Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
The Islamic American Relief Agency (“IARA-USA”), based in Columbia, Missouri, challenges the district court’s decision upholding the blocking of its assets. The government concluded that the organization was a branch office of a Specially Designated Global Terrorist and invoked its authority under anti-terrorism laws to block IARA-USA assets. In this appeal, IARA-USA contends that the district court erroneously held that the record supports the government’s conclusion, and that it erroneously dismissed and entered summary judgment for defendants on IARA-USA’s claims under the Administrative Procedure Act and the Constitution. IARA-USA also argues that it should have been permitted to amend its complaint to request access to its blocked funds for payment of attorneys’ fees. Because we conclude that the designation was supported by the record and was not contrary to law, we affirm the district court’s disposition of the case, but on the question of attorneys’ fees we remand for further proceedings.
I
In 1985, a Sudanese immigrant founded IARA-USA as the Islamic African Relief Agency. Since then, the entity has engaged in humanitarian activities around the world, often in partnership with similar organizations. In 2000, IARA-USA *731 changed its name from the “Islamic African Relief Agency” to the “Islamic American Relief Agency” (emphasis added). Meanwhile, the entity in Sudan calling itself the Islamic African Relief Agency (“IARA”) continued to exist under that name.
On October 13, 2004, the Office of Foreign Assets Control in the Department of the Treasury (“OFAC”) designated IARA as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (“SDGT”). The designation was based on OFAC’s conclusion that IARA “provides financial support or other services to persons who commit, threaten to commit or support terrorism” in violation of anti-terrorism laws. Although IARA-USA was not independently designated, OFAC considered it to be the United States branch of IARA and included it in the blocking notice. This meant that none of IARA-USA’s financial assets or property could be “transferred, withdrawn, exported, paid, or otherwise dealt in without prior authorization from OFAC.” IARA-USA could not receive “any contribution of funds, goods, or services,” nor could it continue to use its offices or remove any items of corporate property. Any violation of the blocking notice could subject IARA-USA to criminal and civil penalties.
IARA-USA immediately contested the blocking, maintaining that it is a separate entity from IARA. It requested that OFAC review the designation and permit IARA-USA to access its blocked funds for the limited purpose of paying attorneys’ fees. In late December 2004, having failed to persuade OFAC to unblock its assets, IARA-USA filed a complaint in district court, naming as defendants the Attorney General, the Secretary of the Treasury, and other unidentified FBI agents and Treasury personnel.
1
Relevant to this appeal, it claimed that (1) the blocking is unsupported by the record and thus violates the APA and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 50 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1707; (2) the blocking violates IARA-USA’s constitutional rights of equal protection, free exercise of religion, and free association; and (3) IARA-USA should be permitted to pay attorneys’ fees from the blocked funds. In a memorandum opinion and order issued on September 15, 2005, the district court dismissed or entered summary judgment in favor of defendant on all claims.
Islamic Am. Relief Agency v. Unidentified FBI Agents,
In this appeal, IARA-USA argues that the district court erred in rejecting the three arguments described above, and that it erred in failing to ensure that the Government complied with an internal regulation requiring it to declassify record evidence and in denying discovery before entering summary judgment. IARA-USA does not challenge the district court’s ruling on its other claims.
II
We note at the outset that the designated entity, IARA, is not a party to this case, and IARA-USA does not challenge the evidentiary basis for the designation of its alleged parent. Rather, the question here is whether the record supports OFAC’s conclusion that IARA-USA is a branch of IARA. If so, as IARA-USA conceded at oral argument, OFAC’s blocking of its assets was a proper consequence of the designation.
*732
We review de novo the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendants. We will affirm if, viewing all evidence in the light most favorable to IARA-USA, “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); see
McCready v. Nicholson,
Our review of an SDGT designation falls under the APA, and thus its highly deferential standard of review applies.
See Holy Land Found, for Relief & Dev. v. Ashcroft,
A
This case is the first in this Court challenging an SDGT designation based on a branch relationship with an entity that supports terrorists. Our prior cases involved entities that directly supported terrorists. IARA-USA suggests that because of this factual difference, we should review the blocking as we would review an alias designation in a Foreign Terrorist Organization (“FTO”) case. In those cases, we require evidence that the designated entity “so dominates and controls” the alleged alias entity that they can be considered one and the same.
Nat’l Council of Resistance of Iran v. Dep’t of State,
We conclude that the Government has the better argument. To determine
*733
whether the evidence is sufficient, we must employ a test that reflects the theory on which the assets were blocked. The “dominates and controls” test is appropriate for reviewing the existence of a principal-agent relationship because, where there is sufficient evidence to find an agency relationship, substantial evidence of the principal’s unlawful activity is sufficient to justify the designation or blocking of the agent.
See NCRI,
The district court applied the proper standard. It entered summary judgment on the APA claims, concluding that the record contained “substantial evidence” to support OFAC’s conclusion that IARA-USA “is related and connected to the IARA,” and accordingly that the designation was not arbitrary and capricious.
IARA-USA
With this framework in mind, we turn to the unclassified record. While the record contains a great number of documents, we discuss here only a sampling of the most pertinent. IARA-USA was founded by an immigrant from Sudan, the site of IARA’s offices, and was incorporated with a name identical to IARA’s from its founding until 2000, when IARA-USA made the minor change of replacing “African” in its name with “American.” IARA-USA’s Articles of Incorporation describe it as “Islamic African Relief Agency United States Affiliate” and include the purpose of “effecting] the Objectives and Means of the Islamic African Relief Agency as set forth in its Constitution.” In the event of IARA-USA’s dissolution, the Articles of Incorporation provided that IARA, among other entities, should receive its assets.
Since its founding, IARA-USA has continued to engage in conduct that evinces a branch relationship with IARA. In 1998, for example, IARA-USA applied to the Treasury Department for a license to transfer funds to “Islamic African Relief Agency, Sudan,” in which it described itself as “The Islamic African Relief Agency, United States Affiliate.” It described “the Islamic African Relief Agency, Sudan” as its “partner in Sudan.” In a letter to the Washington Times on October 10, 1995, IARA-USA’s Executive Director identified himself as speaking on behalf of “IARA and its partners,” implicitly accepted the newspaper’s characterization of IARA as the “Khartoum-based ‘Islamic Relief Agency,’ ” and acknowledged IARA’s “branch offices in the United States” and other countries. Solicitation materials used by IARA-USA stated that its “international headquarters are in Khartoum, Sudan.” Additionally, IARA-USA maintained financial connections with at least one other IARA branch and its address was listed on IARA websites as a United States branch office.
*734 IARA-USA denies that this evidence reveals a branch relationship. The initial identity and current similarity in the entities’ names, it claims, is purely coincidental: the founder of IARA-USA, though aware of IARA’s existence, chose the name because it was descriptive of the organization’s mission. Although IARA-USA offers no explanation for the references to IARA in its Articles of Incorporation, it nonetheless categorically denies that the organization was founded as a branch.
IARA-USA’s arguments fail in the face of clear and substantial evidence in the record. The evidence supports the conclusion that, at its founding, IARA-USA considered itself a branch of IARA. An entity’s “genesis and history” may properly be considered by OFAC in making the designation or blocking, at least where the ties have not been severed.
Holy Land,
We acknowledge that the unclassified record evidence is not overwhelming, but we reiterate that our review — in an area at the intersection of national security, foreign policy, and administrative law — is extremely deferential.
Cf. Holy Land,
OFAC’s conduct was also lawful under the relevant statute and Executive Orders. In the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001, the President invoked the authority of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 50 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1707 (“IEEPA”) by declaring a national emergency with respect to the “unusual and extraordinary threat to national security” posed by terrorists. Blocking Property and Prohibiting Transactions With Persons Who Commit, Threaten to Commit, or Support Terrorism, Exec. Order No. 13,224, 66 Fed.Reg. 49,079 (Sept. 23, 2001), as amended by Exec. Orders No. 13,268, 67 Fed.Reg. 44,-751 (July 2, 2002) and No. 13,372, 70 Fed. Reg. 8499 (Feb. 16, 2005). In that Order, the President described the types of conduct that could subject an entity to blocking of its assets, such as providing financial support to terrorists. He named a number of entities whose assets would be blocked immediately, and authorized the *735 Treasury Department to designate additional entities that it determines are within the purview of the Order. Exec. Order No. 13,224, §§ 1, 7, 66 Fed.Reg. at 49,079, 49,081.
IARA-USA argues that OFAC cannot block an entity’s assets unless it determines that the entity itself poses an “unusual and extraordinary threat to national security.” The district court rejected this argument, holding that the threat need not be found with regard to each individual entity.
IARA-USA,
B
We turn next to IARA-USA’s claims that the blocking violated its rights under the Constitution. As an initial matter, we note that IARA-USA’s constitutional claims rest on a misinterpretation of OF AC’s basis for the designation. IARA-USA argues that the blocking was unconstitutional because the Government has not shown that IARA-USA is controlled or dominated by IARA. But as explained above, OF AC’s basis for the blocking was that IARA-USA functions as a branch of IARA. Thus, the “dominates and controls” test is not relevant to whether the blocking was constitutional. And since we have concluded that there was substantial evidence that IARA-USA was a branch of IARA, these constitutional claims lose their footing. As we have noted previously, “there is no First Amendment right nor any other constitutional right to support terrorists.”
Holy Land,
Our analysis of IARA-USA’s constitutional arguments is informed by our recent decision in
Holy Land,
IARA-USA contends that OFAC violated its right to equal protection under the Fifth Amendment by singling it out as a Muslim organization. As evidence that OFAC treated it differently than similar organizations, IARA-USA notes that UNICEF’s funds were not blocked even though it also provided financial support to IARA. The district court entered summary judgment after concluding that IARA-
*736
USA had not shown that it was similarly-situated to UNICEF.
IARA
IARA-USA also argues that OFAC violated its rights of association and free exercise of religion under the First Amendment. Its freedom of association claim is that the blocking inhibits its ability to engage in the associational activity of making financial contributions and that its association, even with an unpopular entity, cannot form the basis of the decision to block its assets. Following
Holy Land,
the district court dismissed the claim, concluding that the blocking did not implicate IARA-USA’s association rights because it did not prevent or punish the associational activity of IARA-USA, but rather was directed at its funding of terrorists, as a branch of IARA.
IARA-USA,
Here, as in
Holy Land,
we adopt the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning. The blocking was not based on, nor does it prohibit, associational activity other than financial support. The blocking of IARA-USA’s assets does not punish advocacy of IARA’s or any other entity’s goals.
See Humanitarian Law Project,
Nor is the Government required to show that IARA-USA funded terrorist organizations with an intent to aid their unlawful activities. Although the Supreme Court has previously imposed such an intent requirement, it is limited to cases in which liability was imposed by reason of association alone.
See Healy v. James,
As to IARA-USA’s free exercise of religion claim, we conclude that the district court properly entered summary judgment for defendants. IARA-USA argues that the blocking “substantially burdens” the religious exercise of its members because they intended their donations to fulfill their religious obligation to engage in humanitarian charitable giving. Blocking those funds before they could be distributed, IARA-USA contends, interfered with that religious expression. As we explained in
Holy Land,
“[a]cting against the funding of terrorism does not violate the free exercise rights protected by ... the First Amendment. There is no free exercise right to fund terrorists.”
IARA-USA argues that, had it been permitted to engage in additional discovery on its constitutional claims, it might have found evidence sufficient to survive summary judgment. The district court held that discovery was not warranted because, based on the record presented, discovery would not have produced any evidence to create a genuine factual dispute and thus could not have changed its disposition of the claims.
IARA-USA,
C
IARA-USA also argues that the district court erred in failing to ensure that the Government complied with an internal regulation governing the declassification of record material in judicial proceedings. The regulation, promulgated by the Department of Justice, states in relevant part that when that agency is required “to produce classified information” in litigation, it “shall immediately determine from the agency originating the classified information whether the information can be declassified.” 28 C.F.R. § 17.17(a)(1). In a hearing in early 2005, the district court accepted DOJ’s representation that it had complied with the regulation. Even if it had not, the regulation provides no private right of action, as IARA-USA itself conceded at oral argument before this Court.
Cf. Alexander v. Sandoval,
* * *
Finally, IARA-USA maintains that the district court erred in denying its motion to compel payment of attorneys’ fees. The blocking notice stated that OFAC would consider “requests for specific licenses to ameliorate the effects” of the blocking, including permitting “the payment from blocked funds ... of attorneys’ fees and expenses related to legal representation of the organization in this matter.” In its motion, IARA-USA argued that OFAC acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying its request to access the blocked funds for the purpose of paying attorneys’ fees connected with the litigation. The district court denied the motion, concluding that the motion raised a new claim that was collateral to the complaint and thus that the issue was not properly before the court.
IARA-USA
Leave to amend one’s complaint is liberally permitted. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a) (leave to amend a pleading “shall be freely given when justice so requires”);
Foman v. Davis,
Ill
As the district court held, the blocking of IARA-USA’s assets was not unlawful. OFAC’s determination that IARA-USA functions as a branch of IARA was supported by substantial evidence in the unclassified record, and was proper under the relevant anti-terrorism laws, the APA and the Constitution. Accordingly, IARA-USA’s claims are without merit and were properly dismissed or disposed of on summary judgment by the district court. The judgment of the district court is affirmed in all respects except that portion relating to IARA-USA’s motion for leave to amend its complaint. On that issue, the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
So ordered.
Notes
. For simplicity, we refer to the remaining defendants collectively as "the Government.”
