US withdrawal from 1955 friendship treaty with Iran ‘legal evidence’ against Washington

The U.S. contentious move of
withdrawing from a 63-year-old friendship treaty with Iran could be used as a
legal evidence against Washington at the international courts.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo censured the Hague-based International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling,
which eases some U.S. sanctions on Iran, describing the ruling as “absurd. In
return, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Gholam Hossein Dehqani said that U.S.
withdrawal has no impacts on the ICJ ruling and its execution.
The ICJ will start on Monday
a four-day consideration into a complaint filed by Tehran against Washington
over violating the friendship deal via “illegally confiscating” $2 billion of
Iranian Central Bank assets in the U.S.
The withdrawal came as a
response to the court ruling. On Wednesday, the ICJ ruled that the U.S. has to
lift the sanctions on Iranian humanitarian aid, medical, food goods and
aviation safety.
“U.S. withdrawal is not a
surprising move as it had previously withdrawn from the 2015 nuclear deal with
Iran, and from other international treaties” professor and expert of the
Iranian affairs in Faculty of Arts at Menoufya University Nourhan Ahmed Nour
told al-Marjie.
“It was not the first time as
U.S. withdrew twice from international treaties following ICJ rulings against
its interests. One was during Reagan’s administration on a complaint filed by
Nicaragua in 1984, and the second was in 2005 when the George W. Bush
administration lost a case filed by Mexico,” she said.
The U.S. move means a
rejection to the court ruling. Despite that the ICJ initial ruling is
binding, It has no authority to carry out it.
“The United States, which
consistently defends the rules of international law, has abandoned this
approach when it contradicts its interests,” she added.
National Security Adviser
John Bolton has played a major role in this move as he considered that
globalization restricts US sovereignty. So the US has to be away from the
United Nations bodies and international organizations, including the
International Court of Justice, Nour said.
Iranian newspapers wrote the
ICJ ruling is a slap in the US face, she continued, adding that the court
ruling has good influence on the Iranian diplomacy and foreign policies.
The expert did not rule out
that Tehran could escalate its crackdown on individuals have links with the
U.S., saying that the Tehran-Washington differences are endless.