Application instituting proceedings

Document Number
7211
Document Type
Date of the Document
Document File
Document

General List No. 90

INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE

APPLICATION

INSTITUTING PROCEEDINGS

filed in the Registry of the Court

on 2 November 1992

OIL PLATFORMS

(ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN v. UNITED STATES

OF AMERICA)

__________

I. THE AGENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN TO THE REGISTRAR OF
THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE

Embassy of the
Islamic Republic of Iran

Agent Bureau
The Hague

IN THE NAME OF GOD

11 Aban 1371,
2 November 1992.

On behalf of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and in accordance with Article 40, paragraph 1, of
the Statute of the Court, I have the honour to notify the Court that the Islamic Republic is
hereby presenting an Application instituting proceedings against the Government of the

United States of America concerning the interpretation and application of provisions of the
Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights between the United States ofAmerica and Iran which was signed in Tehran on 15 August 1955 and entered into force on
16 June 1957.

As indicated in the Application, in accordance with Article 40 of the Rules of Court, the
Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran informs the Court that its Agent will be the

undersigned and that the address for service to the Agent is the Agent Bureau of the Embassy
of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Waldeck Pyrmontkade 872, 2518 JS The Hague.

(Signed) Ali H. Nobari,

Agent of the Government of
the Islamic Republic of
Iran.

I hereby certify the authenticity of the above signature.

(Signed) Mohsen Sharif Khodaee,
Chargé d'affaires of the

Islamic Republic of Iran
to the Netherlands.

__________

II. APPLICATION INSTITUTING PROCEEDINGS

IN HIS EXALTED NAME

I have the honour to refer to Article XXI (2) of the Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and

Consular Rights between the United States of America and Iran which was signed in Tehran
on 15 August 1955 and entered into force on 16 June 1957 (the "Treaty of Amity") [284
UNTS 93, II Recueil des traités bilatéraux 69, 8 UST 899, TIAS No. 3853]. Under the
jurisdiction thereby conferred upon the Court, I hereby submit on behalf of the Government of
the Islamic Republic of Iran, in accordance with Article 40 (1) of the Statute of the Court and
Article 38 (1) of the Rules of Court, an Application instituting proceedings against the
Government of the United States of America in the following case.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTSThis case arises out of the attack and destruction of three offshore oil production complexes,
owned and operated for commercial purposes by the National Iranian Oil Company, by
several warships of the United States Navy on 19 October 1987 and 18 April 1988,
respectively. As will be described below, these acts constitute a fundamental breach of
various provisions of the Treaty of Amity and international law.

On 19 October 1987, an attack was launched by four US guided-missile destroyers, the
Young, Hoel, Kidd and Leftwich, against the Iranian oil platforms Result and Reshadat, owned
and operated by the National Iranian Oil Company in the Persian Gulf.

The Resalat and Reshadat platforms are located in the continental shelf and exclusive
economic zone of the Islamic Republic. They form part of a larger series of oil installations

involving more than 100 producing wells and platforms essential to the Iranian commercial
oil industry.

On 19 October 1987, a radio warning was issued by the US naval forces of the attack, with
the information to personnel on the platform that firing would begin in 20 minutes. At 1400
hours, the US vessels began their attack using 5-inch guns, the largest naval artillery in the

Persian Gulf at the time. The attack lasted for 90 minutes, and over 1,000 rounds of
ammunition were used.

As a result of the attack, one platform was completely obliterated, and the other was 90 per
cent destroyed. This resulted in the complete stoppage of oil production from the underlying
oilfields to date.

In statements made after the incident, the United States sought to justify the attack as a
"lawful exercise of the right of self-defense", and as a "measured response'' to an alleged
Iranian attack against the reflagged Kuwaiti tanker Sea Isle City said to have been launched
from the Fao Peninsula along the northern stretches of the Persian Gulf.

In subsequent submissions, the Islamic Republic will show that these allegations are devoid of
any factual or legal merit. For present purposes' however, it is important to note that as a

victim of an imposed war, and having been subject to 8 years of attacks by Iraqi forces on its
oil installations and commercial shipping, the Islamic Republic of Iran was fully entitled to
take all measures to protect itself from the aggressor State, and to verify that war contraband
was not being shipped to Iraq in violation of the laws of neutrality.

In such circumstances, the attack on these platforms constituted an unjustifiable violation of

the applicable principles and rules of international law and the Treaty of Amity.

On the morning of 18 April 1988, and after only 5 minutes' warning to the oil workers on the
platforms, US forces attacked another series of oil installations in the Persian Gulf owned and
operated by the National Iranian Oil Company causing serious damage and killing one
civilian worker and injuring seven others.

One of the installations attacked was the Nasr production platform located in the continental
shelf and exclusive economic zone of the Islamic Republic, off the Iranian island of Sirri. As
a result of the attack, the central Nasr platform was destroyed and a near-by platform
seriously damaged. Both platforms remain out of operation to date.Simultaneously, on 18 April 1988, US forces also attacked the Salman complex. Platforms
associated with the Salman Field are located in the continental shelf and also in the exclusive
economic zone of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The main platform was destroyed and remains
out of operation to date.

In the statements made after the incident, the United States sought to justify the attacks, again,
as "necessary" and "proportionate" "self-defence" in response to an alleged Iranian attack
against USS Samuel B. Roberts that had struck a mine and had been damaged at
approximately 60 miles east of Bahrain in the Persian Gulf, four days earlier on 14 April
1988. The United States has also subsequently attempted to characterize the NIOC oil
platforms as "legitimate" "military targets in the Persian Gulf which have been used for
attacks against non-belligerent shipping in the international waterways of the [Persian] Gulf".

The Islamic Republic has denied both allegations and will show in the subsequent
submissions that they are devoid of any factual or legal merit, and are irrelevant to the hostile
actions of the United States. If USS Samuel B. Roberts had struck a mine it was wrong to
attribute this to the Islamic Republic when, as well known to the United States, Iraq was the
main source of mine laying in the Persian Gulf and the Islamic Republic frequently used its
minesweeping vessels to clear the area. Moreover, it is obvious that the NIOC oil platforms

had no means of defence or no military value, and, in particular had no role in the damaging
of the USS Samuel B. Roberts.

In such circumstances, the attack on these platforms also constituted an unjustifiable violation
of the applicable principles and rules of international law and the Treaty of Amity.

II. THE JURISDICTION OF THE COURT AND THE NATURE
OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC'S CLAIMS

Article 36 (1) of the Statute of the Court provides in the relevant part that the Court's
jurisdiction

"comprises all cases which the parties refer to it and all matters specially
provided for in the Charter of the United Nations or in treaties and conventions
in force".

The Islamic Republic and the United States are both Members of the United Nations, and thus

parties to the Statute which forms an integral part of the Charter (under Article 92 of the
Charter).

With respect to the reference made in Article 36 (1) of the Statute to matters specially
provided for in treaties and conventions in force, Iran and the United States are both parties to
the Treaty of Amity, which has been in force throughout the period relevant to this dispute.
Article XXI (2) of the Treaty of Amity provides:

"Any dispute between the High Contracting Parties as to the interpretation or
application of the present Treaty, not satisfactorily adjusted by diplomacy,
shall be submitted to the International Court of Justice, unless the High Contracting Parties agree to settlement by some other pacific means." [A copy
of the Treaty of Amity is attached to this Application.]

In the light of the facts recounted above, and as will be more fully developed in a subsequent
stage of the proceedings, the Islamic Republic submits that the United States has breached

both the letter and spirit of several provisions of the Treaty of Amity. In particular, the Islamic
Republic's claims arise out of the following specific provisions of the Treaty of Amity:

(a) Article I of the Treaty, which provides that:

"There shall be firm and enduring peace and sincere friendship between
the United States of America and Iran."

By its actions in assisting the Government of Iraq in its war efforts against Iran, in adopting a
threatening and provocative position vis-à-vis Iran with the deployment of substantial naval
and air forces just off the shores of the Islamic Republic, and in attacking and destroying
Iranian entities and oil installations, the United States has breached the obligations set out in
Article I of the Treaty.

(b) Article X (1 ) of the Treaty, which provides that:

"Between the territories of the two High Contracting Parties there shall
he freedom of commerce and navigation."

By its actions in assisting the Government of Iraq in its war efforts, in threatening and

provoking the Islamic Republic with the deployment of US forces in the region, and in
attacking and destroying Iranian entities and the oil installations referred to here, the United
States has gravely interfered with the commerce and navigation of the Islamic Republic and
has thus violated the provisions of Article X (1) of the Treaty.

(c) In addition to the above, the actions of the United States taken against the

Islamic Republic have violated the spirit and purpose of the Treaty.

The conduct calf the United States throughout the period referred to above demonstrates very
clearly that there is a dispute between the Parties, and that such dispute unquestionably relates
to the interpretation and application of the Treaty of Amity as to which the Islamic Republic
maintains the United States has violated several key provisions [With respect to the
compromissory clause of the Treaty of Amity, Article XXI (2), it is appropriate to bear in

mind that the United States has previously stressed to this Court that the clause was purposely
kept very broad "precisely because the United States wanted to avoid any narrowing of the
jurisdictional provision". See, Memorial of the United States in the case concerning United
States Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran (United States of America v. Iran), I.C.J.
Pleadings, p. 153, fn. 14.].

It is also apparent that the dispute is not one which has been satisfactorily adjusted by

diplomacy. While Article XXI (2) of the Treaty of Amity does not provide that the failure of
negotiation is a prerequisite to recourse to the Court, it is nonetheless clear that the positions
of the Parties vis-à-vis the incidents are so diametrically opposed to each other that
adjustment by diplomacy, even if the Parties enjoyed diplomatic relations which they do not,
would have been neither practical nor possible.In this connection, on 7 July 1992 the Director of the Islamic Republic's Bureau of
International Legal Services raised the issue of the destruction of the platforms with his US
counterpart, the Legal Adviser to the Department of State and, by declaring the readiness and
willingness of the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran to negotiate the dispute already
defined under the provisions of the Treaty of Amity, sought compensation. After reverting to

his Government for instructions, on 13 August 1992, the Legal Adviser to the Department of
State responded that the United States was not willing to negotiate the issue. When on 15
October 1992 again the Islamic Republic raised the matter with the United States, the US
Legal Adviser denied any possibility for its negotiation by his Government.

Accordingly, the Islamic Republic submits that the requirements of Article XXI (2) of the
Treaty of Amity for submitting a dispute to the Court are fully met and that the Court

therefore has jurisdiction to rule on the Islamic Republic's claims.

III. JUDGMENT REQUESTED

On the basis of the foregoing, and while reserving the right to supplement and amend these
submissions as appropriate in the course of further proceedings in the ease, the Islamic
Republic respectfully requests the Court to adjudge and declare as follows:

(a) that the Court has jurisdiction under the Treaty of Amity to entertain the
dispute and to rule upon the claims submitted by the Islamic Republic;

(b) that in attacking and destroying the oil platforms referred to in the
Application on 19 October 1987 and 18 April 1988, the United States breached
its obligations to the Islamic Republic, inter alia, under Articles I and X (1) of
the Treaty of Amity and international law;

(c) that in adopting a patently hostile and threatening attitude towards the
Islamic Republic that culminated in the attack and destruction of the Iranian oil

platforms, the United States breached the object and purpose of the Treaty of
Amity, including Articles I and X ( 1), and international law;

(d) that the United States is under an obligation to make reparations to the
Islamic Republic for the violation of its international legal obligations in an
amount to be determined by the Court at a subsequent stage of the proceedings.

The Islamic Republic reserves the right to introduce and present to the Court in
due course a precise evaluation of the reparations owed by the United States;
and

(e) any other remedy the Court may deem appropriate.

The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran has designated the undersigned as its Agent

for the purposes of these proceedings. All communications relating to this case should be sent
to the Agent Bureau of the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Waldeck Pyrmontkade
872, 2518 JS The Hague.

Date 2 November 1992 Respectfully submitted,

(Signed) All H. NOBARI,

Agent of the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran.

__________

Attachment

[The following texts are taken from the United Nations,
Treaty Series, Vol. 284, pp. 93-137. [Note by the Registry]]

No. 4132

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND IRAN
TREATY OF AMITY, ECONOMIC RELATIONS,
AND CONSULAR RIGHTS.
SIGNED AT TEHRAN, ON 15 AUGUST 1955

Official texts: English and Persian*.

[*not reproduced on website]

Registered by the United States of America on 20 December 1957.

__________

No. 4132. TREATY OF AMITY, ECONOMIC RELATIONS, AND CONSULAR
RIGHTS
BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
AND IRAN. SIGNED AT TEHRAN, ON 15 AUGUST 1955

[Came into force on 16 June 1957, one month after the day of exchange of the instruments of
ratification at Tehran on 16 May 1957, in accordance with article XXIII.]The United States of America and Iran, desirous of emphasizing the friendly relations which
have long prevailed between their peoples, of reaffirming the high principles in the regulation
of human affairs to which they are committed, of encouraging mutually beneficial trade and
investments and closer economic intercourse generally between their peoples, and of
regulating consular relations, have resolved to conclude, on the basis of reciprocal equality of

treatment, a Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights, and have appointed
as their Plenipotentiaries:

The President of the United States of America:

Mr. Selden Chapin, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of
the United States of America at Tehran; and

His Imperial Majesty, the Shah of Iran:

His Excellency Mr. Mostafa Samiy, Under Secretary of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs;

Who, having communicated to each other their full powers found to be in due form, have
agreed upon the following articles:

Article I

There shall be firm and enduring peace and sincere friendship between the United States of
America and Iran.

Article II

1. Nationals of either High Contracting Party shall be permitted, upon terms no less favorable
than those accorded to nationals of any third country, to enter and remain in the territories of
the other High Contracting Party for the purpose of carrying on trade between their own

country and the territories of such other High Contracting Party and engaging in related
commercial activities, and for the purpose of developing and directing the operations of an
enterprise in which they have invested, or in which they are actively in the process of
investing, a substantial amount of capital.

2. Nationals of either High Contracting Party within the territories of the other High
Contracting Party shall, either individually or through associations, and so long as their

activities are not contrary to public order, safety or morals: (a) be permitted to travel therein
freely and reside at places of their choice; (b) enjoy freedom of conscience and the right to
hold religious services; (c) be permitted to engage in philanthropic, educational and scientific
activities; and(d) have the right to gather and transmit information for dissemination to the
public abroad, and otherwise to communicate with other persons inside and outside such
territories. They shall also be permitted to engage in the practice of professions for which they
have qualified under the applicable legal provisions governing admission to professions.

3. The provisions of paragraphs 1 and 2 of the present Article shall be subject to the right of
either High Contracting Party to apply measures which are necessary to maintain public order,
and to protect public health, morals and safety, including the right to expel, to exclude or to
limit the movement of aliens on the said grounds.4. Nationals of either High Contracting Party shall receive the most constant protection and
security within the territories of the other High Contracting Party. When any such national is
in custody, he shall in every respect receive reasonable and humane treatment; and, on his
demand, the diplomatic or consular representative of his country shall without unnecessary
delay be notified and accorded full opportunity to safeguard his interests He shall be promptly

informed of the accusations against him, allowed all facilities reasonably necessary to his
defense and given a prompt and impartial disposition of his case.

Article III

1. Companies constituted under the applicable laws and regulations of either High Contracting
Party shall have their juridical status recognized within the territories of the other High

Contracting Party. It is understood, however, that recognition of juridical status does not of
itself confer rights upon companies to engage in the activities for which they are organized.
As used in the present Treaty, " companies " means corporations, partnerships, companies and
other associations, whether or not with limited liability and whether or not for pecuniary
profit.

2. Nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party shall have freedom of access to
the courts of justice and administrative agencies within the territories of the other High
Contracting Party, in all degrees of jurisdiction, both in defense and pursuit of their rights, to
the end that prompt and impartial justice be done. Such access shall be allowed, in any event,
upon terms no less favorable than those applicable to nationals and companies of such other
High Contracting Party or of any third country. It is understood that companies not engaged in
activities within the country shall enjoy the right of such access without any requirement of

registrar on or domestication.

3. The private settlement of disputes of a civil nature, involving nationals and companies of
either High Contracting Party, shall not be discouraged within the territories of the other High
Contracting Party; and, in cases of such settlement by arbitration, neither the alienage of the
arbitrators nor the foreign situs of the arbitration proceedings shall of themselves be a bar to
the enforceability of awards duly resulting therefrom.

Article IV

1. Each High Contracting Party shall at all times accord fair and equitable treatment to
nationals and companies of the other High Contracting Party, and to their property and
enterprises; shall refrain from applying unreasonable or discriminatory measures that would
impair their legally acquired rights and interests; and shall assure that their lawful contractual

rights are afforded effective means of enforcement, in conformity with the applicable laws.

2. Property of nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party, including interests in
property, shall receive the most constant protection and security within territories of the other
High Contracting Party, in no case less than that required by international lain Such property
shall not be taken except for a public purpose, nor shall it be taken without the prompt

payment of just compensation. Such compensation shall be in an effectively realizable form
and shall represent the full equivalent of the property taken; and adequate provision shall have
been made at or prior to the time of taking for the determination and payment thereof.3. The dwellings, ounces, warehouses, factories and other premises of nationals and
companies of either High Contracting Party located within the territories of the other High
Contracting Party shall not be subject to entry or molestation without just cause. Official
searches and examinations of such premises and their contents, shall be made only according
to law and with careful regard for the convenience of the occupants and the conduct of

business.

4. Enterprises which nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party are permitted
to establish or acquire, within the territories of the other High Contracting Party, shall be
permitted freely to conduct their activities therein, upon terms no less favorable than other
enterprises of whatever nationality engaged in similar activities. Such nationals and
companies shall enjoy the right to continued control and management of such enterprises; to

engage attorneys, agents, accountants and other technical experts, executive personnel,
interpreters and other specialized employees of their choice; and to do all other things
necessary or incidental to the effective conduct of their affairs.

Article V

1. Nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party snail be permitted, within the
territories of the other High Contracting Party: (a) to lease, for suitable periods of time, real
property needed for their residence or for the conduct of activities pursuant to the present
Treaty; (b) to purchase or otherwise acquire personal property of all kinds; and (c) to dispose
of property of all kinds by sale, testament or otherwise. The treatment accorded in these
respects shall in no event be less favorable than that accorded nationals and companies of any
third country.

2. Upon compliance with the applicable laws and regulations respecting registration and other
formalities, nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party shall be accorded
within the territories of the other High Contracting Party effective protection in the exclusive
use of inventions, trade marks and trade names.

Article VI

1. Nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party shall not be subject to the
payment of taxes, fees or charges within the territories of the other High Contracting Party, or
to requirements with respect to the levy and collection thereof, more burdensome than those
borne by nationals, residents and companies of any third country. In the case of nationals of
either High Contracting Party residing within the territories of the other High Contracting
Party, and of nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party engaged in trade or

other gainful pursuit or in non-profit activities therein, such payments and requirements shall
not be more burdensome than those borne by nationals and companies of such other High
Contracting Party.

2. Each High Contracting Party, however, reserves the right to: (a) extend specific tax
advantages only on the basis of reciprocity, or pursuant to agreements for the avoidance of

double taxation or the mutual protection of revenue; and (b) apply special requirements as to
the exemptions of a personal nature allowed to non-residents in connection with income and
inheritance taxes.3. Companies of either High Contracting Party shall not be subject, within the territories of
the other High Contracting Party, to taxes upon any income, transactions or capital not
attributable to the operations and investment thereof within such territories.

Article VII

1. Neither High Contracting Party shall apply restrictions on the making of payments,
remittances, and other transfers of funds to or from the territories of the other High
Contracting Party, except (a) to the extent necessary to assure the availability of foreign
exchange for payments for goods and services essential to the health and welfare of its people,
or (b) in the case of a member of the International Monetary Fund, restrictions specifically
approved by the Fund.

2. If either High Contracting Party applies exchange restrictions, it shall promptly make
reasonable provision for the withdrawal, in foreign exchange in the currency of the other High
Contracting Party, of: (a) the compensation referred to in Article 1V, paragraph 2, of the
present Treaty, (b) earnings, whether in the form of salaries, interest, dividends, commissions,
royalties, payments for technical services, or otherwise, and (c) amounts for amortization of

loans, depreciation of direct investments and capital transfers, giving consideration to special
needs for other transactions. If more than one rate of exchange is in force, the rate applicable
to such withdrawals shall be a rate which is specifically approved by the International
Monetary Fund for such transactions or, in the absence of a rate so approved, an effective rate
which, inclusive of any taxes or surcharges on exchange transfers, is just and reasonable.

3. Either High Contracting Party applying exchange restrictions shall in general administer

them in a manner not to influence disadvantageously the competitive position of the
commerce, transport or investment of capital of the other High Contracting Party in
comparison with the commerce, transport or investment of capital of any third country; and
shall afford such other High Contracting Party adequate opportunity for consultation at any
time regarding the application of the present Article.

Article VIII

1. Each High Contracting Party shall accord to products of the other High Contracting Party,
from whatever place and by whatever type of carrier arriving, and to products destined for
exportation to the territories of such other High Contracting Party, by whatever route and by
whatever type of carrier, treatment no less favorable than that accorded like products of or
destined for exportation to any third country, in all matters relating to: (a) duties, other
charges, regulations and formalities, on or in connection with importation and exportation;

and (b) internal taxation, sale, distribution, storage and use. The same rule shall apply with
respect to the international transfer of payments for imports and exports.

2 Neither High Contracting Party shall impose restrictions or prohibitions on the importation
of any product of the other High Contracting Party or on the exportation of any product to the
territories of the other High Contracting Party, unless the importation of the like product of, or

the exportation of the like product to, all third countries is similarly restricted or prohibited.

3. If either High Contracting Party imposes quantitative restrictions on the importation or
exportation of any product in which the other High Contracting Party has an important
interest: (a) It shall as a general rule give prior public notice of the total amount of the
product, by quantity or value, that may be imported or exported during a
specified period, and of any change in such amount or period; and

(b) If it makes allotments to any third country, it shall afford such other High

Contracting Party a share proportionate to the amount of the product, by
quantity or value, supplied by or to it during a previous representative period?
due consideration being given to any special factors affecting the trade in such
product.

4. Either High Contracting Party may impose prohibitions or restrictions on sanitary or other
customary grounds of a non-commercial nature, or in the interest of preventing deceptive or

unfair practices, provided such prohibitions or restrictions do not arbitrarily discriminate
against the commerce of the other High Contracting Party.

5. Either High Contracting Party may adopt measures necessary to assure the utilization of
accumulated inconvertible currencies or to deal with a stringency of foreign exchange.
However, such measures shall deviate no more than necessary from a policy designed to

promote the maximum development of non-discriminatory multilateral tirade and to expedite
the attainment of a balance-of-payments position which will obviate the necessity of such
measures.

6. Each High Contracting Party reserves the right to accord special advantages: (a) to products
of its national fisheries, (b) to adjacent countries in order to facilitate frontier tragic, or (c) by
virtue of a customs union or free trade area of which either High Contracting Party, after

consultation with the other High Contracting Party, may become a member. Each High
Contracting Party, moreover, reserves rights and obligations it may have under the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade [See United Nations, Treaty Series, Vol. 284, p. 76, footnote
2.], and special advantages it may accord pursuant thereto.

Article IX

1. In the administration of its customs regulations and procedures, each High Contracting
Party shall:(a) promptly publish all requirements of general application affecting importation
and exportation; (b) apply such requirements in a uniform, impartial and reasonable manner;
(c) refrain, as a general practice, from enforcing new or more burdensome requirements until
after public notice thereof; (d) provide an appeals procedure by which prompt and impartial
review of administrative action in customs matters can be obtained; and (e) not impose greater
than nominal penalties for infractions resulting front clerical errors or from mistakes made in

good faith.

2. Nationals and companies of either High Contracting Party shall be accorded treatment no
less favorable than that accorded nationals and companies of the other High Contracting
Party, or of any third country, with respect to all matters relating to importation and
exportation.

3. Neither High Contracting Party shall impose any measure of a discriminatory nature that
hinders or prevents the importer or exporter of products of either country from obtaining
marine insurance on such products in companies of either High Contracting Party. Article X

1. Between the territories of the two High Contracting Parties there shall be freedom of
commerce and navigation.

2. Vessels under the flag of either High Contracting Party, and carrying the papers required by
its law in proof of nationality, shall be deemed to he vessels of that High Contracting Party
both on the high seas and within the ports, places and waters of the other High Contracting
Party.

3. Vessels of either High Contracting Party shall have liberty, on equal terms with vessels of
the other High Contracting Party and on equal terms with vessels of any third country, to

come with their cargoes to all ports, places and waters of such other High Contracting Party
open to foreign commerce and navigation. Such vessels and cargoes shall in all respects be
accorded national treatment and most-favored-nation treatment within the ports, places and
Raters of such other High Contracting Party; but each High Contracting Party may reserve
exclusive rights and privileges to its own vessels with respect to the coasting trade, inland
navigation and national fisheries.

4. Vessels of either High Contracting Party shall be accorded national treatment and most-
favored-nation treatment by the other High Contracting Party with respect to the right to carry
all products that may be carried by vessel to or from the territories of such other High
Contracting Party; and such products shall be accorded treatment no less favorable than that
accorded like products carried in vessels of such other High Contracting Party, with respect
to:(a) duties and charges of all kinds, (b) the administration of the customs, and (c) bounties,

drawbacks and other privileges of this nature.

5. Vessels of either High Contracting Party that are in distress shall be permitted to take
refuge in the nearest port or haven of the other High Contracting Party, and shall receive
friendly treatment and assistance.

6. The term "vessels", as used herein, means all types of vessels, whether privately owned or

operated, or publicly owned or operated; but this term does not, except with reference to
paragraphs 2 and 5 of the present Article, include fishing vessels or vessels of war.

Article XI

1. Each High Contracting Party undertakes (a) that enterprises owned or controlled by its

Government, and that monopolies or agencies granted exclusive or special privileges within
its territories, shall make their purchases and sales involving either imports or exports
affecting the commerce of the other High Contracting Party solely in accordance with
commercial considerations, including price, quality, availability, marketability, transportation
and other conditions of purchase or sale; and (b) that the nationals, companies and commerce
of such other High Contracting Party shall be afforded adequate opportunity, in accordance
with customary business practice, to compete for participation in such purchases and sales.

2. Each High Contracting Party shall accord to the nationals, companies and commerce of the
other High Contracting Party fair and equitable treatment, as compared with that accorded to
the nationals, companies and commerce of any third country, with respect to: (a) the
governmental purchase of supplies, (b) the awarding of government contracts, and (c) the saleof any service sold by the Government or by any monopoly or agency granted exclusive or
special privileges.

3. The High Contracting Parties recognize that conditions of competitive equality should be
maintained in situations in which publicly owned or controlled trading or manufacturing

enterprises of either High Contracting Party engage in competition, within the territories
thereof, with privately owned and controlled enterprises of nationals and companies of the
other High Contracting Party. Accordingly, such private enterprises shall, in such situations,
be entitled to the benefit of any special advantages of an economic nature accorded such
public enterprises, whether in the nature of subsidies, tax exemptions or otherwise. The
foregoing rule shall not apply, however, to special advantages given in connection with: (a)
manufacturing goods for government use, or supplying goods and services to the Government

for government use; or (b) supplying at prices substantially below competitive prices, the
needs of particular population groups for essential goods and services not otherwise
practically obtainable by such groups.

4. No enterprise of either High Contracting Party, including corporations, associations, and
government agencies and instrumentalities, which is publicly owned or controlled shall, if it
engages in commercial, industrial, shipping or other business activities within the territories

of the other High Contracting Party, claim or enjoy, either for itself or for its property,
immunity therein from taxation, suit, execution of judgment or other liability to which
privately owned and controlled enterprises are subject therein.

Article XII

Each High Contracting Party shall have the right to send to the other High Contracting Party
consular representatives, who, having presented their credentials and having been recognized
in a consular capacity, shall be provided, free of charge, with exequaturs or other
authorization.

Article XIII

1. Consular representatives of each High Contracting Party shall be permitted to reside in the
territory of the other High Contracting Party at the places where consular officers of any third
country are permitted to reside and at other places by consent of the other High Contracting
Party. Consular Officers and employees shall enjoy the privileges and immunities accorded to
officers and employees of their rank or status by general international usage and shall be
permitted to exercise all functions which are in accordance with such usage; in any event they
shall be treated, subject to reciprocity, in a manner no less favorable than similar officers and

employees of any third country.

2. The consular offices shall not be entered by the police or other local authorities without the
consent of the consular officer, except that in the case of fire or other disaster, or if the local
authorities have probable cause to believe that a crime of violence has been or is about to be
committed in the consular office, consent to entry shall be presumed. In no case shall they

examine or seize the papers there deposited.

Article XIV1. All furniture, equipment and supplies consigned to or withdrawn from customs custody for
a consular or diplomatic office of either High Contracting Party for official use shall be
exempt within the territories of the other High Contracting Party from all customs duties and
internal revenue or other taxes imposed upon or by reason of importation.

2. The baggage, effects and other articles imported exclusively for the personal use of
consular officers and diplomatic and consular employees and members of their families
residing with them, who are nationals of the sending state and are not engaged in any private
occupation for gain in the territories of the receiving state, shall be exempt from all customs
duties and internal revenue or other taxes imposed upon or by reason of importation. Such
exemptions shall be granted with respect to the property accompanying the person entitled
thereto on first arrival and on subsequent arrivals, and to that consigned to such officers and

employees during the period in which they continue in status.

3. It is understood, however, that; (a) paragraph 2 of the present Article shall apply as to
consular officers and diplomatic and consular employees only when their names have been
communicated to the appropriate authorities of the receiving state and they have been duly
recognized in their official capacity; (b) in the case of consignments, either High Contracting
Party may, as a condition to the granting of exemption, require that a notification of any such

consignment be given, in a prescribed manner; and (c) nothing herein authorizes importations
specifically prohibited by law,

Article XV

1. The Government of either High Contracting Party may, in the territory of the other, acquire,

own, lease for any period of time, or otherwise hold and occupy, such lands, buildings, and
appurtenances as may be necessary and appropriate for governmental, other than military,
purposes. If under the local law the permission of the local authorities must be obtained as a
prerequisite to any such acquiring or holding, such permission shall be given on request.

2. Lands and buildings situated in the territories of either High Contracting Party, of which the
other High Contracting Party is the legal or equitable owner and which are used exclusively

for governmental purposes by that owner, shall be exempt from taxation of every kind,
national, state, provincial and municipal, other than assessments levied for services or local
public improvements by which the premises are benefited.

Article XVI

1. No tax or other similar charge of any kind, whether of a national, state, provincial, or
municipal nature, shall be levied or collected the territories of the receiving state in respect of
the official emoluments, salaries, wages or allowances received (a) by a consular officer of
the sending state as compensation for his consular services, or (b) by a consular employee
thereof as compensation for his services at a consulate. Likewise, consular officers and
employees, who are permanent employees of the sending state and are not engaged in private
occupation for gain within the territories of the receiving state, shall be exempt from all taxes

or other similar charges, the legal incidence of which would otherwise fall upon such officers
or employees.

2. The preceding paragraph shall not apply in respect of taxes and other similar charges upon:
(a) the ownership or occupation of immovable property situated within the territories of thereceiving state; (b) income derived from sources within such territories (except the
compensation mentioned in the preceding paragraph); or (e) the passing of property at death.

3. The provisions of the present Article shall have like application to diplomatic offers and
employees, who shall in addition be accorded all exemptions allowed them under general

international usage

Article XVII

The exemptions provided for in Articles XIV and XVI shall not apply to nationals of the
sending state who are also nationals of the receiving state, or to any other person who is a
national of the receiving state, nor to persons having immigrant status who have been lawfully

admitted for permanent residence in the receiving state,

Article XVIII

Consular officers and employees are not subject to local jurisdiction for acts done in their
official character and within the scope of their authority No consular offer or employee shall

be required to present his official files before the courts or to make declaration with respect to
their contents.

Article XIX

A consular officer shall have the right within his district to: (a) interview, communicate with,
assist and advise any national of the sending state; (b) inquire into any incidents which have

occurred affecting the interests of any such national; and (e) assist any such national in
proceedings before or in relations with the authorities of the receiving state and, where
necessary, arrange for legal assistance to which he is entitled. A national of the sending state
shall have the right at all times to communicate with a consular officer of his country and,
unless subject to lawful detention, to visit him at the consular office.

Article XX

1. The present Treaty shall not preclude the application of measures:

(a) regulating the importation or exportation of gold or silver;

(b) relating to fissionable materials, the radio-active by-products thereof, or the

sources thereof;

(c) regulating the production of or traffic in arms, ammunition and implements
of war, or traffic in other materials carried on directly or indirectly for the
purpose of supplying a military establishment; and

(d) necessary to fulfill the obligations of a High Contracting Party for the
maintenance or restoration of international peace and security, or necessary to
protect its essential security interests.

2. The present Treaty does not accord any rights to engage in political activities.3. The stipulations of the present Treaty shall not extend to advantages accorded by the
United States of America or its Territories and possessions, irrespective of any future change
in their political status, to one another, to the Republic of Cuba, to the Republic of the
Philippines, to the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands or to the Panama Canal Zone.

4 The provisions of Article II, Paragraph 1, shall be construed as extending to nationals of
either High Contracting Party seeking to enter the territories of the other High Contracting
Party solely for the purpose of developing and directing the operations of an enterprise in the
territories of such other High Contracting Party in which their employer has invested or is
actively in the process of investing a substantial amount of capital: provided that such
employer is a national or company of the same nationality as the applicant and that the
applicant is employed by such national or company in a responsible capacity.

Article XXI

1. Each High Contracting Party shall accord sympathetic consideration to, and shall afford
adequate opportunity for consultation regarding, such representations as the other High
Contracting Party may make with respect to any matter affecting the operation of the present

Treaty.

2 Any dispute between the High Contracting Parties as to the interpretation or application of
the present Treaty, not satisfactorily adjusted by diplomacy, shall be submitted to the
International Court of Justice, unless the High Contracting Parties agree to settlement by some
other pacific means.

Article XXII

1. The present Treaty shall replace the following agreements between the United States of
America and Iran:

(a) the provisional agreement relating to commercial and other relations,
concluded at Tehran May 14, 1928, [De Martens, Nouveau Rccueil général de

Traités, troisième série, tome XXX, p. 885.] and

(b) the provisional agreement relating to personal status and family law,
concluded at Tehran July 11, 1928. [De Martens, Nouveau Rccueil général de
Traités, troisième série, tome XXV, p. 58.]

2. Nothing in the present Treaty shall be construed to supersede any provision of the trade
agreement and the supplementary exchange of notes between the United States of America
and Iran, concluded at Washington April 8, 1943. [United Nations, Treaty Series, Vol. 106, p.
155.]

Article XXIII

1. The present Treaty shall be ratified, and the ratifications thereof shall be exchanged at
Tehran as soon as possible.2. The present Treaty shall enter into force one month after the day of exchange of
ratifications. It shall remain in force for ten years and shall continue in force thereafter until
terminated as provided herein.

3. Either High Contracting Party may, by giving one year's written notice to the other High

Contracting Party, terminate the present Treaty at the end of the initial ten-year period or at
any time thereafter.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Treaty and
have affixed hereunto their seals.

DONE in duplicate, in the English and Persian languages, both equally authentic, at Tehran
this fifteenth day of August one thousand nine hundred fifty-five, corresponding with the
twenty-third day of Mordad one thousand three hundred and thirty four.

Selden Chapin Mostafa Samiy

[seal] [seal]

__________

Document file FR
Document
Document Long Title

Application instituting proceedings

Links