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Between Sollen and Sein: The CJEU’s reliance on international law in the interpretation of economic agreements covering occupied territories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2020

Eva Kassoti*
Affiliation:
TMC Asser Institute, R.J. Schimmelpennincklaan 20-22, 2517 JNDen Haag, Netherlands Email: E.Kassoti@asser.nl
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Abstract

This contribution focuses on the Court of Justice of the European Union (Court or CJEU) reliance on international law in cases involving economic agreements covering occupied territories. In its earlier case law, the Court adopted a formalistic approach by ignoring the broader international legal framework of the dispute in an effort to achieve conformity with international law, while at the same time avoiding being drawn into political storms. The article continues by identifying an even more worrisome trend in the Court’s latest judgments in the Front Polisario and Western Sahara Campaign UK cases. In these two cases the Court showed its willingness to stretch the international rules of treaty interpretation to a breaking point in order to avoid pronouncing on the politically sensitive question of the de facto application of the EU’s agreements with Morocco in the territory of Western Sahara. The article concludes by asserting that the Court’s line of argumentation brings another dimension to the Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit debate. The classical, binary understanding of the Court’s approach as ‘open/hostile’ to international law only provides us with a partial picture of how international law was actually used in these cases. The Court’s apparent willingness to rely on international law as a heuristic device to reinforce an outcome that radically departs from the logic and structure of international law and international legal argumentation requires a more in-depth engagement with both the content of the international law rules invoked in those judgments and with the Court’s use of such rules.

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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
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1. Introduction

The CJEU’s judgment in the Western Sahara Campaign UK caseFootnote 1 is the latest in a series of judgments, spanning over two decades, pertaining to different aspects of the EU’s economic agreements extending to occupied territories. This line of case law is important in the context of the ever-growing debate regarding the CJEU’s approach to international law; it has been argued in the literature that, although in its earlier case law the Court seemed to have adopted a friendly and open attitude towards international law, more recent case law evidences a more reserved, inward-looking attitude and a tendency to eschew engagement therewith.Footnote 2 Revisiting the CJEU’s Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit debate from this vantage point is highly relevant since these cases invariably involve questions of interpretation and application of cardinal principles of international law, such as the duty of non-recognition, the principle of self-determination and the right to permanent sovereignty over natural resources. In this light, this contribution focuses on the Court’s reliance on international law in cases involving economic agreements covering occupied territories.

The article argues that the Court’s approach to international law in these cases is highly problematic. In its earlier case law, including Anastasiou Footnote 3 and Brita,Footnote 4 the Court adopted a formalistic and one-dimensional approach by ignoring the broader international legal framework of the dispute in an effort to achieve conformity with international law, while at the same time avoiding being drawn into political storms. The article continues by identifying an even more worrisome trend in the Court’s latest judgments in the Front Polisario Footnote 5 and Western Sahara Campaign UK cases. In these two cases the Court, instead of simply ignoring relevant international law norms, showed its willingness to stretch the international rules of treaty interpretation to a breaking point in order to avoid pronouncing on the politically sensitive question of the de facto application of the EU’s agreements with Morocco in the territory of Western Sahara.

The article concludes by asserting that the Court’s line of argumentation in its more recent case law pertaining to economic agreements covering occupied territories brings another dimension to the Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit debate. The classical, binary understanding of the Court’s approach as ‘open/hostile’ to international law only provides us with a partial picture of how international law was actually used in these cases. The Court’s apparent willingness to rely on international law as a heuristic device to reinforce an outcome that radically departs from the logic and structure of international law and international legal argumentation requires a more in-depth engagement with both the content of the international law rules invoked in those judgments and with the Court’s use of such rules.

2. Earlier jurisprudence of the CJEU relating to economic agreements covering occupied territories: The Anastasiou and Brita cases

The two most important judgments involving economic agreements extending to occupied territories prior to the Western Sahara litigation before the CJEU were Anastasiou and Brita. Arguably, in both cases, the Court ignored the broader international legal framework of the dispute (including the legal status of the territories in question as ‘occupied’ ones as well as the concomitant obligation of non-recognition on behalf of the EU) in an effort to ensure respect to international law, while, at the same time, avoiding politically contentious issues.

The Anastasiou case arose from an action brought by a number of Greek Cypriot producers before the UK High Court of Justice for judicial review of the practice of UK authorities of accepting origin certificates (pursuant to the 1977 Protocol regarding products originating from Cyprus)Footnote 6 and phytosanitary certificates (pursuant to Directive 77/93/EEC on protective measures against the introduction into the Community of organisms harmful to plants or plant products)Footnote 7 issued by the authorities of the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC).Footnote 8 The Court stated that the non-recognition of the TRNC either by the EU, or by its member states, precluded the possibility of mutual reliance and co-operation between the entity’s authorities and those of the member states according to the 1977 Protocol.Footnote 9 On this basis, it was held that ‘the acceptance of movement certificates not issued by the Republic of Cyprus would constitute … a denial of the very object and purpose of the system established by the 1977 Protocol’.Footnote 10

In Anastasiou, the Court’s reasoning was not based on international law; the judgment evidences no engagement with the question of Community’s obligation of non-recognitionFootnote 11 of the acts of the occupying authorities under international law. More particularly, the Court did not address at all the argument put forward by the Greek Government to the effect that acceptance of the certificates issued by the Turkish authorities in Northern Cyprus would be tantamount to violating a number of UN Security Council ResolutionsFootnote 12 condemning the Turkish occupation and calling upon all members of the international community not to recognize the self-proclaimed TRNC.Footnote 13 Although the Court did acknowledge the de facto partition of the island, the problems stemming from this situation were merely regarded as pertaining to the ‘internal affairs of Cyprus’ which should be resolved ‘exclusively by the Republic of Cyprus, which alone is internationally recognized’.Footnote 14

On the contrary, the Court framed its analysis in terms of the need to maintain the uniform application of Community rules in its trade relations.Footnote 15 The CJEU underscored that a strict interpretation of the 1977 Protocol was required ‘in order to ensure uniform application of the [EU-Cyprus] Association Agreement in all the Member States’.Footnote 16 According to Koutrakos, this approach shows that the Court seeks to ensure the uniformity and effectiveness of EU law ‘whilst intervening as little as possible in an issue which is highly charged in political terms’ and is fully consistent with ‘the case-law in other areas of trade policy with significant foreign policy overtones, namely economic sanctions against third countries and exports of dual-use goods’.Footnote 17

In Brita, the CJEU was confronted with the question of the territorial scope of the EU-Israel Association Agreement.Footnote 18 The case concerned the import to Germany of goods from an Israeli company located in the West Bank.Footnote 19 The German authorities withdrew the benefit of preferential treatment on the ground that it could not be conclusively established that the imported goods fell within the scope of the EU-Israel Association Agreement.Footnote 20 Brita, the company that imports the products in question, brought the issue before the German courts, which then submitted a preliminary question to the CJEU.Footnote 21

Despite an express invitation by the Advocate General to analyse the legal status of Israel’s presence in the West Bank for the purpose of establishing the territorial scope of the Association Agreement,Footnote 22 the Court decided the matter solely with reference to the ‘politically-detached’ principle of pacta tertiis.Footnote 23 The CJEU argued that the EU-PLO Association AgreementFootnote 24 implicitly restricted the territorial scope of the EU-Israel Association Agreement.Footnote 25 The failure to take into account the broader international legal framework of the dispute (including the status of Israel as an occupying power; the violation of the Palestinian peoples’ right to self-determination; and the concomitant obligation of non-recognition on the part of the EU) in interpreting the territorial scope of the EU-Israel Association Agreement leaves much to be desired.Footnote 26 In this light, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that, by not relying more heavily on international law, the Court sought to achieve conformity with EU law while avoiding being drawn into contentious political issues.Footnote 27 However, this judicial strategy severely undermines the normative power of European narrative and lends evidentiary force to the argument that the CJEU, in its practice, shows a great deal of ‘judicial recalcitrance’ towards international law.Footnote 28

3. The Western Sahara cases before the CJEU: Factual and legal background to the Western Sahara dispute

Against this backdrop, the remainder of the article zooms in on the Western Sahara litigation before the CJEU – a line of case law that is of particular significance since it involves questions of interpretation of economic agreements covering an occupied territory. Before embarking on an analysis of the relevant judgments, this section sketches out the factual and legal background of the Western Sahara dispute.

In 1963, the UN added Western Sahara, formerly a Spanish colony,Footnote 29 to its list of non-self-governing territories.Footnote 30 Three years later, the UN General Assembly urged Spain, as the administering power, to hold a referendum in order to enable the indigenous peoples of the territory to ‘exercise freely [their] right to self-determination’.Footnote 31 Front Polisario was formed in 1973 with a view to gaining independence for Western Sahara.Footnote 32 Competing claims between Morocco and Mauritania over the territory prompted the UN General Assembly to request an advisory opinion from the ICJ.Footnote 33 The Court opined that no legal ties existed between Western Sahara and Morocco and Mauritania of such a nature that could affect the application of the principle of self-determination of the peoples of the territory.Footnote 34 A few days after the ICJ rendered its opinion Moroccan armed forces entered the disputed territory and soon thereafter an armed conflict broke out between Front Polisario on the one hand, and Morocco and Mauritania on the other.Footnote 35 In February 1976 Spain officially declared its withdrawal from Western Sahara.Footnote 36 Three years later, in 1979, Mauritania and Front Polisario signed a peace agreement under which Mauritania agreed to withdraw its armed forces and relinquished its claim over Western Sahara.Footnote 37 Upon Mauritania’s withdrawal, Moroccan armed forces annexed the remainder of the territory. The UN General Assembly swiftly condemned the annexation and characterized the presence of the Moroccan army in the territory as ‘occupation’.Footnote 38 Since then, several UN-brokered efforts have been made to resolve the dispute – which have, however, proved thus far futile.Footnote 39 As a result, the UN still recognizes Spain as the de jure administering power of Western Sahara, which remains on the UN’s list of non-self-governing territories.Footnote 40 A series of resolutions by the UN Security Council and General Assembly have repeatedly affirmed the right of Sahrawi people to self-determination.Footnote 41

From an international legal perspective, there is little doubt that Western Sahara is not only a non-self-governing, but also an occupied territory since Morocco’s presence therein meets the objective threshold of occupation under international humanitarian law, namely demonstration of effective authority and control over a territory to which the occupying state holds no sovereign title.Footnote 42 The UN General Assembly has twice characterized the presence of Morocco in Western Sahara as ‘belligerent occupation’Footnote 43 and a number of EU member states describe Western Sahara as ‘occupied’.Footnote 44 The African Union also considers Western Sahara to be under occupation by Morocco.Footnote 45 It needs to be noted that both the South African courtFootnote 46 and the referring court in the Western Sahara Campaign UK caseFootnote 47 also subscribe to the same view. However, Morocco denies its status as an occupying power. Rather, it considers the territory ‘as an integral part of the Kingdom of Morocco’Footnote 48 and even refers thereto in the official UN documentation as ‘Moroccan Sahara’.Footnote 49 In his 2014 speech to the Nation, King Mohammed VI stated that: ‘We say “No” to the attempt to change the nature of this regional conflict and to present it as a decolonization issue. Morocco is in its Sahara and never was an occupying power or an administrative power. In fact, it exercises its sovereignty over its territory’ and added that ‘Morocco’s sovereignty over its entire territory is effective, inalienable, and non-negotiable.’Footnote 50 It is important to note that these claims to territorial sovereignty do not affect the legal status of Morocco as an occupying power since, under international humanitarian law, occupation is a matter of fact resting upon the assertion of effective control and authority over a territory.Footnote 51

Before embarking upon the analysis, a brief overview of the EU’s approach towards Western Sahara needs to be provided at this juncture in order to clarify the political context within which the CJEU was called to pronounce on the legality of the de facto application of the EU’s trade agreements with Morocco to Western Sahara. Although the EU has, on various occasions, expressed concern about the pro-longed nature of the conflict and its implications for security, respect for human rights and co-operation in the region,Footnote 52 it has been observed that its language is ‘rather muted’.Footnote 53 The EU Annual Report on Human Rights and Democracy in the World 2014 states that Western Sahara is a ‘territory contested by Morocco and the Polisario Front’Footnote 54 without making any reference to the legal status of Western Sahara as an occupied territory or to the right of its people to self-determination. While the text of the 2016 Annual Report (which was adopted in October 2017, namely after the delivery of the CJEU’s Front Polisario judgment) is more carefully drafted stating that Western Sahara is a ‘non-self-governing territory, whose status remains the object of a negotiation process conducted under the auspices of the UN’,Footnote 55 it still omits any reference to its status as an occupied territory. In this light, the Western Sahara litigation clearly involved politically sensitive questions, and the Court was well aware of the potential impact of its pronouncements on EU–Morocco relations. The fact that Morocco temporarily suspended its diplomatic relations with the EUFootnote 56 in the aftermath of the General Court’s ruling in Front Polisario Footnote 57 as well as the fact that both the Council and the Commission expressly referred to the political nature of the questions put forward to the Court,Footnote 58 attest to sensitive political dimension of this line of case law.

4. The Front Polisario case

On 21 December 2016, the CJEU delivered its appeals judgment in the Front Polisario case.Footnote 59 The Grand Chamber overturned the General Court’s judgmentFootnote 60 rendered a year earlier. It decided that Front Polisario, the main Sahrawi liberation movement, did not have legal standing to bring an action for annulment against the Council decisionFootnote 61 adopting the 2010 EU-Morocco Agreement on agricultural, processed agricultural and fisheries products (Liberalization Agreement)Footnote 62 since, in its view, neither the Liberalization Agreement nor the 1996 EU-Morocco Association AgreementFootnote 63 (on which the former is based) legally extend to the territory of Western Sahara.Footnote 64 The CJEU ruled that the General Court erred in interpreting the territorial scope of the Liberalization Agreement as extending to Western Sahara to the extent that it failed to take into account Article 31(3)(c) of the Vienna Convention on the Law of TreatiesFootnote 65(VCLT) pursuant to which the interpretation of a treaty must be carried out in the light of ‘any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties’.Footnote 66 The Court pointed out three relevant rules of applicable international law that the General Court failed to take into account: the right to self-determination; Article 29 VCLT relating to the territorial scope of international agreements; and the principle of the relative effect of treaties (the principle of pacta tertiis).Footnote 67

According to the Court, the right to self-determination is an erga omnes right and one of the essential principles of international law, as evidenced by the relevant case law of the ICJ,Footnote 68 applicable to all non-self-governing territories and to all peoples who have not yet achieved independence.Footnote 69 As a non-self-governing-territory whose peoples have an internationally recognized right to self-determination, Western Sahara has a legal status separate and distinct from that of Morocco, and this legal status precludes the legal application of Article 94 of the Association Agreement to the territory.Footnote 70

Next, the Court turned to the ‘territorial scope’ rule enshrined in Article 29 VCLT.Footnote 71 In the Court’s view, the wording of the article implies that an international agreement is applicable only within the geographical space within which a state exercises its full sovereign powers and does not extend to other territories under its jurisdiction or international responsibility, unless the treaty expressly provides for such an extension.Footnote 72 This reading of Article 29 VCLT precluded Western Sahara, as a non-self-governing territory, from being regarded as falling under Article 94 of the Association Agreement.Footnote 73

In its analysis of the relevant rules of international law applicable between the EU and Morocco, the Court finally relied on the principle of the relative effect of treaties (pacta tertiis principle) enshrined in Article 34 VCLT.Footnote 74 It was asserted that Western Sahara’s status as a non-self-governing territory means that it constitutes a third party (tertius) in relation to the EU and Morocco.Footnote 75 Thus, the Association Agreement could not, in the Court’s view, be interpreted as being applicable to the territory of Western Sahara to the extent that its people had not expressly consented thereto.Footnote 76

Finally, the Court also disagreed with the General Court’s assessment of the role of ‘subsequent practice’ in interpreting the Liberalization Agreement pursuant to Article 31(3)(b) VCLT.Footnote 77 The CJEU held that the General Court failed to establish the requisite elements of Article 31(3)(b) VCLT. In the Court’s opinion, the instances of de facto application of the Association and Liberalization Agreements to Western Sahara did not warrant the conclusion that the EU and Morocco had actually agreed to extend the application of those treaties to the territory in question.Footnote 78 In the light of the finding that the Liberalization Agreement is not legally applicable to the territory of Western Sahara, the CJEU held that Front Polisario did not have legal standing to bring an action of annulment against the Council Decision approving the Liberalization Agreement and, accordingly, the Court dismissed its action as inadmissible.Footnote 79

The judgment has been criticized in the literature mainly because of the CJEU’s selective and artificial reliance on international law.Footnote 80 More particularly, as Odermatt observes, the judgment is an example of the Court ‘instrumentalizing’ international law.Footnote 81 Though purportedly relying on international law, upon closer scrutiny, the Court’s reasoning and findings are far from convincing from the vantage point of the international legal order since the CJEU applied principles of international law without taking into consideration how these principles are actually understood in international law and in international judicial practice. In this sense, the Court’s approach to international law in this case is difficult to reconcile with the EU’s internationalist rhetoric.Footnote 82

First, the Court’s approach to treaty interpretation is problematic; here, the Court approached the question of interpretation of the territorial scope of the Association and Liberalization Agreements almost exclusively through the lens of Article 31(3)(c) VCLT (interpretation in the light of ‘relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties’).Footnote 83 The Court’s excessive reliance on Article 31(3)(c) VCLT and the fact that it paid little or no attention to other elements contained therein go against the interpretative process envisaged thereunder; a process that, according to the International Law Commission (ILC), is predicated on the combined application of all means of interpretation set out in Article 31.Footnote 84 The practice of international adjudicatory bodies confirms that interpretation under Article 31 VCLT is a legal operation that requires: (i) that all elements of the article should be evaluated together; and (ii) that no firm conclusion based on particular elements should be reached before the conclusion of the interpretative process.Footnote 85 Rather than starting with the treaty terms and applying the whole process of the Vienna Convention systematically, the CJEU ‘turned treaty interpretation on its head’ and relied almost exclusively on Article 31(3)(c) VCLT.Footnote 86 This not only shows unfamiliarity with the operation of Article 31 VCLT but also casts doubt on its findings.

Secondly, it is questionable to what extent the rules invoked and relied upon by the Court constitute in reality ‘relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties’ within the meaning of Article 31(3)(c) VCLT. The Court’s reliance on the principle of self-determination of the peoples of Western Sahara, as a non-self-governing territory, for the purpose of interpreting the territorial scope of the EU-Morocco Association Agreement is particularly problematic. The Court found that the right of peoples to self-determination is a right erga omnes and as such it is applicable to the relations between the EU and Morocco.Footnote 87 It then relied on the Friendly Relations Declaration,Footnote 88 according to which a non-self-governing territory has ‘under the [UN] Charter, a status separate and distinct from the State administering it’, in order to conclude that the Association Agreement cannot be interpreted in such a way as to include Western Sahara within its territorial scope.Footnote 89 The Court here drew conclusions regarding the territorial status of Western Sahara vis-à-vis Morocco without inquiring into the exact legal consequences that might flow from a non-self-governing-territory possessing ‘separate and distinct status’.Footnote 90 The Friendly Relations Declaration reference to the ‘separate and distinct’ status of non-self-governing territories is generally understood to mean that these territories enjoy a measure of international legal personality, but not necessarily a measure of territorial sovereigntyFootnote 91 – as the CJEU seems to imply here. Indeed, there is evidence to suggest that, in the context of non-self-governing territories, sovereignty and territorial title remain with the administering state.Footnote 92

Furthermore, it is difficult to see how the extract from the Friendly Relations Declaration is relevant for the purpose of interpreting what constitutes the ‘territory of the Kingdom of Morocco’; the extract clearly refers to, and defines, the legal status of non-self-governing territories vis-à-vis their administering states. However, Morocco does not administer Western Sahara under Article 73 of the UN Charter but militarily occupies it. In this vein, Hilpold notes that:

in applying this principle (self-determination) to the Front Polisario case, the Court of Justice goes far beyond what was said by the International Court of Justice in 1995 (in the East Timor Case) and in 2004 (in the Wall Opinion) … If applied coherently, this new rule would mean that the EU is prohibited from extending the territorial application of trade agreements to occupied regions whose population is denied their right to self-determination.Footnote 93

It has been suggested in the literature that, despite its flawed reasoning, the judgment can still be perceived as völkerrechtsfreundlich particularly because the Court clearly reaffirmed Western Sahara’s distinct territorial status, the right of self-determination of the Sahrawi people, and the erga omnes nature of such right.Footnote 94 According to Milano this is so especially in the light of the fact that the role of the CJEU is not to cast light on complex issues of international law:

the CJEU is generally concerned with upholding and guaranteeing the consistency and coherence of the EU legal order, rather than contributing to the development of international law or projecting the image of the EU as a Völkerrechtsfreundlich actor.Footnote 95

This proposition is problematic. Although the Court’s reaffirmation of the right of the people of Western Sahara to self-determination is – in and of itself – commendable, it does not detract from the fact that the Court, in this case, applied international law rules of treaty interpretation in a way that few international lawyers would recognize. Respect for international law is now expressly a core constitutional norm – something that has been acknowledged by the Court itself.Footnote 96 The EU’s external projection of itself as an entity firmly committed to the strict observance and development of international law generates the expectation that its Courts also espouse something of this internationalist approach.Footnote 97 The Court’s misconstruction of international law in this case does not sit well with the image of a court that shares an internationalist outlook. Furthermore, misconstruing international law affects the legitimacy of the Court itself as a judicial body. Traditionally, an important source of legitimacy for the judiciary is a ‘reason-based legitimacy’, namely the convincing quality of its legal reasoning – something that ‘results from the judges construing … the law before them … in a way that their judicial decisions sit coherently with the “relevant” existing legal propositions’.Footnote 98 In this light, the Court’s interpretation of the principle of self-determination undermines its own reason-based legitimacy.

Similarly, the proposition that Article 29 VCLT supports the finding of legal inapplicability of the agreements at hand to the territory of Western Sahara is open to doubt.Footnote 99 Here the Court relied on Article 29 VCLT in order to argue that whenever an international agreement is intended to produce extraterritorial effect, the wording of its ‘territorial scope’ clause is formulated in such a way as to expressly provide for this effect.Footnote 100 Short of a provision expressly allowing the extraterritorial application of the Association Agreement to Western Sahara, it was concluded that its scope could not be understood as including that territory.Footnote 101 The Court’s argument to the effect that Article 29 VCLT creates a presumption against extraterritoriality does not comport with the drafting history of the Article. The ILC, in its 1966 commentary, made it abundantly clear that the matter of extraterritorial application of treaties was too complicated and it decided to leave it aside.Footnote 102 Furthermore, as Odermatt stresses, according to the ILC, Article 29 VCLT was designed to apply in cases where a treaty does not define its territorial application – something that is not the case in relation to the agreement at hand.Footnote 103 In this light, the Court’s conclusion that Article 29 VCLT corroborates the view that the territorial scope of the Association Agreement does not extend to Western Sahara seems unsubstantiated.

The CJEU’s interpretation and application of the principle of the relative effect of treaties (pacta tertiis principle) has also been criticized in the literature to the extent that the applicability of this principle to international legal persons other than states remains unclear.Footnote 104 The principle’s conceptual roots in the notions of state sovereignty and sovereign equality arguably preclude its application to non-state actors. The principle has been codified in Article 34 VCLT which clearly refers to ‘third States’ and not to ‘third parties’ in general, and the ILC in its 1966 commentary highlighted the rule’s intrinsic link to the notion of state sovereignty.Footnote 105 In the light of the state-centric nature of the principle, the Court’s unqualified assertion that it applies to relations between states and non-state actors falls short of convincing.

The overwhelming majority of commentators have found the Court’s reluctance to engage extensively with the parties’ ‘subsequent practice in the application of the treaty’ under Article 31(3)(b) VCLT for the purpose of interpreting the territorial scope of the Association and Liberalization Agreement particularly problematic.Footnote 106 The importance attached to the subsequent practice of the parties to a treaty in its interpretation constitutes one of the most distinctive features of the Vienna rules.Footnote 107 International courts and tribunals routinely have recourse to the subsequent practice of the parties in order to establish the ‘ordinary meaning’ of a treaty term in accordance with Article 31(1) VCLT, or it can enter the reasoning at a later stage, in order to confirm the result reached from the initial textual interpretation.Footnote 108 The CJEU has also recognized the relevance of the ‘settled practice of the parties to the Agreement’ for the purpose of treaty interpretation,Footnote 109 and it has even argued that ‘the subsequent practice followed in the application of a treaty may override the clear terms of that treaty if that practice reflects the parties’ agreement’.Footnote 110 The Court’s refusal to engage with the parties’ subsequent practice severely undermines the outcome of its interpretative process. In a similar vein, the Court’s dismissal of subsequent conduct by the EU and Morocco as mere de facto instances of application of the agreements at hand to the territory of Western SaharaFootnote 111 falls short of convincing since the Court failed to make a distinction between ‘de facto instances of application of an agreement’ and ‘subsequent practice’ within the meaning of Article 31(3)(b) VCLT.

In this context, the sole argument provided by the Court was that the de facto application of the agreements to the Western Sahara did not reflect the existence of an agreement between the EU and Morocco with regard to interpretation as required by Article 31(3)(b) VCLT.Footnote 112 According to the Court, had the EU intended the agreements to apply to Western Sahara, that:

would necessarily have entailed conceding that the European Union intended to implement those agreements in a manner incompatible with the principles of self-determination and of the relative effect of treaties, even though the European Union repeatedly reiterated the need to comply with those principles.Footnote 113

The Court’s tortured logic according to which ‘there could not be what must not be’Footnote 114 has been vociferously criticized in the literature.Footnote 115 As Van der Loo aptly notes: ‘the reasoning of the Court is based on the remarkable assumption that it is unthinkable that the EU would not act in good faith or contrary to international law’.Footnote 116

In the literature, an argument has been floated to the effect that the Court’s prioritization of contextual interpretation (Article 31(3)(c) VCLT over subsequent practice (Article 31(3)(b) VCLT)) is defensible from the vantage point of international law in the light of the interpretative relevance of the jus cogens nature of the principle of self-determination.Footnote 117 According to Cannizzaro: ‘The higher rank of self-determination provides an excellent reason for giving priority to the technique of contextual interpretation over the competing technique of subsequent practice.’Footnote 118 In this view, the existence of a peremptory norm in the normative environment within which a treaty is interpreted constitutes a ‘legally insurmountable limit to a permissible treaty interpretation’Footnote 119 leading the interpreter to construe a treaty provision consistently with the relevant peremptory norm.

With respect, it is submitted that this view is problematic on a number of grounds. First, this proposition does not find support in the Vienna rules which only envisage the operation of jus cogens norms as a body of rules from which no derogation is permitted (Article 53 VCLT). The general rule of interpretation as reflected in Article 31 VCLT does not carve out a special role for peremptory norms in the context of treaty interpretation. Second, this view is premised on the idea that the different means of interpretation enshrined in Article 31 VCLT are ‘competing’ or are (actually or potentially) in conflict with each other. As the argument goes, interpretation on the basis of the different means listed under Article 31 could yield different interpretative outcomes and thus, a conflict settling-rule (jus cogens) is needed in order to give priority to one of the competing means of interpretation.Footnote 120 However, the conceptualization of the different means of interpretation under Article 31 VCLT as ‘competing’ or as in (actual or potential) conflict goes against the way in which the general rule of interpretation was designed to operate. According to the ILCFootnote 121 and to international judicial practiceFootnote 122 all elements of Article 31 VCLT need to be viewed and applied together in a single combined operation, so that there is a single route to the interpretative outcome.Footnote 123 In this sense, the very idea of ‘conflicting means of interpretation’ within the general rule departs from the process of interpretation as envisaged in the Vienna Convention. Third, taken to the extreme, this view would hold that in all cases where there is a discrepancy between law and fact, i.e., between the normative context of the agreement and the subsequent practice of the parties, this discrepancy could simply be papered over at the stage of interpretation – irrespective of the actual evidence on the ground.

Overall, the CJEU’s artificial and selective reliance on international law in the Front Polisario case leaves much to be desired from an international legal perspective. In this case, the Court showed its willingness to stretch the limits of treaty interpretation to a breaking point in order to avoid pronouncing on the politically sensitive question of the de facto application of the agreements in question to the territory of Western Sahara.Footnote 124

5. The Western Sahara Campaign UK case

The judgment followed a request for a preliminary ruling by the High Court of England and Wales in a case brought by Western Sahara Campaign UK, a voluntary organization whose aim is to support the right of the peoples of Western Sahara to self-determination.Footnote 125 In the context of the national proceedings the applicant challenged the validity of the EU-Morocco Association Agreement, the Fisheries Partnership Agreement (FPA),Footnote 126 the 2013 Fisheries ProtocolFootnote 127 as well as the relevant EU implementing legislation insofar as these instruments were applicable to the territory of Western Sahara and to the waters adjacent thereto.Footnote 128 According to the applicant, the inclusion of that territory and of those waters within the territorial scope of the relevant EU-Morocco agreements violates Article 3(5) of the Treaty on European Union (TEU), under which the Union is required to respect international law.Footnote 129 More particularly, the applicant claimed that such inclusion is incompatible with the right to self-determination, the duty of non-recognition, the duty of non-assistance as well as the principle of permanent sovereignty over natural resources.Footnote 130 Since the preliminary ruling request was lodged before the judgment in the Front Polisario case was delivered, the referring court withdrew its first two questions regarding the interpretation and validity of the Association Agreement following the delivery of the Front Polisario judgment.Footnote 131 In this light, the two questions that remained to be answered concerned: (i) the validity of the FPA and the 2013 Protocol as well as the relevant EU implementing acts having regard to Article 3(5) TEU; and (ii) the conditions under which international law may be relied on in the context of judicial review of EU acts by a request for a preliminary ruling on validity.Footnote 132

In this case, the Court set out to interpret the territorial scope of the FPA and the 2013 on the basis of international rules of treaty interpretation. However, as in Front Polisario, the Court’s approach to treaty interpretation in this case is highly problematic from an international law point of view. Four main points pertaining to the Court’s problematic approach to treaty interpretation are made below. First, the Court here ascribed undue weight to the assumption that the EU could not have acted in breach of international law – a line of reasoning that does not comport with the letter and spirit of the Vienna rules. Second, in a similar vein of the Front Polisario judgment, the Court’s excessive reliance on Article 31(3)(c) and its refusal to engage with the other means of interpretation enshrined therein cast doubt on its findings. Third, the cumulative effect of these two aforementioned lines of argumentation is that the Court focused excessively on the normative context of the agreements, thereby losing sight of the main aim of treaty interpretation, i.e., discerning the common intention of the parties. Fourth, the eschewal of engagement with the subsequent practice of the parties renders the Court’s interpretative outcome questionable.

As seen above, one of the most striking aspects of the Front Polisario judgment – and one that has attracted a fair amount of criticism in the literature – was the Court’s over-reliance on the normative context of the dispute for the purposes of interpreting the EU-Morocco Association and Liberalization Agreements.Footnote 133 More particularly, in Front Polisario, the Court advanced, inter alia, the argument that since the EU has expressly professed its respect to international law, then the relevant agreements must be interpreted in a way that assumes that the EU respects international law.Footnote 134 The same argument to the effect that ‘there could not be what must not be’Footnote 135 permeates the Western Sahara Campaign UK judgment. The Court had recourse to this argument twice; both in interpreting what constitutes the concept of ‘territory’ of Morocco and in interpreting what constitutes ‘waters falling within the sovereignty’ of Morocco. According to the judgment, if the EU-Morocco fisheries agreements extended to the territory of Western Sahara and the waters adjacent thereto, ‘this would be contrary to certain rules of international law … which the European Union must observe’.Footnote 136

This line of reasoning is deeply problematic on a number of grounds. The extreme version of the argument advanced by the Court holds that the EU could never be found in breach of international law simply because this would run counter to its express commitment to upholding international law and irrespective of the actual evidence on the ground. In this sense, in the context of judicial review of the compatibility of the EU’s international agreements with international law, all conflicts between what the EU should do according to international law and what it actually does in the application of an agreement could simply be ‘interpreted away’.

More fundamentally, this line of reasoning raises questions in relation to the weight and role that such an assumption may have in the process of treaty interpretation. To be sure, in the context of treaty interpretation, there is a presumption that in entering treaty obligations, the parties intend not to act inconsistently with generally recognized principles of international law.Footnote 137 However, this is merely a presumption, namely the starting point in the quest for attributing meaning to the relevant treaty terms, and thus, it cannot, in and of itself, displace the actual interpretative process. As Jenks writes:

the presumption against conflict is not, however, of an overriding character. It is one of the elements to be taken into account in determining the meaning of a treaty provision, but will not avail against clear language or clear evidence of intention.Footnote 138

Here the Court seems to have accorded undue weight to the presumption of compliance with international law. The EU’s professed commitment to international law was not treated merely as the starting point in the quest for ascertaining the meaning of the relevant treaty terms in the FPA, but as an overriding principle of treaty interpretation. This approach, however, does not comport with the interpretative process under Article 31 VCLT.

Furthermore, the argument, according to which ‘there could not be what must not be’, seems to conflate interpretation with application. Although closely intertwined, these two normative processes are distinct.Footnote 139 Interpretation is the process of determining ‘the meaning of a text’, whereas application is ‘the process of determining the consequences which, according to the text, should follow in a given situation’.Footnote 140 Thus, interpretation, at least in the relatively strict sense referred to in the VCLT, is ‘a matter of definition’,Footnote 141 namely a matter of giving meaning to the terms of a treaty.Footnote 142 In international judicial practice, interpretation precedes the application of a treaty text.Footnote 143 As Schwarzenberger put it: ‘any application of a treaty, including its execution, presupposes … a preceding conscious or subconscious interpretation of the treaty’.Footnote 144 The distinction between the normative processes of interpretation and application is also relevant in demonstrating the inherent limitations of Article 31(3)(c) VCLT (interpretation in the light of ‘relevant rules of international law’). It is one thing to seek interpretative guidance from the general principles of international law in order to clarify the meaning of a treaty term, and quite another to apply these principles independently of interpretation.Footnote 145 As Gardiner notes:

Located in its immediate context of treaty interpretation, article 31(3)(c) implicitly invites the interpreter to draw a distinction between using rules of international law as part of the apparatus of treaty interpretation and applying the rules of international law directly to the facts in the context of which the treaty is being considered. The former is within the scope of the Vienna rules, the latter not.Footnote 146

In this light, the CJEU in the Western Sahara Campaign UK case put the cart before the horse by blurring the lines between interpretation and application. Here, the Court set out to interpret the terms ‘territory’ of Morocco and ‘waters falling within the sovereignty’ of Morocco, but it did so by directly applying the principle of self-determination and the principle of relative effect of treaties to the facts of the case. Having concluded that the application of those principles would lead to a finding of breach by the EU of its international law obligations, the Court reverted back to the process of interpretation and informed the meaning of the relevant treaty terms on the basis of the juridical consequences resulting from the application of the relevant rules. Thus, in essence, the Court here reversed the sequence of the interpretation-application processes in order to reach a conclusion that would not entail the breach by the EU of any of its international law obligations. By doing so, the Court blurred the distinction between clarifying the meaning of a treaty provision with reference to rules of international law and applying those rules directly to the facts in the context of which a treaty is being considered – the latter being impermissible under the Vienna rules.Footnote 147 This greatly weakens the persuasive value of the Court’s argumentation.

Another aspect of the judgment which is strongly reminiscent of the approach to treaty interpretation espoused in Front Polisario Footnote 148 is the Court’s exclusive reliance on Article 31(3)(c) VCLT (interpretation in the light of ‘relevant rules of international law’) for the purpose of interpreting the term ‘waters falling within the jurisdiction’ of Morocco. Here, the Court relied exclusively on Articles 55 and 56 UNCLOS in order to interpret the territorial clause of the FPA and did not engage at all with the other means of interpretation listed in Article 31 VCLT. The Court’s excessive reliance on Article 31(3)(c) VCLT and the fact that it did not take into account the other means of interpretation contained in the Article go against the ‘crucible approach’ intended by the ILC and employed in international judicial practice.Footnote 149 As seen earlier, this ‘crucible approach’ envisages interpretation as a holistic process where the interpretative outcome results from the combined interaction of all elements contained in Article 31 VCLT.Footnote 150 As Abi-Saab succinctly remarked, interpretation as a holistic process means:

[O]ne integrated operation which uses several tools simultaneously to shed light from different angles on the interpreted text; these tools should not be seen as watertight compartments or as a series of separate sub-operations but, rather, as connected (even overlapping) and mutually reinforcing parts of a whole, of a continuum or a continuous and multifaceted process that cannot be reduced to a mechanical operation and which partakes as much of art (the art of judgment) as of science (the science of law).Footnote 151

In a similar vein to Front Polisario, the Western Sahara Campaign UK judgment does not show any evidence of this holistic process to treaty interpretation. By relying exclusively on Article 31(3)(c) VCLT) in order to ascertain the meaning of the term ‘waters falling within the jurisdiction of Morocco’, the Court adopted an interpretative approach that significantly departs from the letter and spirit of the Vienna rules.

Apart from the individual flaws in the Court’s approach to treaty interpretation, as these were identified and discussed above, the cumulative effect of these two main lines of argumentation (namely the over-reliance on the EU’s expressed commitment to international law, and the excessive focus placed on Article 31(3)(c) VCLT) not only casts doubt on its findings but also raises questions about the Court’s understanding of the main aim of treaty interpretation. The interpretative process, at least under the VCLT, ultimately aims at identifying the common intention of the parties.Footnote 152 As Crawford highlights: ‘It is too often forgotten that the parties to a treaty, that is the states which are bound by it at the relevant time, own the treaty. It is their treaty. It is not anyone else’s treaty.’Footnote 153 The common intention of the parties is a construct to be derived in the process of interpretation by having recourse to the means of interpretation enshrined in Article 31 VCLT.Footnote 154 In this light, in interpreting the territorial scope of the FPA and the 2013 Protocol, the sole relevant question is whether the common intention of the EU and Morocco, as evidenced (i) by the ordinary meaning of the terms of these two treaties; (ii) in their context and (iii) in the light of the treaties’ object and purpose, was that the territory were included therein.

However, in Western Sahara Campaign UK, the Court seems to have lost sight of the main aim of treaty interpretation. Here, by focusing exclusively on the normative context of the dispute, the enquiry into the common intention of the parties was replaced with an enquiry into why Western Sahara should not have been included in the territorial scope of the agreements at hand. To be sure, there are many good reasons why the territory should have been excluded from the territorial scope of the EU-Morocco fisheries agreements.Footnote 155 This is, however, beside the point. The crucial question in this context is whether the parties intended to include Western Sahara in their agreements – and not whether what they intended was contrary to international law.

As discussed above, the overwhelming majority of commentators have found the Court’s reluctance to engage extensively with the parties’ ‘subsequent practice in the application of the treaty’ under Article 31(3)(b) VCLT in the context of the Front Polisario case particularly problematic.Footnote 156 The same reluctance to engage with the parties’ subsequent practice for the purpose of interpreting the territorial scope of the FPA and the 2013 Protocol permeates the Court’s judgment in Western Sahara Campaign UK.

The ILC accorded particular importance to ‘subsequent practice’ characterizing it as an ‘authentic means of interpretation’Footnote 157 since ‘it constitutes objective evidence of the understanding of the parties as to the meaning of the treaty’.Footnote 158 The Special Rapporteur on the Law of Treaties, Waldock, stated in his Third Report on the Law of Treaties: ‘Subsequent practice when it is consistent and embraces all the parties would appear to be decisive of the meaning to be attached to the treaty.’Footnote 159 Treaty terms are given meaning by action and thus, the subsequent practice of the parties is the best evidence of their intention.Footnote 160 The ILC, in its recent work on subsequent agreements and subsequent practice in treaty interpretation, has confirmed that the characterization of subsequent practice as an ‘authentic means of interpretation’ implies that Article 31(3)(b) possesses considerable authority as a means of interpretation.Footnote 161 This proposition is borne out by international judicial practice.Footnote 162 Here, the Court’s eschewal of engagement with the normative significance of the subsequent practice of the parties does not reflect the importance attached thereto in theory and in practice as an authoritative indicator of the parties’ common understanding of the relevant treaty terms.

Overall, the CJEU in Western Sahara Campaign UK followed the same judicial strategy as in Front Polisario, namely one of ‘instrumentalization’ of international law. In both cases, the Court relied selectively on international law rules of treaty interpretation in order to limit the applicability of the EU-Morocco’s agreements to the territory of the latter – while ignoring the factual application of these agreements to the territory and waters adjacent to Western Sahara. Furthermore, in both cases, the Court employed international law principles without actually considering how these are understood or applied by international courts and tribunals.Footnote 163

It is safe to assume that the Western Sahara judgments have political overtones – especially, if one considers the context within which they were rendered. By omitting any reference to the legal status of Western Sahara as a territory occupied by Morocco – something, which, as seen earlier, Morocco strongly denies – the EU has managed to enter into a number of agreements with Morocco, and has managed to enter into and maintain trade relations with Morocco without touching upon the thorny question of Moroccan sovereignty over the territory. By a priori excluding the legal applicability of the agreements to Western Sahara on the basis of formalistic argumentation, the Court managed to avoid pronouncing thereon – in a rather overt attempt to achieve conformity with international law without having to pronounce on the legal repercussions of the EU’s policy and practice towards Western Sahara.Footnote 164

6. Conclusion: The Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit debate in the light of the CJEU’s case law relating to economic agreements covering occupied territories

The article showed that the Court’s approach to international law in cases involving economic agreements covering occupied territories is highly problematic. While in its earlier case law the CJEU adopted a formalistic and one-dimensional approach to international law, its more recent jurisprudence evidences a more worrisome trend. In Front Polisario and in Western Sahara Campaign UK, the Court showed that it is prepared to use international law in ways that few international lawyers would recognize in order to avoid pronouncing on politically charged questions. The Court’s willingness to rely on international law principles without actually taking into account how these principles are understood and applied by international courts and tribunals brings in another dimension in the Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit debate. In the literature, one may find diametrically opposed accounts regarding the Court’s openness to international law.Footnote 165 At the same time, the classic, binary understanding of the Court’s approach as ‘open/hostile’ to international law largely refers to the Court’s attitude when confronted with questions of validity, direct effects and supremacy.Footnote 166 Far less attention has been paid to how the Court actually uses international law in its case law and in particular, whether its own version of international law is reconcilable with that accepted by the interpretive community of international lawyers.Footnote 167 The Court’s apparent willingness to rely on international law as a heuristic device to reinforce an outcome that radically departs from the logic and structure of international law means that, in order for the Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit discussion to remain relevant and accurate, a more in-depth engagement with the content of the international law rules invoked and with the Court’s use thereof is required.

Furthermore, the Court’s reconceptualization of international rules of treaty interpretation (to put it mildly) in Front Polisario and in Western Sahara Campaign UK, raises serious questions regarding the way in which the Court handles politically sensitive issues. In both judgments the Court’s unilateral re-interpretation of international law was clearly geared towards shielding the EU from the legal consequences stemming from its policy towards Western Sahara. At the very minimum, this line of case law should raise a few eyebrows over the extent to which the Court performed its judicial function in a proper manner. On the international plane, few disputes have no political ramifications. As the ICJ put it:

[T]he fact that a legal question also has political aspects, “as, in the nature of things, is the case with so many questions which arise in international life”, does not suffice to deprive it of its character as a “legal question” and to “deprive the Court of a competence expressly conferred on it by its Statute…” Whatever its political aspects, the Court cannot refuse to admit the legal character of a question which invites it to discharge an essentially judicial function …Footnote 168

Displaying a cavalier attitude towards international law in politically sensitive cases not only threatens the Court’s own legitimacy, but also undermines ‘respect for international law’ as a core constitutional value of the EU, thereby undermining the image of the EU as a global actor with a particular fidelity to international law.

Footnotes

*

Ph.D., Senior Researcher in International and EU Law T.M.C. Asser Institute, Academic Co-Ordinator of the Centre for the Law of EU External Relations (CLEER).

References

1 Case C-266/16, Western Sahara Campaign UK v. Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, [2018] EU:C:2018:118.

2 For an overview see generally Eckes, C., ‘International Law as Law of the EU: The Role of the ECJ’, in Cannizzaro, E., Palchetti, P. and Wessel, R. (eds.), International Law as Law of the European Union (2011), 353Google Scholar.

3 Case C-432/92, The Queen v. Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, ex parte Anastasiou, [1994] ECR I-3087.

4 Case C-386/08, Firma Brita GmbH v. Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Hafen, [2010] ECR I-1289.

5 Case C-104/16 P, Council of the European Union v. Front populaire pour la libération de la saguia-el-hamra et du rio de oro (Front Polisario), [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:973.

6 Council Regulation 290/77 of 20 December 1977 on the conclusion of the Additional Protocol to the Agreement establishing an Association between the European Economic Community and the Republic of Cyprus, OJ [1977] L339/1.

7 Council Directive 77/93/EEC of 21 December 1976 on protective measures against the introduction into the Community of organisms harmful to plants or plant products, OJ [1977] L26/20.

8 Talmon, S., ‘The Cyprus Question before the European Court of Justice’, (2001) 12 EJIL 727CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 734–7.

9 Anastasiou, supra note 3, paras. 39–40.

10 Ibid., para. 41.

11 On the duty of non-recognition under international law, see Legal Consequences for States of the Continued Presence of South Africa in Namibia (South West Africa) notwithstanding Security Council Resolution 276 (1970), Advisory Opinion of 21 June 1971, [1971] ICJ Rep. 16, paras. 122, 124. Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Advisory Opinion of 9 July 2004, [2004] ICJ Rep. 136, para. 159.

12 UN Doc. S/RES/541 (1983).

13 Koutrakos, P., ‘Legal Issues of EC-Cyprus Trade Relations’, (2003) 52 ICLQ 489CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 492. Skoutaris, N., The Cyprus Issue: The Four Freedoms in a Member State under Siege (2011), 130Google Scholar.

14 Anastasiou, supra note 3, para. 47.

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16 Anastasiou, supra note 3, para. 54.

17 Koutrakos, supra note 13, at 493.

18 Euro-Mediterranean Agreement establishing an association between the European Communities and their member states, of the one part, and the State of Israel, of the other part, adopted on 20 November 1995, entered into force 01 June 2000, OJ [2000] L147/3. (EU-Israel Association Agreement).

19 Brita, supra note 4, para. 30.

20 Ibid., para. 33.

21 Ibid., paras. 35–6.

22 Opinion of Advocate General Bot, Case C-386/08, Firma Brita GmbH v. Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Hafen, supra note 4, paras. 109–12.

23 Harpaz, G. and Rubinson, E., ‘The Interface between Trade, Law and Politics and the Erosion of Normative Power Europe: Comment on Brita’, (2010) 35 European Law Review 551Google Scholar, at 566.

24 Euro-Mediterranean Interim Association Agreement on trade and cooperation between the European Community, of the one part, and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) for the benefit of the Palestinian Authority of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, of the other part, adopted on 24 February 1997, entered into force 1 July 1997, OJ [1997] L187/3. (EU-PLO Association Agreement).

25 Brita, supra note 4, paras. 50–3.

26 Holdgaard, R. and Spiermann, O., ‘Case C-386/08, Brita GmbH v Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Hafen, Judgment of the Court of Justice (Fourth Chamber) of 25 February 2010, nyr’, (2011) 48 Common Market Law Review 1667Google Scholar, at 1680–2.

27 Harpaz and Rubinson, supra note 23, at 566.

28 Casolari, F., ‘Giving Indirect Effect to International Law within the EU Legal Order: The Doctrine of Consistent Interpretation’, in Cannizzaro, Palchetti and Wessel, supraGoogle Scholar note 2, at 395.

29 See generally Franck, T., ‘The Stealing of the Sahara’, (1976) 70 AJIL 694CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

30 On Western Sahara’s inclusion in the list of non-self-governing-territories, see Letter dated 29 January 2002 from the Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs, the Legal Counsel, Hans Corell, addressed to the President of the Security Council, UN Doc. S/2002/161 (2002), para. 5.

31 UN Doc. A/RES/2229/ XXI (1966).

32 The UN has recognized Polisario Front as the representative of the people of Western Sahara since 1979. See UN Doc. A/RES/34/37 (1979), para. 7.

33 Western Sahara, Advisory Opinion of 16 October 1975, [1975] ICJ Rep. 12.

34 Ibid., para. 162.

36 Letter dated 26 February 1976 from the Permanent Representative of Spain to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General, UN Doc. A/31/56 – S/11997 (1976).

37 Mauritano-Saharoui Agreement, concluded on 10/08/1979, annexed to Letter dated 18 August 1979 from the Permanent Representative of Mauritania to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General, UN Doc. A/34/427 – S/13503 (1979).

38 UN Doc. A/RES/34/37 (1979), para. 5. See also UN Doc. A/RES/35/19 (1990), para. 3.

39 For an overview see Dawidowicz, M., ‘Trading Fish or Human Rights in Western Sahara? Self-Determination, Non-Recognition and the EC-Morocco Fisheries Agreement’, in French, D. (ed.), Statehood and Self-Determination: Reconciling Tradition and Modernity in International Law (2013), 250CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 260–1.

40 Information from Non-Self-Governing-Territories transmitted under Article 73e of the Charter of the United Nations, Report of the Secretary General, 03/02/2017, UN Doc. A/72/62 (2017).

41 For the most recent, see UN Doc. S/RES/2351 (2017); UN Doc. A/RES/71/106 (2016).

42 See Art. 42 of 1907 Convention (IV) respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land and its annex: Regulations concerning the Laws and Customs of War (The Hague Regulations), available at ihl-databases.icrc.org/ihl/WebART/195-200052?OpenDocument. ‘Territory is considered occupied when it is actually placed under the authority of the hostile army. The occupation extends only to the territory where such authority has been established and can be exercised.’ See also C. Chinkin, ‘Laws of Occupation’, Conference on Multilateralism and International Law with Western Sahara as a case study hosted by the South African Department of Foreign Affairs and the University of Pretoria, 4–5 December 2008, at 198, available at removethewall.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Laws-of-Occupation-Christine-Chinkin-2009.pdf. Benvenisti, E., The International Law of Occupation (2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 43.

43 UN Doc. A/RES/34/37 (1979), para. 5; UN Doc. A/RES/35/19 (1980), para. 3.

44 See the statements cited in Kontorovich, E., ‘Economic Dealings with Occupied Territories’, (2015) 53 Columbia Journal Transnational Law 584Google Scholar, at 612, footnote 147.

45 African Union, Legal Opinion on the legality in the context of international law, including the relevant United Nations resolutions and organization of African Unity/African Union decisions, of actions allegedly taken by the Moroccan authorities or any other State, group of States, foreign companies or any other entity in the exploration and/or exploitation of renewable and non-renewable natural resources or any other economic activity in Western Sahara, Annex to the letter dated 9 October 2015 from the Permanent representative of Zimbabwe to the United Nations addressed to the President of the Security Council, UN Doc. S/2015/786 (2015), para. 21.

46 South Africa, Eastern Cape High Court, Port Elizabeth, Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic and Another v. Owner and Charterers of the MV ‘Cherry Blossom’ and Others, [2017] ZAECPEH 31, 15 June 2017, para. 38, available at www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZAECPEHC/2017/31.html.

47 Opinion of Advocate General Wathelet, Case C-266/16, Western Sahara Campaign UK v. Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, [2018] EU:C:2018:1, para. 246.

48 Human Rights Committee, Consideration of reports submitted by States parties under Article 40 of the Covenant, Sixth periodic reports of States parties due in 2008, Morocco, UN Doc. CCPR/C/MAR/6, 31 August 2015, para. 31.

49 Human Rights Committee, Consideration of reports submitted by States parties under Article 40 of the Covenant, Fifth periodic report, Morocco, CCPR/C/MAR/2004/5, 11 May 2004, para. 39.

50 Speech to the Nation by King Mohammed VI delivered on the occasion of the 39th anniversary of the Green March, 06 November 2014, available at www.maroc.ma/en/royal-activities/hm-king-delivers-speech-nation-39th-anniversary-green-march.

51 Chinkin, supra note 42, at 198. M. Dawidowicz, supra note 39, at 272.

52 EU Annual Report on Human Rights and Democracy in the World in 2014, 22 June 2015, 10152/15, 186.

53 P. Wrange, Occupation/Annexation of a Territory: Respect for International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights and Consistent EU Policy, Study undertaken at the Request of the European Parliament, 25 June 2015, PE 534.995, 43, available at www.europarl.europa.eu/thinktank/en/document.html?reference=EXPO_STU(2015)534995.

54 EU Annual Report on Human Rights and Democracy in the World in 2014, 86 (emphasis added).

55 EU Annual Report on Human Rights and Democracy in the World in 2016, 16 October 2017, 12816/17, 115.

56 A. El Yaakoubi, ‘Morocco suspends contacts with EU over court ruling on farm trade’, Reuters, 25 February 2016, available at uk.reuters.com/article/uk-eu-morocco-westernsahara/morocco-suspends-contacts-with-eu-over-court-ruling-on-farm-trade-idUKKCN0VY273.

57 Case T-512/12, Front Polisario v. Council of the European Union, [2015] ECLI:EU:T:2015:953.

58 Opinion of Advocate General Wathelet, Case C-104/16 P, Council of the European Union v. Front populaire pour la libération de la saguia-el-hamra et du rio de oro (Front Polisario), [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:677, para. 141.

59 Front Polisario, supra note 5.

60 Case T-512/12, supra note 57. For analysis see E. Kassoti, ‘The Front Polisario v Council Case: The General Court, Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit and the External Aspect of European Integration’, (2017) 2 European Papers 339, available at europeanpapers.eu/en/system/files/pdf_version/EP_EF_2017_I_010_Eva_Kassoti_3.pdf.

61 Council Decision of 8 March 2012 on the conclusion of an Agreement in the form of an Exchange of Letters between the European Union and the Kingdom of Morocco concerning reciprocal liberalization measures on agricultural products, processed agricultural products, fish and fishery products, the replacement of Protocols 1, 2 and 3 and their Annexes and amendments to the Euro-Mediterranean Agreement establishing an association between the European Communities and their Member States, of the one part, and the Kingdom of Morocco, of the other part OJ [2012] L 241.

62 Agreement in the form of an Exchange of Letters between the European Community and the Kingdom of Morocco concerning reciprocal liberalization measures on agricultural products, processed agricultural products, fish and fishery products, the replacement of Protocols 1, 2 and 3 of and their Annexes and amendments to the Euro-Mediterranean Agreement establishing an association between the European Communities and their Member States, of the one part, and the Kingdom of Morocco, of the other part OJ [2012] L 241 (hereinafter the Liberalization Agreement).

63 Euro-Mediterranean Agreement establishing an association between the European Communities and their Member States, of the one part, and the Kingdom of Morocco, of the other part OJ [2000] L 70 (hereinafter the Association Agreement).

64 Front Polisario, supra note 5, paras. 92, 123, 132–3.

65 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 1155 UNTS 331.

66 Front Polisario, supra note 5, para. 86.

67 Ibid., para. 87.

68 Ibid., para. 88. The CJEU cited the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion on Western Sahara and the East Timor case. Western Sahara, supra note 33, paras. 54–6; Case concerning East Timor (Portugal v. Australia), [1995] ICJ Rep. 90, para. 29.

69 Front Polisario, supra note 5, para. 88.

70 Ibid., paras. 89–92.

71 Ibid., paras. 94–9.

72 Ibid., paras. 94–6.

73 Ibid., para. 97.

74 Ibid., paras. 100–7.

75 Ibid., paras. 104–6.

76 Ibid., paras. 106–7.

77 Ibid., paras. 117–25. According to the text of Art. 31(3)(b) VCLT, account must be taken, together with the context, of ‘any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its interpretation’.

78 Front Polisario, supra note 5, paras. 121–2.

79 Ibid., paras. 131–4.

80 Kassoti, E., ‘The Council v. Front Polisario Case: The Court of Justice’s Selective Reliance on Treaty Interpretation’, (2017) 2 European Papers 23Google Scholar, at 41. Odermatt, J., ‘Council of the European Union v. Front populaire pour la libération de la saguia-el-hamra et du rio de oro (Front Polisario). Case C-104/16P’, (2017) 111 AJIL 731Google Scholar, at 737–8. Van der Loo, G., ‘Law and Practice of the EU’s Trade Agreements with Disputed Territories’, in Garben, S. and Govaere, I. (eds.), The Interface between EU and International Law, (2019), 1Google Scholar, at 17. Hilpold, P., ‘Self-Determination at the European Courts: The Front Polisario Case Or the Unintended Awakening of A Giant’, (2017) 2 European Papers 907Google Scholar, at 908. However, according to De Elera: ‘The legal analysis by the Court may seem, under international law, immaculate and is certainly much closer to the orthodoxy of international and Union law.’ De Elera, A., ‘The Frente Polisario Judgments: An Assessment in the Light of the Court of Justice’s Case Law on Territorial disputes’, in Czuczai, J. and Naert, F. (eds.), The EU as a Global Actor - Bridging Theory and Practice, Liber Amicorum in honour of Ricardo Gosalbo Bono (2017), 266Google Scholar, at 287.

81 Odermatt, ibid., at 737.

82 Kassoti, supra note 80, at 27. Van der Loo, supra note 69, at 17. Odermatt, ibid., at 738.

83 Kassoti, ibid., at 29. J. Odermatt, ibid., at 735.

84 Draft Articles on the Law of Treaties with commentaries, text adopted by the International Law Commission at its 18th session, 1966 Yearbook of the ILC, Vol. II, 219, para. 8.

85 ICSID, Award of 21 October 2005, Case No ARB/02/03, Aquas del Tunari v. Bolivia, para. 91. Appellate Report European Communities – Customs Classification of Frozen Boneless Chicken Cuts, adopted 12 September 2005, AB-2005-5, para. 177.

86 Kassoti, supra note 80, at 31. Odermatt, supra note 80, at 735.

87 Front Polisario, supra note 5, paras. 88–9.

88 Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, UN Doc. A/RES/25/2625 (1970) (Friendly Relations Declaration).

89 Front Polisario, supra note 5, para. 92.

90 Kassoti, supra note 80, at 32–4. Odermatt, supra note 80, at 735.

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100 Front Polisario, supra note 5, paras. 94–6.

101 Ibid., paras. 95–7.

102 International Law Commission (ILC) Draft Articles on the Law of Treaties with commentaries, adopted by the ILC at its 18th session in 1966, 1966 Yearbook of the ILC, at 213–14, para. 5.

103 Odermatt, supra note 80, at 736. ILC Draft Articles on the Law of Treaties with commentaries, ibid., at 213, para. 2.

104 C. Ryngaert, ‘The Polisario Front Judgment of the EU Court of Justice: A Reset of EU-Morocco Trade Relations in the Offing’, Reinforce blog, available at blog.renforce.eu/index.php/nl/2017/01/15/the-polisario-front-judgment-of-the-eu-court-of-justice-a-reset-of-eu-morocco-trade-relations-in-the-offing; Hilpold, supra note 80, at 917; Kassoti, supra note 80, at 35–7; Odermatt, supra note 80, at 736; Van der Loo, supra note 80, at 17.

105 ILC Draft Articles on the Law of Treaties with commentaries, supra note 102, at 226, para. 1.

106 E. Cannizzaro, ‘In Defence of Front Polisario: The ECJ as a Global Jus Cogens Maker’, (2018) 55 Common Market Law Review 569, at 578; Hilpold, supra note 80, at 917; Kassoti, supra note 80, at 37–40; Odermatt, supra note 80, at 737; Van der Loo, supra note 80, at 16.

107 ILC Draft Articles on the Law of Treaties with commentaries, supra note 102, at 221, para. 15.

108 See for example Case concerning Kasikili/Seduku Island (Botswana v. Namibia), Judgment of 13 December 1999 [1999] ICJ Rep. 1045, para. 50. Appellate Report Japan - Taxes on Alcoholic Beverages, adopted 4 October 1996, AB-1996-2, at 12–13.

109 Case C-52/77, Leonce Cayrol v. Giovanni Rivoira & Figli, [1977] EU:C:1977:196, para. 18; Anastasiou, supra note 3, paras. 43, 50.

110 Case C-464/13, Europäische Schule München v Silvana Oberto and Barbara O´Leary, [2015] EU:C:2015:163, para. 61.

111 Front Polisario, supra note 5, para. 121.

112 Ibid., paras. 121–2.

113 Ibid., para. 123.

114 Hilpold, supra note 80, at 916.

115 Cannizzaro, supra note 106, at 12; Van der Loo, supra note 80, at 16; Odermatt, supra note 80, at 737.

116 Van der Loo, ibid., at 16.

117 Cannizzaro, supra note 106, at 578–80.

118 Ibid., at 580.

119 Oil Platforms Case (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America), Judgment of 6 November 2003, [2003] ICJ Rep. 324, at 330, para. 9 (Judge Simma, Separate Opinion).

120 Cannizzaro, supra note 106, at 579.

121 ILC Draft Articles on the Law of Treaties with commentaries, supra note 102, at 219, para. 8.

122 Torres Bernárdez, S., ‘Interpretation of Treaties by the International Court of Justice following the Adoption of the 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties’, in Hafner, G.et al. (eds.), Liber Amicorum Ignaz Seidl-Hohenveldern in honour of his 80th Birthday (1998), 721, at 726Google Scholar.

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126 Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the European Community and the Kingdom of Morocco, OJ [2006] L141/4.

127 Protocol between the European Union and the Kingdom of Morocco setting out the fishing opportunities and the financial contribution provided for in the Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the European Union and the Kingdom of Morocco, OJ [2013] L328/2.

128 Western Sahara Campaign UK, supra note 1, para. 32.

129 Ibid., para. 32.

130 Ibid., para. 32. Opinion of A.G. Wathelet, Western Sahara Campaign UK, supra note 47, para. 26.

131 Western Sahara Campaign UK, supra note 1, paras. 39–40.

132 Ibid., para. 41; Opinion of A.G. Wathelet, Western Sahara Campaign UK, supra note 47, para. 40.

133 Kassoti, supra note 80, at 29–37; Hilpold, supra note 80, at 916; Van der Loo, supra note 80, at 14–17.

134 Front Polisario, supra note 5, para. 123; Odermatt, supra note 80, at 737.

135 Hilpold, supra note 80, at 916.

136 Western Sahara Campaign UK, supra note 1, paras. 63, 71.

137 Case concerning Right of Passage over Indian Territory (Portugal v. India), Preliminary Objections, Judgment of 26 November 1957, [1957] ICJ Rep. 125, at 142.

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147 Ibid., at 320.

148 Kassoti, supra note 80, at 30–1.

149 See above notes 110 and 111.

150 Gardiner, supra note 123, at 32.

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153 Crawford, J., ‘A Consensualist Interpretation of Article 31(3) of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties’, in Nolte, G. (ed.), Treaties and Subsequent Practice (2013), 29Google Scholar, at 31 (emphasis added).

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155 The A.G.’s opinion offers a detailed exposition of the rules of international law breached by the inclusion of the territory in the territorial scope of the agreements. Opinion of A.G. Wathelet, Western Sahara Campaign UK, supra note 47, paras. 143–292.

156 Cannizzaro, supra note 106, at 578; Kassoti, supra note 80, at 37–40; Odermatt supra note 80, at 717; Hilpold, supra note 80, at 917.

157 Report of the ILC on the work of its 16th session, 11 May – 24 July 1964, 1964 Yearbook of the ILC, Vol. II, 203, para. 13.

158 ILC Draft Articles with commentaries, supra note 102, at 221, para. 15.

159 H. Waldock, Third Report on the Law of Treaties, 1964 Yearbook of the ILC, Vol. II, 60, para. 25 (emphasis added).

160 Gardiner, supra note 123, at 253; B. Simma, ‘Miscellaneous Thoughts on Subsequent Agreements and Subsequent Practice’, in Nolte, supra note 142, at 46.

161 Report of the ILC on the work of its 65th session, 6 May – 7 June and 8 July – 9 August 2013, UN Doc. A/68/10 (2013), 21–2.

162 See the overview provided in G. Nolte, First Report on Subsequent Agreements and Subsequent Practice in relation to treaty interpretation, UN Doc. A/CN.4/660 (2013), paras. 31–41.

163 Odermatt, supra note 80, at 737–8.

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