The International Court of Justice begins Monday hearing a lawsuit brought by Iran against new US sanctions ordered by the Trump administration against Tehran.
Iran last month lodged a complaint with the Hague-based tribunal, arguing that the sanctions violate terms of a 1955 friendship treaty between the two countries.
The United States’ lawyers will present their arguments on Tuesday. They are expected to argue that the ICJ should not have jurisdiction in the dispute.
The oral arguments, essentially a request by Iran for a provisional ruling, will last for four days, with a decision to follow within a month.
The ICJ was set up in 1946 to resolve international disputes. Its rulings are binding but on rare occasions they have been ignored by some countries, chiefly the United States.
The US will respond formally in oral arguments on Tuesday, reportedly arguing that the United Nations court should not have jurisdiction in the dispute.
US lawyers will reportedly claim that the friendship treaty signed before the Islamic Revolution in 1979 is no longer valid and that the sanctions Washington has levied against Tehran do not violate it anyway.
President Donald Trump unilaterally pulled the US out of the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran in May and pledged to reimpose the most restrictive sanctions on the country.
Washington reinstated a series of sanctions against Iran in early August and will re-impose a second batch in November which will primarily be meant to undermine Tehran’s oil exports.