Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
In these two appeals, the court must determine whether the plaintiffs have demonstrated proximate cause in seeking, on an aggregate basis, to recover costs incurred as a result of paying for the health care needs of individual smokers. The complaints allege conspiracy and fraud in connection with federal antitrust and racketeering (“RICO”) claims as well as antitrust claims under District of Columbia lаw and common law claims. Similar claims have been considered and rejected as too remote by seven other circuits. Because we agree with the other circuits that the alleged injuries of the third-party payors are too remote to have been proximately caused by the defendants’ alleged conduct, we reverse the denial of the motion to dismiss with respect to the RICO and fraud claims in
Service Employees International Union Health and Welfare Fund v. Philip Morris Inc.,
I.
A.
In Service Employees, several labor-management health trust funds (“the funds”), see 29 U.S.C. § 186(c)(5) (1994), sued Philip Morris, other tobacco companies, and other entities related to the tobacco industry, alleging a fraudulent scheme to preserve their control of the cigarette market and to avoid the costs of *1070 treating smoking-related diseases by counteracting smokers’ efforts to quit, by impairing the ability of health care providers to reduce costs through effective smoking cessation programs and safer cigarettes, and by concealing the tobacco industry’s active role in manipulating and perpetuating the resulting health care crisis. The funds seek to recover their payments for participants’ smoking-related health care costs by “su[ing] in their own capacities, rather than asserting claims in subrogatiоn on behalf of individual [f]und beneficiaries.”
The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) the funds’ local and federal antitrust claims for lack of an antitrust injury and for failure to specify antitrust damages.
Service Employees,
83 F.Supp.2d at
89-91. The
court dismissed the funds’ fraud claims without prejudice for failure to plead fraud with particularity as required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b).
Id.
at 91-92. The district court also dismissed the funds’ special duty, indemnity, and unjust enrichment claims.
Id.
at 92-94. Denying the motion to dismiss with respect to the funds’ RICO claims, however, the district court accepted the funds’ characterization of their injuries as “direct injuries to the trust assets,”
id.
at 86, or harm “to their infrastructure and financial health and stability,”
id.,
and rejected the view that such damages 'are entirely derivative of the harm suffered by the funds’ beneficiaries,
id.
at 89. While the district court acknowledged the analytical framework provided by the Supreme Court in
Associated General Contractors of California, Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters,
The defendants, in seeking reversal on the RICO and fraud claims, rely principally on what they characterize as “150 years of controlling precedent” regarding proximate cause under the common law that the Supreme Cоurt’s decisions in
AGC
and
Holmes
have incorporated in analyzing standing to pursue federal antitrust and RICO claims.
Holmes,
B.
The Republics of Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Ukraine (“the nations”) seek to distinguish their claims from those of the typical third-party payor whose fate is sealed by *1071 the decisions of other circuits. They contend that as sovereign nations constitutionally (or otherwise legally) obligated to provide free health care and other forms of social welfare to their residents, or at least to those who cannot afford to pay for such benefits, they have suffered economic harms to their treasuries that are independent of any harms allegedly suffered by their residents as a result of smoking defendants’ products. The nations maintain that they are not only the best but the only plaintiffs who can rеcover for the economic harm allegedly suffered by their public fiscs. Further, they claim' a purported right to sue in parens patriae that they view as overcoming concerns about their standing to recover their economic losses under RICO and the federal antitrust laws.
The district court dismissed the complaints in their entirety.
Guatemala,
In seeking reversal, the nations contend that the district court misapplied the
Holmes
factors, ignored the foreseeable nature of the harms alleged as well as public рolicy considerations in conducting its proximate cause analysis, failed to address the alternate chain of causation alleged by the nations, and failed to acknowledge the nations’ unique status as foreign sovereigns. Essentially, the nations urge this court to adopt the district court’s proximate cause analysis in
Service Employees
and to give special weight to their right to sue as
parens patriae.
They also contend that the district court erred in not allowing them to replead their fraud and RICO claims.
See Guatemala,
II.
Our review of the district courts’ partial denial and grant of the defendants’ motions to dismiss the complaints under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) is
de novo. See Kowal v. MCI Communications Corp.,
To date, seven circuit courts of appeal have rejected claims similar to those brought by the funds and the nations by generally concluding that the alleged injuries are too remote and, therefore, are not redressable for lack of proximate cause. 2
*1072
In
Service Employees,
the funds seek to distinguish these cases principally on the ground that the circuits have engaged in an overly mechanical analysis of proximate cause and ignored congressional intent and important public policies underlying RICO. Pointing to RICO’s history and purpose,
see Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
The funds and the nations err in assuming that the proximate cause analysis called for by
AGC
and
Holmes
is a quest for the “best” (or, realistically, “least bad”) plaintiff. Rather, the Supreme Court has insisted on an appropriate plaintiff, namely, a plaintiff whose alleged injury possesses a sufficiently direct causal relationship to the alleged wrongdoing.
See AGC,
By relying on the analysis of RICO’s legislative history set forth in Justice Marshall’s dissenting opinion in
Sedima,
The nations’ assertion that they may proceed in
parens patriae
is a dubious assertion at best, for as the First Circuit pointed out in
Estados Unidos Mexicanos v. DeCoster,
Even were the court to view as oversimplified the defendants’ reliance on the settled rule barring direct suits by third parties seeking to recover the costs of medical care paid on behalf оf individuals injured as a result of an alleged tortfeasor’s conduct,
3
application of the
Holmes
factors,
4
We likewise hold that the harms alleged by the funds and the nations are too remote from the defendants’ alleged wrongdoing to provide antitrust or RICO standing. Neither the funds nor the nations have shown that their claimed economic harms were not caused by other independent factors or that difficult problems of duplicative recoveries or allocation of damages could be avoided were they allowed to proceed. Indeed, as the defendants suggest, the alleged harm arising from payment of medical expenses by the funds and the nations is itself derivative of alleged injuries to individual smokers, and the alleged “infrastructure” harms are even more remote than the damages for mеdical payments because the potential
for
“infrastructure” harm does not exist until an actuarially significant number of medical payments on behalf of smokers has been made.
See Laborers Local,
The remоte, derivative nature of the alleged injuries, in turn, makes more difficult the determination of the amount of damages that is attributable to the alleged wrongdoing, as distinct from other independent factors. As the circuits have pointed out, considerable speculation would be involved in identifying the costs that have caused the alleged financial instability of the funds and similar costs to the nations’ treasuries that the plaintiffs contend have deterred or prevented them from financing various health care programs.
See Wash. Pub. Hosp.,
Allowing the funds and the nations to proceed would also require complex rules for apportioning damages between potеntial plaintiffs removed from the alleged wrongdoing by different levels of injury, as well as create a very real possibility of duplicative recoveries against the defendants. The need for complex rules apportioning damages arises because other indirectly injured parties might also sue. As a result, courts would be required to allocate damages among various classes of directly and indirectly injured parties who are removed from the alleged torts by varying degrees and would be required to do so in a manner that protects the tobacco industry from being held repeatedly liable for the same alleged wrongdoing.
See Holmes,
The nations contend that because they are not private insurers they cannot bring a subrogation action. Further, because they have assumed the responsibility of compensating the directly injured, they suggest that if they cannot recover in this action for the alleged harms, no one can. Assuming the premise to be correct (and the nations’ submissions are far from clear on the matter), the argument mistakenly assumes that it was Congress’ intent that there must be recoveries, regardless of the burdens inflicted on the legal system and the significant policies captured in the first two Holmes factors. See supra p. 1073 n. 4. It seems especially implausible that Congress would have wished to saddle the United States judicial system with such burdens simply to accommodate the legal idiosyncrasies of foreign nations. To the extent that such idiosyncrasies stand between the nations’ smokers and recoveries in United States courts, the nations may wish to consider amendment of their domestic law.
Relatedly, because individual smokers may seek recoveries for the same allegеd conduct under state law theories and because employers, other health insurers, and other similar potential plaintiffs might also pursue similar antitrust and RICO claims against the tobacco industry, double recovery could occur.
See Wash. Pub. Hosp.,
Virtually the same kinds of problеms exist with respect to the nations’ claims.
See Wash. Pub. Hosp.,
By its very nature, the common law proximate cause requirement adopted by the Supreme Court in
Holmes
and
AGC
leaves open the possibility that “[sjome injuries caused by an antitrust [or RICO] violation may thus be left unremedied for
*1076
lack of a proper plaintiff.”
Oregon Laborers,
The funds’ and the nations’ reliance on the purportedly foreseeable nature of their injuries and the allegedly intentional nature of defendants’ wrongdoing is misplaced. “[Fjoreseeability and direct injury (or remoteness) are distinct concepts, both of which must generally be established by a plaintiff.”
Laborers Local,
Accordingly, because the funds’ and the nations’ claims are “too remote, contingent, derivative, and indirect to survive,”
Guatemala,
Notes
. By unpublished order, the district court dismissed the complaints of Nicaragua and the Ukraine for the reasons in Guatemala.
. Lyons v. Philip Morris Inc.,
.
Cf. Indus. Risk Insurers,
. In explaining that the common law required "some direct relation between the injury asserted and the injurious conduct alleged,”
Holmes,
.The decisions of the Third and Ninth Circuits in
Allegheny
and
Washington Public Hospital
are instructive with respect to the nations’ claims becausе, like the nations, the plaintiffs in both cases were legally obligated to directly provide health care to smokers who could not afford to pay for such services.
See Wash. Pub. Hosp.,
. The failure of the funds and the nations to demonstrate proximate cause under
Holmes
with respect to their RICO and federal antitrust claims also means that .their antitrust and common law claims under District of Columbia law fail for lack of proximate cause.
See McKethean v. Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth.,
