USA TODAY US Edition

US ends pact with Iran after UN court ruling

Tehran had used treaty to object to sanctions

- Hjelmgaard reported from London Kim Hjelmgaard and Deirdre Shesgreen

“This is a decision that is, frankly, 39 years overdue.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo

WASHINGTON – Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Wednesday that the United States is canceling a relatively obscure but decades-old economic treaty with Iran after a sanctions-related ruling by the United Nations’ highest court.

Before the second phase of Washington’s reimpositi­on of sanctions on Iran next month over its nuclear program, the U.N. Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ), based in the Hague, Netherland­s, ordered President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to lift any punitive measures that affect Tehran’s imports of humanitari­an goods and products and services linked to civil aviation safety. The ruling was provisiona­l.

Iran challenged the U.S. sanctions in a case filed in July on the grounds that they violate the 1955 Treaty of Amity, an agreement covering economic relations and some reciprocal consular rights.

“This is a decision that is, frankly, 39 years overdue,” Pompeo said in a news briefing in Washington. He said Iran tried to interfere with the “sovereign rights of the United States” by going to the ICJ. “Iran is abusing the ICJ for political and propaganda causes,” he said. He said Iran’s claims to the court are “absurd.”

Washington has long insisted that its sanctions do not target humanitari­an goods or services, but the sanctions it imposed on Iran after Trump pulled out of a nuclear deal with Tehran and world powers in May restrict Iran’s ability to use the internatio­nal banking system – that, in turn, has affected its imports of essential medicines and consumer goods. It has also pressured internatio­nal companies operating in the Middle Eastern country. Many have wound down their operations in recent months.

In its judgment, the court said Washington must “remove, by means of its choosing, any impediment­s arising from” the reimpositi­on of sanctions that affect exports to Iran of medicine and medical device; food and agricultur­al commoditie­s; and spare parts and equipment necessary to ensure the safety of civil aviation.

Iran has an aging civilian aircraft fleet for which it’s unable to acquire spare parts, and it has seen numerous airplane crashes in recent years.

Richard Goldberg, a senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a Washington-based research institute, said the “U.S. sanctions already have a humanitari­an exemption for food, medicine and agricultur­e commoditie­s – an exemption the mullahs (Iran’s religious leaders) often use to make money on the black market while denying the Iranian people access to humanitari­an goods.”

The next installmen­t of U.S.-sponsored sanctions on Iran is due Nov. 4. It will target Iran’s lucrative oil industry. Sanctions reinstated in August clamped down on Iran’s access to U.S. dollars, its car industry and trading in some commoditie­s.

Neither Wednesday’s ruling nor the terminatio­n of the treaty is likely to have significan­t impact on the Trump administra­tion’s implementa­tion of the sanctions.

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice’s rulings are legally binding, but the court has no power to enforce them.

Pompeo escalated his criticism of Iran’s role in Iraq, saying Iran was to blame for a recent mortar attack near the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and a rocket attack on the U.S. Consulate in Basra. The State Department announced last week it would close the Basra facility.

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