Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
The plaintiff in this case is the grandson of Gholam Oveissi, who was chief of the Iranian armed forces under the Shah’s regime. Members of the terrorist organization Hezbollah, operating under the name Islamic Jihad, assassinated Oveissi in Paris in 1984. In 2003, the plaintiff sued the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Iranian Ministry of Information and Security (MOIS) in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, alleging that the defendants had funded and directed Islamic Jihad. The district court found that Iran and MOIS were not entitled to sovereign immunity and that they were culpable in Oveissi’s murder, but the court rejected the plaintiffs claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress and wrongful death. We conclude that the court applied the wrong law to the plaintiffs claims because it conducted an erroneous choice-of-law analysis. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
I
Gholam Oveissi, an Iranian citizen, served as a four-star general and chief of Iran’s armed forces until early 1979. In *838 that year, revolutionaries deposed the Shah and established an Islamic Republic. Oveissi, a supporter of the Shah’s government, fled the country, traveling first to the United States and then to France, where he took up residence in Paris. Oveissi’s son and daughter-in-law also fled from Iran to the United States. Their son, plaintiff Amir Oveissi, was born during their stay in California. Several months after the plaintiffs birth, his family moved to Paris, where they shared an apartment with Gholam Oveissi.
“While the family lived together in Paris, Gholam was outspoken in his opposition to Iran’s revolutionary government and met with other expatriates in the family’s apartment.”
Oveissi v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
On June 2, 2003, the plaintiff filed a complaint against Iran and MOIS in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, invoking the court’s jurisdiction under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1602 et seq. The complaint alleged causes of action for, inter alia, intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED) and wrongful death. The plaintiff filed an amended complaint on December 31, 2005, and effected service of process through diplomatic channels on May 30, 2006, рursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1608(a)(4).
Iran failed to enter an appearance or respond to the complaint. The FSIA, however, “does not automatically entitle a plaintiff to judgment when a foreign state defaults,” and instead requires a court “to satisfy itself that [the plaintiff has] established a right to relief.”
Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
[I]n the early 1980s, members of Hezbollah, under the direction of MOIS, engaged in terrorist activities outside the Middle East using the nom-de-guerre “Islamic Jihad.” These activities included assassinations of expatriate Iranian dissidents, mainly in France. In [the expert’s] opinion, the killings were intended to silence the Iranian regime’s critics and to deter Frenсh intervention in Lebanon.... As well as guiding Hezbollah’s terrorist activities, Iran, through MOIS and other entities, provided logistical support and training that, according to [the expert], were crucial to Hezbollah’s ability to carry out the assassinations.
Oveissi,
The court nonetheless dismissed all of the plaintiffs claims. With respect to the IIED claim, the court began by conducting a choice-of-law analysis. Applying District of Columbia choice-of-law rules, it deter
*839
mined that ordinarily the “the law of the plaintiffs domicile at the time of the acts at issue” would govern the claim.
Oveissi,
Without applying a choice-of-law analysis, the court found the plaintiffs wrongful-death claim barred by Lord Campbell’s Act, a law enacted by the British Parliament in 1846 that became the prototype for wrongful-death statutes in many American states. Id. at 277-79;
see Sea-Land Servs., Inc. v. Gaudet,
The plaintiff now appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his amended complaint.
II
We begin with some necessary background regarding the FSIA. The Act “grants United States courts both subject matter and personal jurisdiction (where service of process has been made) over any claim against a foreign state as to which the state is not entitled to immunity.”
World Wide Minerals, Ltd. v. Republic of Kazakhstan,
In this case, the district court correctly determined that it had jurisdiction over the plaintiffs suit under the terrorism exception оf the FSIA. The assassination of Gholam Oveissi clearly qualifies as an extrajudicial killing attributable to the Iranian government; “Iran has been designated a state sponsor of terrorism continuously since January 19, 1984, one month prior to Gholam Ali Oveissi’s death,”
Oveissi,
Although the FSIA grants jurisdiction over certain claims against foreign countries, at the time the plaintiff filed his suit the terrorism exception did not provide a federal cause of action against a foreign state.
See Cicippio-Puleo v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
One additional development in the statutory scheme merits notice. After the district court issued its opinion in this case, Congress enacted the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (NDAA), which, among other things, amended the terrorism exception by repealing 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7) and adding a new exception codified at § 1605A. Pub.L. No. 110-181, § 1083, 122 Stat. 3, 338-44 (2008). This new exception, which became effective on January 28, 2008, is “more advantageous to plaintiffs in several respects”; for example, it “creat[es] a federal right of action against foreign states, for which punitive damages may be awardеd.”
Simon v. Republic of Iraq,
In
Simon,
the circuit held that a “plaintiff in a case pending under § 1605(a)(7) may not maintain that action based upon the jurisdiction conferred by [the new] § 1605A; in order to claim the benefits of § 1605A, the plaintiff must file a new action under that new provision.”
Ill
As noted in Part I, the district court dismissed the plaintiffs IIED claim on the ground that he lacked standing to assert such a claim under California law, and it dismissed his wrongful-death claim on the ground that it was barred by Lord Campbell’s Act. Before we can consider whether the court accurately construed California law or Lord Campbell’s Act, we must ask whether the district court was right to apply them. And before we can answer that question, we must first determine which jurisdiction’s choice-of-law rules tell us which jurisdiction’s substantive law to apply.
1. The FSIA does not contain an express choice-of-law provision. FSIA § 1606 does, however, provide that a foreign state stripped of its immunity “shall be liable in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances.” 28 U.S.C. § 1606. This section ensures that, if an FSIA exception abrogates immunity, plaintiffs may bring state law claims that they could have brought if the defendant were a private individual.
See First Nat’l City Bank v. Banco Para El Comercio Exterior de Cuba,
Relying on the language of § 1606, the Second Circuit has held that courts considering issues governed by state substantive law in FSIA cases should apply the choice-of-law rules of the forum state.
Barkanic v. Gen. Admin. of Civil Aviation of the People’s Republic of China,
*842
In this case, the plaintiffs causes of action for IIED and wrongful death are based solely on state substantive law, and the choice-of-law rules of the forum — the District of Columbia — therefore apply to those claims. The district court did rely on D.C. law when conducting its choice-of-law analysis for the plaintiffs IIED claim, and it concluded that California law should supply the rule of decision.
See Oveissi,
2. To determine which jurisdiction’s substantive law governs a dispute, District of Columbia courts blend a “governmental interests analysis” with a “most significant relationship” test.
Hercules & Co., Ltd. v. Shama Rest. Corp.,
In any given case, these considerations may point in opposite directions and raise difficult questions concerning how each should be weighted. In this case, however, we face no such difficulty because the factors overwhelmingly point in the direction of France. The assassination occurred in France. The victim, Gholam Oveissi, was an Iranian who was domiciled there. Although the plaintiff is a U.S. citizen, he, too, was domiciled in France at the time his grandfather was murdered. Hence, this is not a case in which we must choose between applying the law of the jurisdiction where the tort occurred versus that where the plaintiff was domiciled, as both are the same. Moreover, in addition to having the most significant relationship to the assassination, France has a strong governmental interest in both deterring attacks within its sovereign borders and ensuring compensation for injuries to its domiciliaries.
3
The interest of California,
*843
which arises solely out of the fact that the plaintiff was born and briefly resided there — for less than a year and not at the time of the attack — is slight by comparison. Cf
. Jaffe,
The district court recognized that, under ordinary D.C. choice-of-law analysis, French law would apply to the plaintiffs claims.
Oveissi,
To support this proposition, the district court cited another district court opinion,
Dammarell v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
which applied the law of the American plaintiffs’ state of domicile — rather than that of Lebanon — to a suit brought by American victims of the 1983 bombing of the United States Embassy in Beirut.
We have no doubt that the United States has a strong interest in applying its domestic law to terrorist attacks on its nationals, especially when, as was the case in
Dammarell,
the attacks are “by reason
of
their nationality.” But Gholam Oveissi was not an American national; nor has the plaintiff suggested that the defendants knew Oveissi had an American grandchild or that the United States or its nationals were in any other way the object of the attack. To the сontrary, plaintiffs counsel conceded at oral argument that there is no evidence that Oveissi’s assassination was intended to affect the United States.
See
Oral Arg. Recording at 4:52-5:03. Moreover, the plaintiffs international terrorism expert testified that assassinations like this one “were intended to silence the Iranian regime’s critics
and to deter French intervention in Lebanon.” Oveissi,
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We close this discussion by emphasizing that we are not setting forth a general choice-of-law rule for terrorism cases, but merely applying the District of Columbia’s rules to the facts of a case filed under former § 1605(a)(7). And we note that, for terrorism cases filed under the new § 1605A, plaintiffs whose cases meet the statutory requirements now have a
federal
cause of action.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1605A(c);
Simon,
3. Having concluded that French law governs the assassination of French-domiciliary Gholam Oveissi in France, we do not address the plaintiffs arguments that the district court misconstrued California law and Lord Campbell’s Act in dismissing his claims. We have no reason to suspect that French and California law are the same with respect to IIED claims. And we have every reason to doubt that France has adopted the equivalent of an 1846 British statute to govern wrongful-death claims in its courts. Accordingly, our opining on California law or Lord Campbell’s Act would be beside the point. We leave it to the district court on remand to evaluate the plaintiffs claims under French law.
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment dismissing the plaintiffs amended complaint, and we remand the case for furthеr proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
.
See Acree,
. By contrast, the Ninth Circuit has stated that, "[i]n the absence of specific statutory guidance [in the FSIA], [it] prefer[s] to resort to the federal common law for a choice-of-law rule.”
Harris v. Polskie Linie Lotnicze,
. There is no contention here that application of French law would ‘'conflict!] with a strong public policy” of the District of Columbia.
Cf. Sami v. United States,
. We also note that, although choice-of-law rules can point to different sources of substantive law for different claims,
e.g., Logan v. Providence Hosp., Inc.,
