Thank you Parminder.
I have several comments/points/questions with regards to granting ICANN immunity from the US laws altogether.
First: Can ICANN be held accountable if it is immune in the US? If it can, how so? ( I know you have explained this before but can you specifically point to a source, an applicable law? ) United Nations and its agencies act autonomously, they have been granted immunity and sometimes they don't act responsibly and it is not clear how we can hold them accountable. Same thing should not happen to ICANN. which court can ICANN be taken to? You think IRP is enough?
Second: As to the laws, we don't have a developed set of international laws that can address all ICANN issues, do we? For example, sometimes in some disputes the question is whether domain names or ccTLDs are property or service. We don't have a solid body of international laws that can ascertain such issues. So I am not sure what will happen if there is a blanket immunity over US laws. ( I think we have discussed these before, sorry for bringing them up again but it's not bad to be reminded)
Also, I was wondering if you could be more issue specific on domain name issues, maybe with real examples. I understand your hypothetical example but there can be so many ifs and buts that I prefer to get a clear example of something has already happened. I don't think any governmental executive agency can just ask ICANN to disable a generic name. They have to go through court. But I might be wrong and a real life example will be extremely helpful.
You are right that OFAC licenses can be revoked, and certainly we need to discuss this further as to what happens if a license is revoked and based on what reasons it can be revoked. But consider that sometimes the US does not revoke a license for a national reason, it does it because of an international reason! There is an interesting revocation case which US cites the reason as:
"As a member of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the United States today fulfilled its obligation
[revoking Iran's license] to strengthen measures to protect the financial sector from the risks posed to the international financial system by Iran. In October 2008, FATF issued its fourth statement declaring that Iran continues to "pose a serious threat to the integrity of the international financial system" and called for countries worldwide to strengthen measures to protect their financial sectors from this threat." Found at
https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/hp1257.aspx
addition in italics added by me.
So I guess this revocation could happen in any other country.
Best
Farzaneh