien vouloir dire : l'Iran

se réjouit donc de constater qu'en substance, au-delà des positions de

" Op. cie., p. so.

"Ibid., p. 49, par. 3.34. - 69 -

façade, les Etats-Unis partagent son point de vue quant à la portée large

du traité de 1955 et à son aptitude à couvrir les actes d'emploi de la

force.

Une dernière remarque à ce sujet. La thèse des Etats-Unis, que je

viens de qualifier de «position de façade», fait fi de la jurisprudence

de votre Cour qui, dans son arrêt du 27 juin 1986 dans l'affaire des

Activités militaires et paramilitaires au Nicaragua et contre celui-ci, a

décidé qu'une série d'attaques armées américaines en territoire du

Nicaragua constituaient la violation d'obligations résultant d'une

disposition du traité d'amitié entre les Etats-Unis et le Nicaragua -

l'article XIX de ce traité-là- qui est la soeur jumelle de l'article X

du traité avec l'Iran. Je reviendrai avec plus de détails sur ce point

dans la deuxième partie de ma plaidoirie, lorsque je me pencherai,

justement, sur l'interprétation de l'article X, relatif à la liberté de

commerce et de navigation. Pour l'heure, je me limiterai à relever gue

les distinguo dans lesquels s'est lancé- avec beaucoup d'habileté, il

faut le reconnaître- l'un des plaideurs de la Partie adverse,

Mr. Murphy, n'enlèvent absolument rien à l'importance et à la pertinence

de ce précédent, gui conforte incontestablement le point de vue de

l'Iran : votre jurisprudence confirme on ne peut plus nettement gue les

dispositions du traité d'amitié Iran-Etats-Unis, à l'instar de celles

identiques du traité d'amitié Etats-Unis-Nicaragua sont parfaitement

utilisables pour évaluer la légalité ou non d'actes d'emploi de la force

par une partie portant préjudice aux intérêts, protégés par le traité

d'amitié, de l'autre partie. - 70 -

4. Les principes à utiliser pour l'interprétation des dispositions du

traité de 1955

En discutant de la nature et de l'étendue des obligations découlant

du traité de 1955, j'ai déjà évoqué certains principes (ou méthodes)

d'interprétation qui sont particulièrement pertinents dans notre affaire.

C'est le cas, notamment, du principe de l'interprétation dite

«téléologique», qui demande d'apprécier la signification des dispositions

de tout accord international en tenant compte de l'objet et du but de

celui-ci {tel qu'il résulte, en particulier, du préambule). C'est le cas

aussi du recours aux «moyens complémentaires d'interprétation».

Deux autres grands principes méritent également d'être mis en

évidence à ce stade, avant d'analyser de façon ponctuelle les trois

dispositions du traité sur lesquelles se fonde la requête de l'Iran dans

la présente affaire. Il s'agit du principe dit de l'«effet utile», ou

«effectiveness» (ut res magis valeat quam pereat) et du principe de

l'interprétation dite «contextuelle», qui impose de tenir compte de tout

l'«environnement» juridique d'un traité, y compris le droit international

général, pour l'interpréter. Dans ses écritures, la Partie iranienne a

pris la liberté d'illustrer avec beaucoup de détails l'assise et la

portée de ces principes, qui jouissent d'une reconnaissance universelle

tant dans la jurisprudence que dans la doctrine 16 : de ce fait, je pourrai

me limiter ici à un rappel qui sera d'autant plus bref que la Partie

adverse ne semble, pour l'heure, vouloir en contester ni la validité, ni

la pertinence.

Le principe de l'«effet utile» est, comme l'a défini votre Cour dans

son arrêt du 3 février 1994 17, dans l'affaire du Différend territorial

10
et Mp.o42e et suiv.n, p. 72 et suiv.; Observations et (Submissions) de l'Iran, p. 23 et suiv.

17
par.ffSl.. du Différend territorial (Jamalliriya arabe libye=e/Tcb.ad), C.I.J. Recueil l.994, - 7~ -

(Jamahiriya arabe libyenne/Tchad) : «l'un des principes fondamentaux

d'interprétation des traités constamment admis dans la jurisprudence

internationale». Ce principe impose d'interpréter toute clause

conventionnelle, comme le dit l'ancienne sentence arbitrale : «so as to

give it a meaning rather than so as to deprive it of meaning» 18•

Autrement dit, en cas de doute sur l'interprétation d'une disposition

d'un traité, l'interprète doit choisir entre plusieurs sens possibles

celui qui permet d'accorder à cette disposition un effet et de lui donner

application, plutôt qu'un autre sens qui la priverait de toute utilité,

9
qui la viderait de toute portée juridiqué •

Il est tout à fait remarquable que, dans l'arrêt à peine cité de

1994, votre Cour, dans l'affaire du Différend territorial (Jamahiriya

arabe libyenne/Tchad), dans cet arrêt, le principe en question a joué

pour votre Cour un rôle essentiel dans le règlement du différend

territorial qui opposait la Libye au Tchad et qui portait justement sur

l'interprétation d'un traité d'amitié. C'est en s'en inspirant apertis

verbis de ce principe que votre Cour a décidé de choisir l'interprétation

de l'article 3 du traité d'amitié et de bon voisinage du 10 août ~955

entre la France et la Libye que prônait le Tchad. En effet, cette

interprétation donnait â l'article en question un «effet utile», alors

que l'interprétation suggérée par la Libye aurait privé «totalement»

(c'est le mot qu'utilise votre Cour) d'effet certaines parties de la

disposition 20 • J'ajoute d'ailleurs que votre Cour a raisonné de façon

très similaire encore plus récemment, dans

18
complètea dansanobservations jade l'Iran,26p. A42 . vol. 20, 1926, p. 587. Voir la citation plus

., !?our la doctrine en ce sens, voir les citations contenues dans observations de l'Iran,
p. 43, note 99.

2
° C.I.J. Recueil 1994, cit., par. 47 Cet passim) de l'arrêt. - 72 -

son arrêt du ~5 février ~995 dans l'affaire de la Délimitation maritime

et des questions territoriales entre Qatar et Bahrein 21•

Le principe de l'«effet utile» est donc une clé parfaitement fiable,

qu'il conviendra d'utiliser sans hésitation par la suite, afin

d'interpréter les articles pertinents du traité de ~955. Il en va de

mêmepour l'autre principe évoqué précédemment, suivant lequel un traité

doit être interprété à la lumière de son contexte; contexte dont fait

partie, comme le consacre l'article 3~, alinéa 3, lit. c, de la

convention de Vienne sur le droit des traités de ~969, «toute règle

pertinente de droit international applicable dans les relations entre les

parties», y compris donc, bien évidemment, le droit international général

et la Charte des Nations Unies.

Les écritures iraniennes, ici aussi, ont cité un grand nombre de

précédents jurisprudentiels et d'opinions doctrinales établissant le

caractère incontesté de ce principe 22• Au vu de l'unanimité qui règne au

sujet de la pleine validité du principe en question, il serait fastidieux

pour votre Cour que je m'attarde dans des citations qui pourraient être

fort nombreuses. Je voudrais pourtant me limiter à signaler ici deux

points.

Le premier est que, contrairement à ce que semble craindre l'un des

plaideurs de l'autre côté de la barre, M. Crook, l'Iran n'a absolument

rien à objecter au bien-fondé des remarques qu'il a présentées au sujet

de l'article 31, alinéa 3, lit. c, de la convention de Vienne sur le

droit des traités (CR 96/13, p. 20-21) . Il est indiscutable, en effet,

que cette disposition proclame exclusivement un principe d'interprétation

des traités et n'élargit d'aucune façon, en tant que telle, la compétence

21
C.I.J. Recueil J.995,p. 19, par. 35.

22Supra, note 17; voir spécialement les observations de l'Iran, p. 24·27, et notes
pertinentes. - 73 -

de votre Cour. Il est également indiscutable gue seules les règles

«pertinentes» du droit international en vigueur sont à utiliser pour

interpréter les traités. Parfaitement d'accord sur toute la ligne, M.

Crook : les Parties à la présente procédure conviennent donc -d'ailleurs

elles ne pourraient pas faire autrement - que votre Cour a la mission de

prendre en considération toute règle pertinente du droit international,

en dehors le cas échéant du traité lui-même, pour interpréter les

dispositions de celui-ci. Toutes les dispositions de celui-ci, toutes

les dispositions du traité de 1955, bien entendu : y compris, cela va de

soi, l'article I ! En somme, pour déterminer la signification de cet

article, votre Cour devra avoir recours aux règles de droit international

en vigueur entre les Parties gui sont «pertinentes» afin de déterminer ce

que veut dire "firm and enduring peace" et ce gue veut dire "sincere

friendship".

Le deuxième point, le voici il convient de rappeler gue le principe

consacré à l'article 31, alinéa 3, lit. c, de la convention de Vienne a

été appliqué à plusieurs reprises par le Tribunal des réclamations

Etats-Unis/Iran, et sur demande précise du demandeur américain, justement

à fin d'interprétation du traité qui nous intéresse ici.

Parmi les sentences pertinentes 23, celle de 1987 dans l'affaire Amoco

International Finance 2~ mérite une citation explicite. Dans ce cas, la

question de l'utilisation du droit international général afin de combler

les lacunes du traité (en l'espèce, celles de l'article IV) avait formé

l'objet d'un débat judiciaire très serré entre la partie iranienne et la

partie demanderesse, Amoco. On notera cependant que les deux parties

23
Pour les références,observations de l'Iran, p. 26, note 59.

24 Amoco International Finance Corp. v. The Islamic Republic of Iran et al., sentence
N°3~0-56-3 du 14 juillet 1987, par.88-100 (~5 Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal Reports, 1987 II,
p.189 ss.). - 74 -

concordaient pleinement quant à l'idée qu'il fallait avoir recours au

droit international général dans ce but, celui-ci devant être conçu comme

«incorporé» dans le traité de 1955 25 : il y avait cependant désaccord

concernant le contenu du droit coutumier en vigueur aujourd'hui en

matière d'expropriation d'intérêts économiques étrangers. Or, avant de

trancher le point litigieux, le Tribunal se lance dans un obiter dictum

particulièrement heureux, dans lequel on reconnait bien la griffe du

Président, le regretté Professeur Michel Virally. Cet obiter dictum

dont il ne faut pas oublier qu'il a été dicté en songeant spécifiquement

à notre traité - représente, à mon sens, la formulation la plus accomplie

et la plus satisfaisante du principe relatif à l'utilisation du droit

international général dans l'interprétation des traités internationaux.

Permettez-moi, Monsieur le Président, de citer intégralement le passage

pertinent de la sentence :

"As a lex specialis in the relations between the two
countries, the Treaty supersedes the lex generalis, namely

customary international law. This does not mean, however, that
the latter is irrelevant in the instant case. On the contrary,
the rules of customary law may be useful in arder to fill in the
possible lacunae of the Treaty, to ascertain the meaning of
undefined terms in its text or, more generally, to aid

interpretation and implementation of its provisions. "26

Monsieur le Président, Madame et Messieurs les Juges, dans la

prochaine analyse des dispositions du traité qui sont pertinentes pour le

règlement du présent différend, il faudra garder soigneusement en mémoire

ce principe, tel que l'a identifié le Tribunal des réclamations

Etats-Unis/Iran en 1987, et ce pour l'appliquer spécifiquement à notre

traité : c'est bien au droit international général qu'il faut donc avoir

recours chaque fois qu'on décèle des lacunes dans les dispositions du

25Par. 87 de la sentence.

" Paragraphe l.l.2 de lasentence . - 75 -

traité, ou chaque fois qu'on y rencontre des termes et des concepts non

précisément définis par le même traité.

Monsieur le Président, Madame et Messieurs les Juges, avec votre

permission, je voudrais interrompre ici ma plaidoirie pour la reprendre

demain matin. Merci.

Le PRESIDENT : Je vous remercie, Monsieur le professeur

Luigi Condorelli pour votre exposé. Je déclare close la séance de ce

matin et la Cour reprendra ses audiences publiques demain matin à

10 heures.

L'audience est levée à 13 h 05.

Document Long Title

Audience publique tenue le jeudi 19 septembre 1996, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix, sous la présidence de M. Bedjaoui, président

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