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d-37313House OversightOther

Dissenting Opinion Highlights Broad Immunity Granted to International Organizations Under U.S. Law

The passage outlines legal reasoning about immunity for international bodies, but offers no specific allegations, actors, or financial flows. Its investigative value is limited to understanding legal Congress granted international organizations immunity similar to foreign governments. Immunity covers both commercial and non‑commercial activities. The dissent argues that such immunity may exceed w

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #028565
Pages
1
Persons
4
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage outlines legal reasoning about immunity for international bodies, but offers no specific allegations, actors, or financial flows. Its investigative value is limited to understanding legal Congress granted international organizations immunity similar to foreign governments. Immunity covers both commercial and non‑commercial activities. The dissent argues that such immunity may exceed w

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legal-doctrineimfinternational-lawimmunityhouse-oversightun

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Cite as: 586 U.S. (2019) 7 BREYER, J., dissenting the International Monetary Fund, Art. IX, §8, Dec. 27, 1945, 60 Stat. 1413, T. I. A. S. No. 1501. UNRRA required members, absent waiver, to accord the organization “the facilities, privileges, immunities, and exemptions which they accord to each other, including ... [i]mmunity from suit and legal process.”. 2 UNRRA, A Compilation of the Resolutions on Policy: First and Second Sessions of the UNRRA Council, Res. No. 32, p. 51 (1944). And the UN Charter required member states to accord the UN “such privileges and immunities as are necessary for the fulfill- ment of its purposes.” Charter of the United Nations, Art. 105, 59 Stat. 1058, June 26, 1945, T. 8S. No. 998. These international organizations expected the United States to provide them with essentially full immunity. And at the time the treaties were written, Congress un- derstood that foreign governments normally enjoyed im- munity with respect to their commercial, as well as their noncommercial, activities. Thus, by granting international organizations “the same immunity from suit” that foreign governments enjoyed, Congress expected that international organizations would similarly have immu- nity in both commercial and noncommercial suits. More than that, Congress likely recognized that immu- nity in the commercial area was even more important for many international organizations than it was for most foreign governments. Unlike foreign governments, inter- national organizations are not sovereign entities engaged in a host of different activities. See R. Higgins, Problems & Process: International Law and How We Use It 98 (1994) (organizations do not act with “‘sovereign author- ity,” and “to assimilate them to states ... is not correct’). Rather, many organizations (including four of the five I mentioned above) have specific missions that often require them to engage in what U.S. law may well consider to be commercial activities. See infra, at 12. Nonetheless, under the majority’s view, the immunity of

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