Kang Joo Kwan, for himself and as representative of Korean veterans of the Vietnam conflict, and Se Jeik Park, for 270 members of the Korean National Assembly, seek payment by the United States of moneys asserted to have been promised to Korean veterans of the Vietnam conflict but not paid. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania held that Messrs. Kwan and Park lack standing to enforce a government-to-government obligation, and that their claims are nonjusticiable political questions. 1 We affirm that decision. The district court also dismissed the Republic of Korea as a party; no objection has been raised to that dismissal.
DISCUSSION
This action arises from the participation in the Vietnam conflict of military forces from the Republic of Korea. Various inter-governmental documents relate to this participation. Of direct relevance is a letter from United States Ambassador to Korea Winthrop G. Brown to the Korean Minister of Foreign Affairs dated March 4, 1966, wherein the United States agreed to provide military and economic assistance and also to pay the Republic of Korea “death and disability gratuities resulting *1362 from casualties in Vietnam at double the rates recently agreed to by the Joint United States Republic of Korea Military Committee.” This letter is herein called the Brown Commitment. It was discussed and reported in United States Security Agreements and Commitments Abroad, Republic of Korea: Hearings Before the Subcomm. on United States Security Agreements and Commitments Abroad of the Senate Comm, on Foreign Relations, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. Part 6 (1970). The district court reports, citing these Hearings, that pursuant to the Brown Commitment the United States paid death and disability payments to the Republic of Korea, through the Minister of National Defense, of $10.5 million. The appellants state that the United States has “refused to pay,” 2 and seek payment directly from the United States to eligible recipients. Suit was filed in the district court under the Little Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2).
The Brown Commitment concerns an arrangement between the government of the United States and the government of the Republic of Korea. As an instrument of foreign affairs, it is called an “executive agreement.” Although not a treaty, treaty principles have been applied to interpreting executive agreements. In
United States v. Belmont,
When the foundation document is an agreement between governments, nongovernmental entities can not ordinarily challenge either their interpretation or their implementation, in the absence of express authorization for such private action. The Court in the
Head Money Cases (Edye v. Robertson),
A treaty is primarily a compact between independent nations. It depends for the enforcement of its provisions on the interest and the honor of the governments which are parties to it. If these fail, its infraction becomes the subject of international negotiations and reclamations, so far as the injured party chooses to seek redress, which may in the end be enforced by actual war. It is obvious that with all this the judicial courts have nothing to do and can give no redress.
Id.
at 598,
The district court correctly held that the Brown Commitment, even if viewed as a treaty, permits no private right of enforcement by or on behalf of Korean veterans who may be its beneficiaries. Since the obligations in the Brown Commitment were not legislatively executed, they can not be judicially enforced.
Foster v. Neilson,
The appellants argue that this case is similar to others in which courts have determined that a particular treaty did, in fact, provide a private right of action. The authorities to which the appellants refer concern, variously, a criminal defendant’s right to raise the defense that his prosecution would violate extradition treaties or human rights treaties, and the rights of a foreign citizen provided by treaties concerning property and inheritance. For example, appellants cite
United States v. Rauscher,
Nor do the various property and inheritance treaties provide rights beyond their terms, whereby persons may rely on treaty commitments to protect or enforce their rights. These treaty principles have been applied in varied circumstances, none comparable to the situation here.
See, e.g., Kolovrat v. Oregon,
The plaintiffs, apparently recognizing that precedent and custom weigh against their cause, ask that the Brown Commitment be viewed as a contract of which they are the intended third party beneficiary. However, the appellants cite no authority, and we know of none, whereby an individual has been found entitled to judicial enforcement of a government-to-government agreement on the legal theory that they are third party beneficiaries of the agreement. The district court ruled that “[t]he commitment by Ambassador Brown was made on behalf of the United States to the government of the Republic of Korea and not to the individual Korean veterans,” and “because in the past payments under the Brown Commitment were made directly to the Republic of Korea and not to the individual veterans, it is clear that issues between the two nations as to the amount of the payments was
*1364
intended to be resolved by government to government negotiations.”
The political question doctrine often requires “a delicate exercise in constitutional interpretation,”
Baker v. Carr,
The district court determined that the standing of the plaintiffs “turns on whether the Republic of Korea has formally protested a violation of the rights of the individual plaintiffs under the Brown Commitment.”
Kwan,
Appellants also refer to the national treatment provisions of the Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation between the United States and the Republic of Korea, 8 U.S.T. 2217 (entered into force Nov. 7, 1957). This treaty establishes, inter alia, that nationals of one country have the same access to the courts of the other as do the nationals of the other country. However, this treaty does not redefine justiciable subject matter. Although “not every case or controversy which touches foreign relations lies beyond judicial cognizance,”
New Jersey v. United States,
No costs.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Kwan v. United States,
. The district court “presumed” that the present action was directed primarily to the issue of Agent Orange compensation and late-developing illnesses. Although the appellants do not so state or limit their action, we will also so presume, for otherwise there may arise statute of limitations issues that have not been considered.
