MEMORANDUM OPINION
Agrоcomplect AD, the plaintiff in this civil suit, seeks $47,000,000 in compensatory damages from the Republic of Iraq for the alleged breach of a construction contract entered into by the plaintiff and the defendant in the early 1980s (the “Contract”). 1 First Amended Complaint at 11 (the “Amended Complaint” or “Am. Compl.”). The plaintiff further requests that the Court enter an order directing the parties to arbitrate its breach of contract claim in the first instance pursuant to the terms of the Contract. Id. Currently before the Court is the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Complaint (the “Def. Mot”) and the Plaintiffs Motion for Leave to Conduct Limited Discovery on Motion to Dismiss First Amended Complaint (the “PI. Discovery Mot.”). After carefully reviewing the Amended Complaint, the parties’ motions, and all memo-randa relevant thereto, 2 the Court concludes that it must grant, the defendant’s motion to dismiss and deny the plaintiffs discovery motion as moot for the reasons that follow.
I. Background
The following facts are either alleged or incorporated by reference in the plaintiffs Amended Complaint. ■ The plaintiff “is a corporation organized under the laws of the Republic of Bulgaria.” Am. Compl. ¶2. At some point in 1984, 3 the plaintiff *18 entered into the Contract with the defendant, whereby the plaintiff agreed “to perform work, inter alia, on the Hilla-Diwаni-ya 4 Land .Reclamation Project for the State Organization for Land Reclamation [the ‘Project’], operating under the authority of Iraq’s Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation of the Republic of Iraq.” Id. ¶¶ 4-5. The construction work awarded to the plaintiff by the Contract covered “102,-000 donum,” 4 which were “divided initially into [eight] zones.” Id. ¶ 10. A ninth zone was later added. Id.
As reflected in a document attached to the Contract entitled “Memorandum No. 2,” Contract at 248-51 (the “Mem. No. 2”), 5 payment to the plaintiff was to be made in the form of “monthly certificates” redeemable in part in Iraqi dinars (45%) and in part in United States dollars (55%), Mem. No. 2 ¶¶ 11(B), 14-15. Memorandum No. 2 specified that the defendant would make a down payment equal to eight percent of the contract price in three installments, id. ¶ 11(A), which would then be deducted “from the Iraqi [d]inar portion of the monthly certificates,” id. ¶ 11(B). It further provided that the dollar portion of the contract price could be transferred abroad by the plaintiff for various uses, “including payment for the personnel engaged in the Project’s execution, in accordance with the minutes of the Extraordinary Session [of the] Iraqi-Bulgarian Joint Committee for Economic, Scientific[,] and Technical Cooperation, signed on January 13, 1983[,] in Baghdad, Republic of [Iraq].” Id. ¶ 15.
The minutes referenced in Memorandum No. 2 appear to reflect a financing arrangement between the Bulgarian Foreign Trade Bank (the “Bulbank”), the national bank for the People’s Republic of Bulgaria (“Bulgaria”), and the Central Bank of Iraq (the “CBI”) reached at a session held by the Bulgarian-Iraqi Joint Committee for Economic, Scientific, and Technical Cooperation (the “Joint Committee”) whereby the Bulbank would finance the dollar portion of the contract price pursuant to certain “deferred payment arrangements agreed upon” by the defendant and Bulgaria. Def. Mem., Ex. D (Agreed Minutes of the Fifteenth Regular Session of the Bulgarian-Iraqi Joint Committee for Economic, Scientific!,] and Technical Cooperation) (the “Fifteenth Session Minutes”) at 2; see also Mem. No. 2 ¶¶ 15-16 (referencing this arrangement), Ministry Letter at 1 (same). 6 “The uti- *19 li[z]ed credit principle amount [would] be repaid in [four] equal yearly installments,” with five percent interest on the principle to be paid within three months “following its charging.” Mem. No. 2 ¶ 16(B).
The plaintiff commenced work on the Project on March 12, 1985. Am. Compl. ¶ 11. “[T]o perform under the terms of the Contract, [the p]laintiff ... enter[ed] into agreements with suppliers and others in the United States.” Id. ¶ 8. The plaintiff completed work on the Project zone-by-zone, handing over each zone to the Iraqi governmеnt upon completion. Id. ¶ 11. “By August 2, 1990, eight zones were completed and handed over.” Id. ¶ 12.
The defendant invaded Kuwait on August 2,1990, id. ¶ 13, leading to an international embargo that lasted from August 6, 1990, through 2003, id. ¶ 14. At some point in January of 1991, “[the p]laintiffs machinery, production base, and camp facilities were destroyed by the American military as a consequence of the [defendant’s] invasion and occupation of Kuwait.” Id. ¶ 15. As alleged in the Amended Complaint, the plaintiff suffered contract losses totaling approximately $17,000,000, the loss of tangible property totaling approximately $38,000,000, third-party expenses totaling approximately $188,000, and loss of business reputation totaling approximately $483,000. Id. ¶ 17.
Based on the defendant’s failure to “pay to [the p]laintiff the sums due and owing under the Contract,” id. ¶ 18, or enter into arbitration pursuant to the terms of the Contract, id. ¶ 19, the plaintiff “timely exhausted its claims under the Contract to the United Nations Compensation Commission (the ‘UNCC[ ]’),” id. ¶21. On March 19, 1999, the UNCC awarded the plaintiff $150,790 “for the cost of air evacuation of 368 company employees and 56 family members.” Id. ¶22. Thereafter, the plaintiff pursued the balance of its claim before the Iraqi Debt Reconciliation Office (the “IDRO”), which was established by the interim Iraqi government “for the expressed purpose of resolving certain debts on certain pre-established terms, including discounts and structured payment schedules.” Id. ¶23. The IDRO “rejected certain of [the plaintiffs [c]laims as outside of its jurisdiction,” id. ¶25, but agreed to pay $7,505,203.20 “on certain of [the p]laintiff s claims, plus accrued interest at the IDRO rate,” id. ¶ 26. The IDRO then reduced its award “to 10.25% of the total amount of the claim plus interest,” resulting in a net payment of $1,761,875.12. Id.
The plaintiff filed its initial complaint with this Court on January 23, 2007. After the defendant filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs complaint under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) and the plaintiff filed a motion for limited jurisdictional discovery, the plaintiff filed its Amended Complaint on July 16, 2007, thereby rendering both motions moot. The defendant filed its motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint on August 6, 2007, once again citing Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). The plaintiff filed its new motion for leave to take jurisdictional discovery on September 13, 2007.
The defendant seeks to dismiss the Amended Complaint on two grounds. First, it argues that the Court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over this dispute under the doctrine of sovereign immunity as codified in the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1330, 1391, 1441, 1602-11 (2001) (the “FSIA” or the “Act”). Def. Mem. at 1-3, 7-22; Def. Reply at 1-16. Second, the defendant argues that the plaintiff has failed to state a claim for which relief can be provided because (1) the plaintiffs complaint must be referred to arbitrаtion in the first in *20 stance, Def. Mem. at 23-24; Def. Reply at 16, (2) the plaintiffs suit is barred by the applicable statute of limitations, Def. Mem. at 24-26; Def. Reply at 16, 18-23, and (3) the plaintiff has released its claims against the defendant by participating in the IDRO process, Def. Mem. at 24, 26-29; Def. Reply at 16, 23-25. In raising this last argument, the defendant relies heavily on documents generated as part of the IDRO review process. Def. Mem. at 26-29; Def. Reply at 23-25.
The plaintiff argues in its opposition to the defendant’s motion to dismiss that this suit falls within two of the statutory exceptions to a foreign nation’s sovereign immunity provided by the FSIA: the exception for actions, based upon a foreign nation’s commercial activity outside the United States that has a “direct effect” within the United States set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2), PI. Opp’n at 4-5, 10-20, and the exception in § 1605(a)(6) for actions brought to enforce an arbitration agreement capable of enforcement in the United States, id. at 5, 20-24. 7 The plaintiff further argues that the defendant’s timeliness argument cannot be resolved on a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), id. at 25-31, and that the plaintiffs release of any claims in the IDRO process was a limited one that does not cover the claims at issue in this suit,, id. at 32^1. The plaintiff also seeks discovery with respect to its “direct effect” argument on the issue of sovеreign immunity and with respect to the defendant’s affirmative defenses. PI. Discovery Mem. at 4-6.
The parties agree that the defendant’s affirmative defenses of timeliness and release should be addressed in arbitration in the first instance, but they arrive at different results based on this conclusion. The plaintiff asserts that the Court should enter an order directing the parties to arbitrate their dispute pursuant to the terms of the Contract. PI. Opp’n at 24-25. The defendant, on the other hand, argues that the Contract’s arbitration clause requires dismissal of the plaintiffs suit because the plaintiff has not made a demand on the defendant for arbitration. PI. Reply at 16. Under either approach, the defendant’s arguments regarding timeliness and release cannot be considered by the Court at this time because the parties have not yet attempted to resolve those defenses through the arbitration process.
See
Def. Mem. at 23 (“Even if the Court had subject matter jurisdiction under the FSIA, ... it could not reach the [defendant’s] alternate grounds for dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), but rather would be required to refer the matter, to arbitration.... ”); PI. Opp’n at 25 (“issues other than the ‘[ Jbasie question of whether the parties have agreed to arbitrate the dispute [¶]... ] including allegations, of waiver, delay, or like defenses, аre for the arbitrators to decide’ ” (quoting
Walnut Street Sec., Inc. v. Lisk,
*21 II. Standard of Review
As the Court previously noted, the defendant seeks to dismiss the Amended Complaint under both Rule 12(b)(1) and Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. “Rule 12(b)(1) presents a threshold challenge to the [C]ourt’s jurisdiction, whereas 12(b)(6) presents a ruling on the merits with res judicata effect.”
Al-Owhali v. Ashcroft,
Broadly speaking, there are two types of Rule 12(b)(1) motions. “A facial challenge attacks ‘the factual allegations of the complaint’ that are contained on ‘the face of the complaint,’.while a factual challenge is addressed to the underlying facts contained in the complaint.”
Al-Owhali,
III. Legal Analysis
Given the parties’ agreement that the defendant’s affirmative defenses of timeliness and release must be arbitrated before they can be raised in this Court, the only issues remaining before the Court are (1) whether the Court has subject-matter ju *22 risdiction over the plaintiffs suit and (2) whether, based on the allegations in the plaintiffs Amended Complaint, the Court must order the parties to attend arbitration or dismiss this suit based on the plaintiffs failure to demand arbitration. The Court’s first obligation is to determine whether it has subject-matter jurisdiction in this case. The question of subject-matter jurisdiction, in turn, depends upon whether the defendant is entitled to invoke sovereign immunity under the FSIA.
“The FSIA provides the sole basis for obtaining jurisdiction ovеr a foreign state in federal court.”
Permanent Mission of India to the United Nations v. City of New York,
- U.S. -, -,
The plaintiff contends that the Court has subject-matter jurisdiction in this case based on the second and sixth exceptions to the FSIA. These provisions state that (a) A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of courts of the United States or of the States in any case&emdash;
(2) in which the action is based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state; or upon an act performed in the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere; or upon an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States;
(6) in which the action is brought, either to enforce an agreement made by the foreign state with or for the benefit of a private party to submit to arbitration all or any differences which have arisen or which may arise between the parties with respect to a defined legal relationship, whether contractual or not, concerning a subject matter capable of settlement by arbitration under the laws of the United States, or to confirm an award made pursuant to such an agreement to arbitrate, if (A) the arbitration takes place or is intended to take place in the United States, (B) the agreement or' award is or may be governed by a treaty or other international agreement in force for the United States calling for the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards,
(C) the underlying claim, save for the agreement to arbitrate, could have been brought in a United States court under this section or section 1607, or
(D) paragraph (1) of this subsection is otherwise applicable_
28 U.S.C. §§ 1605(a)(2), 1605(a)(6).
The plaintiff first contends that the Court has subject-matter jurisdiction over
*23
this dispute pursuant to the third clause of § 1605(a)(2), PL Opp’n at 4, 10-20, which “allow[s] for jurisdiction where an action ‘is based ... upon an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States,’ ”
Nelson,
A. “Direct Effect” Exception
The “FSIA’s commercial activity exception provides that a foreign state is not immune from suit in a U.S. court if its challenged act is ‘based upon ... an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States.’ ”
Rong v. Liaoning Province Gov’t,
The defendant does not dispute that its agreement with the plaintiff to enter into the Contract constitutes “commercial activity” within the meaning of § 1605(a)(2). Rather, it asserts that the “plaintiff has identified no ‘act’ by [the defendant] that caused a direct effect in the United Statеs within the meaning of well-established FSIA jurisprudence.” Def. Mem. at 8. The plaintiff responds that it has identified three such effects: (1) that “payment was to be made at least in part by and through banking institutions in the United States,” PI. Opp’n at 11 (citing Am. Compl. ¶¶ 30-40); (2) that “goods and services to be provided pursuant to the Contract were to be supplied in part by commercial entities in the United States,” id. (citing Am. Compl. ¶ 29); and (3) that “the construction projects became foreseeable targets of opportunity and necessity for the United States military,” id. (citing Am. Compl. 1141).
*24
The plaintiffs first proffered “direct effect;”
i.e.,
that “payment was to be made at least in part by and through and into banking institutions in the United States,” Am. Compl. ¶ 30, implicates the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Weltover.
In that case, the Republic of Argentina and its central bank (collectively “Argentina”) “instituted a foreign exchange insurance contract program (FEIC), under which Argentina effectively agreed to assume the risk of currency depreciation in cross-border transactions involving Argentine borrowers.”
Weltover,
“When the Bonods began to mature in May [of] 1986, Argentina concluded that it lacked sufficient foreign exchange to retire them,” so it “unilaterally extended the time for payment and offered bondholders substitute instruments as a means of rescheduling the debts.”
Id.
at 610,
Upon review of the Second Circuit’s af-firmance, the Supreme Court held that the Argentine government’s unilateral rescheduling of payments on the Bonods had a “direct effect” on the United States.
Weltover,
Barely two years after
Weltover
was decided, a three-judge panel of the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals held in
Goodman Holdings v. Rafidain Bank,
Following
Weltover
and
Goodman Holdings,
other members of this Court have uniformly concluded that there “is no direct effect unless payment was ‘supposed’ to have been made in the United States.”
Global Index, Inc. v. Mkapa,
*26 Measured against this standard, the plaintiffs allegation that “payment was to be made at least in part by and through and into banking institutions in the United States,” Am. Compl. ¶ 30, fails to adequately state a “direct effect” in the United States because it omits the required element that the Contract (including Memorandum No. 2, the Minstry Letter, and the Fifteenth Session Minutes) or a subsequent arrangement entered into by the parties either require or give the party receiving the payment discretion to require thаt payment be made “through and into” United States banks. Instead, the plaintiff relies upon two financing agreements between Bulgaria and the defendant which provide for “the execution of all development projects in Iraq awarded to Bulgarian [organizations on the principle of deferred payments.” Def. Mem., Ex. E (Banking Arrangement No. (1)) at 1; see also Def. Mem., Ex. F (Banking Arrangement No. (3)) at 1-2 (memorializing agreement whereby “all payments due or which will fall due to the Bulgarian side in Convertible Currency during 1986” would be paid in part through “[djeferred payments” bearing five percent simple interest). These agreements required the CBI to repay the credit extended by Bulgaria “by crediting the account of [the Bulbank] [w]ith Credit [L]yonnais, New York, under telex advice to the [Bulbank].” Banking Arrangement No. (1) at 4; see also Banking Arrangement No. (3) at 4-5 (“On the respective maturity dates, [the CBI] shall credit the [accounts of [the Bulbank] with Credit Lyonnaise, New[ ]York”).
Banking Arrangement No. (1) and Banking Arrangement No. (3) arose out of the seventeenth Joint Committee session, not the fifteenth session referenced in Memorandum No. 2. See Banking Arrangement No. (1) at 1 (implementing the “seventeenth [r]egular [s]ession” of the Joint Committee); Banking Arrangement No. (3) at 1 (same). As the defendant correctly points out, this means that these documents could not havе been incorporated into the Contract through Memorandum No. 2 (indeed, they were not in existence when the parties signed the Contract). See Def. Mem. at 12-13 (noting that Banking Arrangement No. (1) and Banking Arrangement No. (3) “are not referenced in the Contract at all” (emphasis added)); Def. Reply at 8 (“[The p]laintiff offers no explanation why these later agreements between [the] CBI and [the Bulbank] apply to the Contract, and its assumption that they do is speculation.”). Moreover, at least one of the banking arrangements appears to cover contracts that would conclude in 1986 or 1987, whereas the Contract between the plaintiff and the defendant stretched into 1990. See Banking Arrangement No. (1) at 1 (“The credits which the Bulgarian party shall grant to the Iraqi party shall cover ... the contracts to be concluded ... [f]rom 1st Jan. 1986 until 31st Dec. 1987.”); Am. Compl. ¶ 12 (alleging that as of August 9, 1990, eight out of nine zones making up the Project “were completed and handed over”).
But even if the Court were to conclude that the banking arrangements applied to the payments to be made to the plaintiff *27 for work performed on the Contract, that conclusion would not advance the plaintiffs position in the slightest. Banking Arrangement No. (1) reflects an agreement between Bulgaria аnd the defendant for Bulgaria to “finance the execution of all development projects in Iraq awarded to Bulgarian [organizations” by granting the defendant “credits” that would “cover 100% [of the] value of the foreign exchange currency portion” of contracts to be completed between 1986 and 1987. Id. at 1. Banking Arrangement No.. (3) reflects a similar arrangement for “all existing [c]i-vilian and special [blanking [arrangements and [cjommercial [c]ontracts,” under which 50% of the amounts “due to the Bulgarian side in [Convertible Currency during 1986” would “be paid in accordance with relevant Contracts and [blanking [arrangements,” and the other 50% would “be paid one year from the dates of maturity in accordance with relevant contracts and [blanking [a]rrangements.” Banking Arrangement No. (3) at 1-2. In other words, Banking Arrangement No. (1), like the earlier banking arrangement referenced in Memorandum No. 2, memorializes a financing arrangement between Bulgaria and the defendant whereby the Bulbank would advance the CBI credit to cover the foreign currency component of all Iraqi construction contracts with Bulgarian companies, and Banking Arrangement No. (3) memorializes a refinancing arrangement between the same two countries that would permit the defеndant to defer half of the amount due to the Bulbank in 1986 for one year.
Read collectively, these documents indicate that any payments to be made in the Bulbank’s Credit Lyonnaise account in New York City were owed to Bulgaria as the creditor of the defendant, not to the plaintiff. Bulgaria, in turn, agreed to “cover” the defendant’s obligations to Bulgarian companies like the plaintiff with respect to the United States dollar portion of the contract price. The defendant remained liable to Bulgarian companies only with respect to the Iraqi component of the contract price, which could be used “solely in Iraq, and with no right to transfer [the Iraqi dinar] to another country or currency[ ] whatsoever.” Mem. No. 2 ¶ 14. At no point was the defendant under any obligation to pay the plaintiff in the United States.
The plaintiff cites
Commercial Bank of Kuwait v. Rafidain Bank and Central Bank of Iraq,
*28
At best,
Commercial Bank
could be read to suggest that a missed payment that is “supposed” to be made to a plaintiffs agent in the United States may satisfy the “direct effect” requirement of § 1605(a)(2). It does not, as the plaintiff urges, remotely'suggest that
any
payment owed to
any
entity in the United States satisfies that test. Such a result is foreclosed in breach of contract suits by the plain language of § 1605(a)(2), which excepts from the defense of sovereign immunity “aetion[s]” that are
“based ... upon
an act ... in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state ... and that act causes a direct effect in the United States.” (Emphasis added.) As the Supreme Court explained in
Nelson,
the phrase “based upon” in § 1605(a)(2) “is read most naturally to mean those elements of a claim that, if proven, would entitle a plaintiff to relief under his theory of the case.”
Nelson,
The Court recognizes that another member of this Court has concluded that “the plain language of [the] FSIA does not limit direct effects to effects suffered by plaintiffs.”
Idas Resources, N.V. v. Empresa Nacional De Diamantes De Angola E.P.,
Civil Action No. 06-00570(ESH),
*29 Perhaps in recognition of the precariousness of its legal position, the plaintiff has attached a declaration by its president, Iskren Tsonev, to its reply memorandum in support of its discovery motion in which Tsonev states that “the payments to be made to the Bulbank account in New York were exclusively payments due to [the plaintiff],” PI. Discovery Reply, Ex. A (Declaration of Iskren [Ts]onev T[s]onev) ¶ 8, and that the “Bulbank served under those arrangements as [the plaintiffs] bank for purposes of receipt of the Contract payments,” id. ¶ 9. Assuming that the Court would be willing to consider this untimely submitted document at all, 12 it still does not explain why the Bulbank “financed” the construction projects at issue in those documents by “covering” the dollar component of the amounts due under the contracts relating to those projects. Banking Arrangement No. (1) at 1. Moreover, Tsonev’s statements would seem to contradict the plaintiffs own assertion that that the CBI and Bulbank were “acting as agents for their respective governments” when they entered into the banking arrangements incorporated in the Amended Complaint. PI. Opp’n at 12. 13
Unless the plaintiff agreed to finance its own services using the entire Bulgarian government аs its agent — a proposition that might charitably be described as improbable — the only way to interpret Tso-nev’s statements in a manner consistent with the documents incorporated in the Amended Complaint and the plaintiffs own arguments would be to assume that the plaintiff separately agreed to defer its right to payment with respect to the United States dollar portion of its contract price until Bulgaria received its payment from the defendant. If that is the case, the only conceivable claim that the plaintiff could assert “based upon” the failure of the defendant to make its payment to the Bulbank in New York City would be against Bulgaria (for its failure to pursue its claim against the defendant), not the plaintiff, and the only party holding a claim against the defendant “based upon” the defendant’s lack of payment in New York City would be Bulgaria (for the unpaid portion of the Contract “covered” by *30 the Bulbank), not the plaintiff. 14 In any event, the plaintiff does not allege the facts necessary for the Court to infer that the Bulbank acted as the plaintiffs agent when the Bulbank entered into Banking Arrangement No. (1) and Banking Arrangement No. (3), and the documents themselves argue against such an interpretation.
If, as Memorandum No. 2, the Fifteenth Session Minutes, and the banking arrangements subsequently entered into by Bulgaria and the defendant indicate, Bulgaria agreed to finance and then refinance the Project on the defendant’s behalf, then the plaintiff has sued the wrong party altogether and the case should be dismissed for lack of Article III standing.
See Raines v. Byrd,
The plaintiffs additional allegation that “goods and services to be provided pursuant to the Contract were to be supplied in part by commercial entities in the United States,” Am. Compl. ¶ 29, also fails the “direct effect” test. The plaintiff does not allege, and the Contract does not specify, that the “goods and services to be рrovided” to the plaintiff were “supposed” to come from the United States pursuant to the Contract (or, for that matter, based on the past practices of the parties). The plaintiff simply alleges that the plaintiffs sub-contractors, some of whom were based in the United States, were damaged as a consequence of the defendant’s decision to invade Kuwait. “A financial loss in the United States, when all the acts giving rise to the claim occurred outside this country,
*31
is insufficient to show the ‘direct effect’ in the United States that [the] FSIA requires.”
BPA Int’l, Inc. v. Kingdom of Sweden,
Nor does it matter “that the construction projects became foreseeable targets of opportunity and necessity for the United States military,” as the plaintiff alleges, Am. Compl. ¶ 41, for “[t]he fact that a U.S. citizen or entity suffers a loss does not suffice to prove a direct effect in the United States.”
Global Index,
The plaintiff cites
Vermeulen v. Renault, U.S.A., Inc.,
The plaintiff suggests that “[u]nder [the] defendant’s intervening element test, Ver-meulen would lose[] because Vermeulen made the decision to purchase the car [and] drive the car on the roads of Georgia.” Pl. Opp’n at 19. This argument is
*32
specious. By the time Vermeulen purchased the car, it had already been distributed in the United States by Renault through its distribution agreements with AMC and AMSC.
See Vermeulen,
In contrast, the defendant in this ease did nothing to involve the United States in the Project insofar as the provision of goods and equipment was concerned. The decision to use American sub-contractors and American supplies was the plaintiffs decision, and the plaintiff does not allege that its decision was mandated by the Contract or expected based on the customary practices of the parties. Yet, the plaintiff would have this Court deprive the defendant of its sovereign immunity based on the plaintiffs own choices made after the parties entered into the Contract. The Court declines to interpret § 1605(a)(2) in such an unduly expansive manner.
In sum, the plaintiffs allegations and the documents incorporated into the Amended Complaint, even if taken as true, do not satisfy the commercial activity exception found in § 1605(a)(2). The defendant was not “supposed” to pay the plaintiff in the United States under the terms of the Contract, Memorandum No. 2, or the Fifteenth Session Minutes, the plaintiffs claim against the defendant is not “based upon” the commercial activities contemplated in Banking Arrangement No. (1) and Banking Arrangement No. (3) as required by the statute, the plaintiffs use of American sub-contractors and American supplies is not a “direct effect” of the defendant’s commercial activities, and the destruction of American property abroad does not constitute a “direct effect” in the United States. Section 1605(a)(2) is simply not applicable in this case.
B. Arbitration Exception
Article Sixty-Nine of the Contract (the “Arbitration Clause”) provides in pertinent part that
If any dispute or difference of any kind whatsoever shall arise between the [defendant] and the [plaintiff] in connection with or arising out of the [ ]Contract[ ] or the carrying out of the “Works” (whether during the progress of the Works or after their completion and whether before or after the termination, abandonment, or breach of the []Contract[ ])[,] it shall in the first place be referred to and settled by the “Engineer[,]” who shall give notice of his decision to the [defendant] and the [plaintiff.] Such decision in respect of every matter so referred shall be final and binding upon the [defendant] and the [plaintiff] until the completion of the [ ]Works,[ ] and shall forthwith be given effect to by the [plaintiff,] who shall proceed with the [ ]Works[ ] with all due diligence, whether notice of dissatisfaction is given by him or by the [defendant] as hereinafter provided or not. If the [defendant] or the [plaintiff] be dissatisfied with any such decision, then in any such case the [defendant] or the [plaintiff] may within thirty (30) days after receiving notice of such decision require that the matter be referred to a “Committee of Arbitration”....
The [ ]Committee of Arbitration ] shall have complete authority to review (reconsider), revise, and amend any decision, opinion, order, certificate, or [illegible] issued by the []Engineer.[ ] The *33 ruling issued by the [Committee of Arbitration] shall be binding to both parties unless one adheres to its annulment in accordance with the provisions stated in the Civil Procedure Code.
Contract at 218-19 (quoted in part in Am. Compl. ¶ 6). The plaintiff argues that this language satisfies the exception to the FSIA’s general grant of sovereign immunity set forth in § 1605(a)(6)(B) of the statute, which provides that an action may be brought “either to enforce an agreement ... to submit to arbitration ... or to confirm an award made pursuant to such an agreement ..., if ... the agreement or award is or may be governed by a treaty or other international agreement in force for the United States calling for the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards.” According to the plaintiff, “an arbitration proceeding conducted in a country which is a signatory to the New York Convention is ‘governed’ by the New York Convention,” which “is a ‘treaty or other international agreement in force in the United States calling for the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards.’ ” PI. Oрp’n at 21 (quoting § 1605(a)(6)(B)). “Thus, [argues the plaintiff,] unless the arbitration agreement itself requires that the arbitration proceeding take place in a jurisdiction which is not a signatory to the New York Convention, [§ ] 1605(a)(6)(B) will preclude the assertion of sovereign immunity.” Id. at 22.
The Court finds no fault in the plaintiffs logic, but its reasoning is inapplicable in this case because, as indicated below, the Contract itself mandates that any arbitration take place in Iraq, which is (according to the unrebutted assertion of the defendant) not a signatory to the New York Convention. See Def. Mem. at 18 (“Iraq is not a signatory to the [New York Convention]”); Def. Opp’n at 21-24 (arguing that § 1605(a)(6) is applicable “[b]ecause th[e][C]ourt cannot conclude as a matter of law that the parties agreed that any arbitration had to be conducted only in Iraq,” and not on the grounds that Iraq is a signatory to the New York Convention). Article Seventy-Two of the Contract plainly states that “[t]he Contract[] shall be subject to and construed according to the Iraqi laws, regulations, and instructions[,] and the Iraqi courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all actions and proceedings arising out of the [t]he Contract^ ]” Contract at 220. Iraqi law in effect at the time of the Project, in turn, provided that “all [arbitration] awards [we]re subject to the mandatory confirmation of Iraqi courts prior to any enforcement thereof.” Mahir Jalili, International Arbitration in Iraq, 4 J. Int’l Arb. 109, 112 (1987) (citing Iraq Civ. P.Code Art. 272(1)). In other words, the Arbitration Clause could not be enforced without a judicial proceeding, and both Iraqi law and the Contract itself mandated that the judicial proceeding take place in Iraq.
The plaintiff argues that “the parties’ decision to identify ... a forum for judicial proceedings, but not for arbitration proceedings, weighs against” the notion that arbitration of any disputes over the Contract were required to take place in Iraq. PI. Opp’n at 28. But the Arbitration Clause itself states that any arbitration between the parties would be binding “in accordance with the provisions stated in the [Iraqi] Civil Procedure Code,” Contract at 219, 16 and the Iraqi Civil Procedure Code required “the defendants in a judicial action [to] apply for a stay hearing *34 at the first hearing” to enforce a contract’s arbitration clause, or else “the action w[ould] proceed and the arbitration agreement w[ould] be deemed null and void.” Jalili, 4 J. Int’ Arb. at 110. Indeed, Article Seventy-Two of the Contract, which tracks exactly the generic language used in construction contracts by the Iraqi Ministry of Planning at this time, see id. at 115-16 (reprinting Clause 71 of the Gеneral Conditions for Contracts of Civil Engineering Works, entitled “Law Applicable to the Contract”), is “not inconsistent” with the Arbitration Clause, which also tracks the generic language used in Iraqi construction contracts, see id. at 114-15 (reprinting Clause 69 of the General Conditions for Contracts of Civil Engineering Works, entitled “Settlement of Disputes — Arbitration”), precisely because “the [Arbitration [C]lause provides the mechanism for the arbitration proceeding, whereas the jurisdiction clause [ (i.e., Article Seventy-Two) ] empowers the courts to enforce the Civil Procedure Code under which the arbitration proceeding is conducted.” Id. at 116.
The Arbitration Clause could only be enforced in Iraq under the provisions of the Iraqi Civil Procedure Code and the terms of the Contract. Iraq was not a signatory to the New York Convention or (to the best of the Court’s knowledge) any other “treaty or other international agreement in force for the United States calling for the recognition and enforcement of ar-bitral awards” when it entered into the Contract with the plaintiff. 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(6)(B). Therefore, the exception to the FSIA’s general grant of sovereign immunity set forth in § 1605(a)(6)(B) does not apply.
C. Motion for Jurisdictional Discovery
Finally, the plaintiffs motion for limited discovery on the question of subject-matter jurisdiction must be denied as moоt. For the reasons discussed above, the plaintiff has failed to allege facts sufficient to form a basis for the Court to have subject-matter jurisdiction in this case. “Jurisdictional discovery is not warranted when [the] plaintiff’s] allegations, even if supplemented or verified, would remain insufficient to establish a FSIA exception.”
Idas Resources,
IY. Conclusion
“[T]here is only one way for a court to obtain jurisdiction over a foreign state and
*35
it is not a particularly generous one — the FSIA.”
Peterson v. Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,
SO ORDERED this 30th day of November, 2007. 18
Notes
. The Contract is attached as Exhibit A to the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Complaint.
. In addition to the Amended Complaint, the defendant’s motion to dismiss, and the plaintiff's discovery motion, the Court considered (1) the Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Defendant's Motion tо Dismiss the First Amended Complaint (the "Def. Mem.”), (2) the Plaintiff’s Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Complaint (the "PI. Opp’n”), (3) the Reply Memorandum in Further Support of the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Complaint (the "Def. Reply”), (4) the Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to Conduct Limited Discovery on Motion to Dismiss First Amended Complaint, (5) the Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Opposition to Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to Conduct Limited Discovery on Motion to Dismiss First Amended Complaint, and (6) the .Plaintiff's Reply to Defendant’s Opposition to Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to Conduct Limited Discovery qn Motion to Dismiss First Amended Complaint (the “PL Discovery Reply”).
.The date on which the parties entered into the Contract is not alleged in the Amended Complaint, but a letter from the Iraqi Ministry of Irrigation (the "Ministry”) dated September 2, 1984, and attached to the Contract, states that the Ministry approved the plaintiff's bid for the Project on September 1, 1984, Contract at 260-62 (Letter from Ministry of Irrigation, the Public Authority for Land Reclamations, Republic of Iraq to Bulgarian Company Agrocomplect (Sept. 2, 1984)) at l(the “Ministry Letter”), and directed “a representative from [the plaintiff’s] side[] with the authority to sign the contract by an official authorization[ ] [to come] to the headquarters of this establishment's] legal depart *18 ment within tend days ... for the purpose of signing the contract,” id. at 2. The Court therefore infers that the Contract was executed on or about September 12, 1984.
. As alleged by the plaintiff, one donum is "equal to 1338 square meters.” Am. Compl. ¶ 10.
. It is not entirely clear to the Court whether the plaintiff agrees that all of the documents appended to the Contract by the defendant should be considered part of that document. Although the plaintiff hints that "there [is] cause for prudence in asserting that one or more documents constituted the full agreement between the parties,” PL Opp’n at 2 n. 3, it does not explain the nature of this "cause,” nor does it object to the defendant’s characterization of Memorandum No. 2 and the Ministry Letter as part of the overall Contract between the parties. The Court will therefore treat these latter documents as appendices or supplements to the original Contract between the parties in deciding the motions before it.
.The Court is rather cautious when describing the Fifteenth Session Minutes because the parties have submitted only a portion of those minutes, and that excerpt does not detail the "deferred payment arrangements” referenced in Memorandum Nо. 2 and the Ministry Letter. The Court is therefore left to infer the contents of the missing provisions of the minutes based upon other language regarding the minutes in Memorandum No. 2, the Ministry Letter, and the available portions of the minutes themselves.
. The plaintiff makes a passing reference to 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(1), which excepts from the general immunity provided by the FSIA those cases "in which a foreign state has waived its immunity either explicitly or by implication,”
see
Def. Opp’n at 5 ("Sovereign immunity is also unavailable to the [d]efen-dant because the [Contract’s arbitration clause is a waiver of that immunity under 28 U.S.C. §§ (a)(1) and (6).”), but it does not discuss this exception or its application anywhere else in its opposition. The Court cannot "act as an advocate for [ ] the parties and construct their legal arguments on [their] behalf in order to counter those in the motion to dismiss.”
United States v. Real Property,
. The plaintiff asserts that the "defendant bears the burden of proof on the inapplicability of the exceptions” set forth in § 1605(a). PI. Opp’n at 10. This formulation is not quite correct. While it is true that "[floreign defendants challenging a U.S. court's subject[-]matter jurisdiction bear the
ultimate
burden of proving immunity,”
Idas Resources N.V. v. Empresa Nacional De Diamantes De Angola E.P.,
Civil Action No. 06-00570(ESH),
. The plaintiff also invokes § 1605(a)(6)(C), but as the plaintiff correctly observes, that section "is co[-]terminous with § 1605(a)(2)” in this instance. PI. Opp'n at 20 n. 22.
. The plaintiff severely overstates the scope of the District of Columbia Circuit's ruling in
I.T. Consultants, Inc. v. Republic of Pakistan,
. The Court respectfully disagrees with the observation in
Idas Resources
that “the Tenth Circuit has considered the possibility of finding a direct effect based on losses to non[-]parties.”
Idas Resources,
Similarly, the plaintiff's assertion that in
Maritime Int’l Nominees Establishment v. Republic of Guinea,
. "Courts highly disfavor parties creating new arguments at the reply stage that were not fully briefed during the litigation.”
Bates v. Northwestern Human Servs., Inc.,
. The Court can only accept the statements made in Tsonev’s declaration insofar as they are consistent with the allegations in the Amended Complaint. See
Lindsey v. United States,
. The plaintiff cites in a footnote to
Nat’l Westminster Bank plc v. Grant Prideco, Inc.,
. The Eleventh Circuit issued Vermeulen one day prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Nelson, so there is understandably no discussion in the Eleventh Circuit’s decision as to whether Renault’s distribution of its cars in the United States was an element of Vermeu-len's tort claim. Nevertheless, it is readily apparent that this commercial activity was a necessary part of Vermeulen's claim, for if Renault had not distributed its cars in the United States, Vermeulen would never have purchased it.
. The specific reference to the Iraqi Civil Procedurе Code in the Arbitration Clause renders moot the plaintiffs argument that the “arbitral tribunal” convened pursuant to that clause would have the right to determine the site of arbitration under the Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration promulgated by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law ("UNCITRAL”). PI. Opp'n at 22 (quoting Article 20(1) of UN- *34 CITRAL's Model Law). As Mr. Jalili notes in his incisive discourse on Iraqi arbitration law as it existed in 1987, "the main disadvantage to a foreign contractor [was] that the arbitration [was] conducted under Iraqi arbitration rules rather than [international arbitration] rules.” Jalili, 4 J. Int’l Arb. at 116. Mr. Jalili goes so far as to recommend that foreign contractors "internationali[ze] the arbitration clause by adopting the UNCITRAL rules” as a means of avoiding the arbitration rules set forth in the Iraqi Civil Procedure Code. Id. at 116. Mr. Jalili would not have made this recommendation if the UNCITRAL model rules of arbitration and the Iraqi Civil Procedure Code arbitration rules in effect in the 1980s were one and the same.
. Even if the plaintiff's discovery motion were not moot, the Court would be inclined to deny it. "Typically, the discretion of a district court to allow jurisdictional discovery in FSIA cases is limited to those instances where the facts sought are peculiarly within the knowledge of the party against whom discovеry is sought.”
Crist v. Republic of Turkey,
. An order granting the defendant’s motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, dismissing the plaintiff's discovery motion as moot, and closing this case follows.
