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UNITED STATES � MEASURES AFFECTING THE CROSS-BORDER SUPPLY OF
AB-2005-1
I. Introduction II. Arguments of the Participants and the Third Participants
III. Issues Raised in This Appeal
V. Interpretation of the Specific Commitments Made by the United States in its GATS Schedule
VI. Article XVI of the GATS: Market Access
VII. Article XIV of the GATS: General Exceptions
VIII. Findings and Conclusions
TABLE OF CASES CITED IN THIS REPORT
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
I. Introduction 1. The United States, and Antigua and Barbuda ("Antigua"), each appeals certain issues of law and legal interpretations developed in the Panel Report, United States � Measures Affecting the Cross-Border Supply of Gambling and Betting Services (the "Panel Report").1 The Panel was established to consider a complaint by Antigua concerning certain measures of state and federal authorities that allegedly make it unlawful for suppliers located outside the United States to supply gambling and betting services to consumers within the United States.2 2. Before the Panel, Antigua claimed that certain restrictions imposed by the United States through federal and state laws resulted in a "total prohibition" on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services from Antigua.3 Antigua contended that such a "total prohibition" was contrary to obligations of the United States under the General Agreement on Trade in Services (the "GATS"). In particular, Antigua asserted that the GATS Schedule of the United States includes specific commitments on gambling and betting services. Antigua argued that, because the United States made full market access and national treatment commitments (that is, inscribed "None" in the relevant columns of its GATS Schedule), the United States, in maintaining the measures at issue, is acting inconsistently with its obligations under its GATS4 Schedule, as well as under Articles VI, XI, XVI, and XVII of the GATS.5 3. On 17 October 2003, after receiving Antigua's first written submission to the Panel and before filing its own first written submission, the United States requested the Panel to make certain preliminary rulings, including a ruling that Antigua had failed to make a prima facie case that specific United States measures are inconsistent with the GATS.6 In particular, the United States argued that a "total prohibition" on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services could not constitute a "measure".7 According to the United States, by challenging such an alleged "total prohibition", rather than the laws and regulations underlying that prohibition, Antigua had failed to satisfy its burden as the complaining party to "identif[y] � specific measures that are the subject of [its] prima facie case."8 The Panel denied the United States' request on the ground that it was premature, given that Antigua had "two sets of written submissions and two panel hearings to convince the Panel that it [had] established a prima facie case."9 4. In its oral and written submissions to the Panel, the United States maintained its objections to the Panel's consideration of Antigua's claims on the basis of an alleged "total prohibition", reiterating its argument that Antigua had failed to establish a prima facie case.10 In the Panel Report, circulated to Members of the World Trade Organization (the "WTO") on 10 November 2004, the Panel addressed this argument by "identify[ing] the measures that the Panel [would] consider in determining whether the specific provisions of the GATS that Antigua [had] invoked have been violated."11 The Panel determined, first, that Antigua was not entitled to rely on the alleged "total prohibition" as a "measure" in and of itself.12 The Panel then determined that the following laws of the United States had been "sufficiently identified [by Antigua] so as to warrant a substantive examination by the Panel":13
5. After evaluating Antigua's claims with respect to these federal and state measures, the Panel concluded that:
1072 That is, state laws that prohibit a "business enterprise involving gambling". Such state laws would include but are not limited to � 14:90.3 of the Louisiana Rev. Stat. Ann., � 17A of chapter 271 of Massachusetts Ann. Laws, � 22-25A-8 of the South Dakota Codified Laws, and � 76-10-1102(b) of the Utah Code. 1073 That is, state laws that prohibit a "gambling business ". Such state laws would include but are not limited to � 14:90.3 of the Louisiana Rev. Stat. Ann., � 17A of chapter 271 of Massachusetts Ann. Laws, � 22-25A-8 of the South Dakota Codified Laws, and � 76-10-1102(b) of the Utah Code. 6. The Panel further found that the following state laws are not inconsistent with of Article XVI: (i) Section 18-10-103 of the Colorado Revised Statutes16; (ii) Section 609.755(1) and Subdivisions 2-3 of Section 609.75 of the Minnesota Statutes (Annotated)17; (iii) paragraph 2 of Section VII of Article 4 of the New Jersey Constitution, and Section 2A:40-1 of the New Jersey Code18; and (iv) Section 9 of Article I of the New York Constitution and Section 5-401 of the New York General Obligations Law.19 The Panel decided to exercise judicial economy with respect to Antigua's claims under Articles XI and XVII of the GATS.20 The Panel accordingly recommended that the Dispute Settlement Body ("DSB") request the United States to bring the measures that the Panel had identified as GATS-inconsistent into conformity with the United States' obligations under the GATS.21 7. On 7 January 2005, the United States notified the DSB of its intention to appeal certain issues of law covered in the Panel Report and certain legal interpretations developed by the Panel, pursuant to paragraph 4 of Article 16 of the DSU, and filed a Notice of Appeal22 pursuant to Rule 20 of the Working Procedures for Appellate Review (the "Working Procedures").23 On 19 January 2005, Antigua also notified the DSB of its intention to appeal certain issues of law covered in the Panel Report and certain legal interpretations developed by the Panel, pursuant to paragraph 4 of Article 16 of the DSU, and filed a Notice of Other Appeal24 pursuant to Rule 23(1) of the Working Procedures. On 14 January 2005, the United States filed its appellant's submission.25 Antigua filed an other appellant's submission on 24 January 2005.26 The United States and Antigua each filed an appellee's submission on 1 February 2005.27 On that same day, the European Communities, Japan and the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu each filed a third participant's submission.28 Also on 1 February 2005, Mexico notified the Appellate Body Secretariat of its intention to make a statement at the oral hearing as a third participant, and Canada notified its intention to appear at the oral hearing as a third participant.29 8. The oral hearing was held on 21 and 22 February 2005. The participants and third participants each made an oral statement (with the exception of Canada and the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu) and responded to questions put to them by the Members of the Division hearing the appeal. II. Arguments of the Participants and the Third Participants
9. The United States argues that Antigua did not make a prima facie case that any particular United States measure is inconsistent with any provision of the GATS. The United States therefore requests the Appellate Body to find that the Panel erred in law because it nevertheless made findings on Antigua's claims and thereby absolved Antigua from establishing a prima facie case. The United States further submits that the Panel made the case for Antigua with respect to three United States federal laws and eight state laws and thus denied the United States a "fair opportunity"30 to defend the laws at issue, inconsistent with the Panel's obligations under Article 11 of the DSU. 10. According to the United States, Antigua made its case on the basis that the measure at issue was "the total prohibition on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services."31 The United States emphasizes, Antigua never specifically alleged that any particular law or laws violate Article XVI of the GATS. The United States emphasizes that, Antigua never specifically alleged that any particular law or laws violate Article XVI of the GATS. Thus, Antigua did not identify precisely what measures it was challenging or provide evidence and argumentation sufficient to establish a presumption of inconsistency of any measures with any provision of the GATS. 11. The United States contends that the Panel rejected Antigua's reliance on the alleged "total prohibition" as the measure at issue in this dispute and properly found that it could not identify the individual laws supporting Antigua's case where Antigua itself had not. Nevertheless, according to the United States, the Panel proceeded to review Antigua's submissions and exhibits and identify for itself whether and how particular laws resulted in a prohibition on the remote supply of gambling services. In so doing, the Panel exceeded the limits of its authority, and erred in the same way that the Appellate Body found the panels in Japan � Agricultural Products II and Canada � Wheat Exports and Grain Imports to have erred.32 The United States further contends that the Panel mistakenly found support for its approach in the Appellate Body decisions in Canada � Autos and Thailand � H-Beams.33 The Panel is said to have further erred in referring to a purported admission by the United States that "federal and state laws are applied and enforced so as to prohibit what it describes as the 'remote supply' of most gambling and betting services"34, when the United States never conceded that any particular measure had this effect. The United States maintains that the approach taken by the Panel in this case�namely identifying a subset of United States measures from the "remarkably broad" list of "possibly relevant"35 laws in Antigua's panel request, and assembling arguments regarding their meaning, application and consistency with Article XVI�unfairly deprived the United States of any opportunity to respond and defend those specific measures. 12. In addition to alleging legal error on the basis that the Panel made findings on claims in the absence of a prima faciecase by Antigua, the United States asserts that the Panel did not comply with its obligations under Article 11 of the DSU.36 Although the Panel explicitly recognized its lack of authority to make the case for the complaining party, the Panel is said to have nevertheless assumed the role of the complaining party in this dispute. Moreover, the Panel did not merely "fill in small gaps" in Antigua's claim, but rather, "created an entirely new approach to the case on behalf of the complaining party".37 In the submission of the United States, the "egregious" nature of the Panel's approach to Antigua's claims gives rise to a separate and distinct error, namely that the Panel failed to satisfy its duty under Article 11 of the DSU to "make an objective assessment of the matter before it".38 The United States thus requests that the Appellate Body find that the Panel failed to satisfy its obligations under Article 11 of the DSU. 13. For these reasons, the United States argues that the Panel erroneously concluded that: (i) it "should consider" three federal laws and eight state laws in order to determine whether the United States violated its obligations under the GATS; and (ii) Antigua had met its burden of proof that these laws result in a prohibition on the remote supply of gambling and betting services. "Separate and in addition to" this error39, the United States argues that the Panel's resolution of Antigua's claims was inconsistent with the Panel's obligations under Article 11 of the DSU. Should the Appellate Body find error on either ground, the United States requests that the Appellate Body determine that the remaining Panel findings are "without legal effect".40 14. The United States appeals the Panel's finding that the United States' Schedule to the GATS includes specific commitments on gambling and betting services under subsector 10.D, entitled "other recreational services (except sporting)". The United States maintains that it expressly excluded "sporting", the ordinary meaning of which includes gambling, from the United States' commitment for recreational services. In the United States' submission, the Panel misinterpreted the ordinary meaning of "sporting" and improperly elevated certain preparatory work for the GATS to the status of context for the interpretation of the relevant United States' commitment. 15. According to the United States, in concluding that the ordinary meaning of "sporting" does not cover gambling, the Panel misapplied the customary rules of treaty interpretation and disregarded relevant WTO decisions. The Panel is said to have disregarded numerous English dictionaries that confirm that "sporting" in English includes activity pertaining to gambling and, thus, failed to give the word "sporting" in the United States' Schedule this ordinary English-language meaning, as required by the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (the "Vienna Convention").41 Furthermore, the United States contends that the Panel erred in relying on the meaning of the term "sporting" in French and Spanish, because the cover page of the United States' Schedule clarifies that "[t]his is authentic in English only".42 16. The United States also asserts that the Panel erred in treating two documents, referred to in the Panel Report as "W/120"43 and the "1993 Scheduling Guidelines"44, as context instead of as negotiating documents that constitute preparatory work. The United States points out that Members never agreed to memorialize W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines, and that the disagreement of parties to the Uruguay Round services negotiations as to the content of these two documents prepared by the Secretariat is apparent in the divergent approaches adopted by Members in scheduling their specific commitments. Therefore, the United States asserts, neither W/120 nor the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines reflects an "agreement between the parties" or an "agreement made by all participants", within the meaning of Article 31(2) of the Vienna Convention. 17. According to the United States, the characterization of these documents carries important implications because, under Articles 31 and 32 of the Vienna Convention, context has primary interpretative significance, whereas preparatory work is merely a supplementary means of interpretation. A panel may look to preparatory work only to confirm an interpretation made in accordance with Article 31 of the Vienna Convention, or if such interpretation leaves the meaning ambiguous or unclear or leads to a result that is manifestly absurd or unreasonable. In this case, however, the Panel is said to have erred in using W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines, which are "mere preparatory work"45, to support a meaning that is at odds with the ordinary meaning of the "sporting" exclusion in the United States' Schedule. According to the United States, the Panel could not have reached the conclusion that it did, had it treated the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines and W/120 as preparatory work. 18. In the United States' submission, the proper context for its Schedule is the Schedules of other WTO Members. Consistent with the principle of effective treaty interpretation, the absence of any reference in the United States' Schedule to the United Nations' Provisional Central Product Classification46 (the "CPC"), in contrast to other Schedules, must be given legal effect. Therefore, the United States' Schedule must be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning and cannot be presumed to follow the meaning given to various terms by the CPC. Similarly, other Members' Schedules confirm that at least one Member made a commitment for gambling and betting services in subsector 10.E. Thus, the United States argues, the Panel erred in failing to find that, in the United States' Schedule, gambling properly resides in 10.E�where the United States made no commitment�rather than in the broad category of "recreational services" in 10.D. 19. The Panel is said, however, to have ignored the ordinary meaning of the United States' Schedule, read in the proper context, and instead erroneously created a "presumption" that, unless the United States "expressly" departed from W/120 and the CPC, it could be "assumed to have relied on W/120 and the corresponding CPC references."47 In this respect, the United States contends that the Panel confused the structure of W/120 with the cross-references to the CPC contained in that document, failing to recognize that Members, such as the United States, may have elected to adopt the former without necessarily embracing the latter. Thus, the Panel is said to have been wrong in construing any purported ambiguity against the United States and failing to acknowledge that there was no mutual understanding between the parties to the services negotiations as to the coverage of gambling in the United States' Schedule. In the United States' submission, such an approach, if upheld, would allow Members to expand negotiated commitments through dispute settlement. 20. The United States therefore requests the Appellate Body to reverse the Panel's finding that the United States undertook specific commitments on gambling and betting services in its GATS Schedule. Should the Appellate Body reach this issue and reverse the Panel's finding, the United States requests that the Appellate Body determine that the remaining Panel findings are "without legal effect."48
21. The United States challenges the Panel's finding that the United States acts inconsistently with paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2 by failing to accord services and service suppliers of Antigua "treatment no less favourable than that provided for" in the United States' Schedule. According to the United States, the Panel erred in converting two of the prohibitions on bsp;specific forms of market access limitations set out in Article XVI:2 into general prohibitions on any measure having an effect similar to that of a "zero quota", regardless of form. 22. The United States contends that, in interpreting Article XVI, the Panel failed to give meaning to the text and expanded the obligations set out in that provision. The Panel is said to have ignored the fact that Article XVI "represents a precisely defined constraint on certain problematic limitations specifically identified by Members"49 and that measures not caught by Article XVI remain subject to disciplines set out elsewhere in the GATS, including in Article XVII and Article VI. According to the United States, these errors are revealed in the Panel's misinterpretation of sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2. 23. As to Article XVI:2(a), the United States argues that the Panel misunderstood the ordinary meaning of this provision because the Panel ignored the requirement that limitations be "in the form of numerical quotas". In particular, the United States contends, the Panel erroneously found that "a measure that is not expressed in the form of a numerical quota or economic needs test may still fall within the scope of Article XVI:2(a)" if it has the "effect" of a zero quota.50 In the United States' submission, a limitation that has only the "effect" of limiting to zero the number of service suppliers, or their output, does not satisfy the "form" requirements of Article XVI:2. 24. As to Article XVI:2(c), the United States contends that the Panel did not come to the proper ordinary meaning of this provision because it used an incorrect reading of the French and Spanish versions as the basis for its interpretation, which is at odds with a plain reading of the English text. This approach, which is contrary to Article 33(4) of the Vienna Convention, is said to have led the Panel to the erroneous conclusion that Article XVI:2(c) refers to limitations "expressed in terms of designated numerical units" and limitations "in the form of quotas", when in fact the absence of a comma in Article XVI:2(c) requires these to be read together as a unitary requirement, namely, limitations "expressed in terms of designated numerical units in the form of quotas". 25. The United States submits that none of the United States state and federal laws imposes a limitation on the number of service suppliers "in the form of numerical quotas" or limitations on service operations or output "expressed as designated numerical units in the form of quotas". Rather, these laws represent domestic regulation limiting the characteristics of supply of gambling services, not the quantity of services or service suppliers. More specifically, these laws are "in the form of" and "expressed" as non-numerical, non-quota criteria that restrict certain activities, rather than restricting numbers of suppliers, operations, or output. As these laws match none of the "forms" identified in Article XVI:2(a) or XVI:2(c), the United States argues that the Panel should have found that these laws are not inconsistent with those provisions. 26. The United States contends that the Panel's interpretation of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) would "unreasonably and absurdly"51 deprive Members of much of their right to regulate services by not allowing them to prohibit selected activities in sectors where commitments are made. The approach to market access liberalization reflected in the GATS is said not to provide an unlimited right to supply services throughout each committed sector or mode of supply. Such an approach would be at odds, so it is argued, with the balance between liberalization and regulation reflected in the Members' recognized right to regulate services. According to the United States, there is no reason why a Member's imposition of nationality-neutral limitations should violate Article XVI provided that they do not take the form of numerical quotas or any other form prohibited by Article XVI:2. Such limitations remain subject to other GATS provisions, however, including Article VI. In this regard, the United States also questions the Panel's finding that Article XVI, and Article VI:4 and VI:5, are mutually exclusive. 27. For these reasons, the United States requests that the Appellate Body reverse the Panel's findings that the United States failed to satisfy its obligations under Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) of the GATS. Should the Appellate Body so decide, the United States requests the Appellate Body to determine that the remaining Panel findings are "without legal effect."52 28. The United States appeals the Panel's findings that the Wire Act, the Travel Act, and the Illegal Gambling Business Act are not justified under paragraph (a) or (c) of Article XIV of the GATS and are inconsistent with the requirements of the chapeau of Article XIV.
29. According to the United States, the Panel erroneously interpreted the term "necessary" in Article XIV(a) and XIV(c) to require the United States to "explore and exhaust reasonably available WTO-consistent alternatives"53 that would ensure the same level of protection as the prohibition on the remote supply of gambling and betting services. The United States contends that the Panel then misunderstood this obligation, in conjunction with the specific market access commitments set out in the United States' Schedule, as requiring the United States to hold consultations with Antigua before and while imposing the prohibition on the remote supply of gambling and betting services. 30. The United States underlines that the Panel erroneously read a "procedural requirement" of consultation or negotiation into Article XIV(a) and XIV(c).54 Such a requirement is said to find no support in either the text of Article XIV or in previous decisions of GATT panels and the Appellate Body. Pointing to Articles XII:5 and XXI:2(a) of the GATS, the United States asserts that the treaty drafters were explicit when they intended to impose a prerequisite of consultations before a Member could take certain actions, and that no such explicit requirement is found in the text of Article XIV. The United States also contends that, when examining whether a WTO-consistent alternative was reasonably available, the Panel departed from previous GATT and WTO decisions interpreting the term "necessary" under Article XX of the GATT and, in particular, from the decision of the Appellate Body in Korea � Various Measures on Beef.55 According to the United States, these decisions clarified that alternatives that are only "theoretical"56�such as a possible negotiated outcome following consultations�cannot be regarded as "reasonably available". 31. Furthermore, the United States argues that a possible negotiated outcome following consultations does not qualify as a legitimate "alternative" in this case because it could not ensure the same level of protection vis-�-vis the remote supply of gambling. If the United States were to withdraw its prohibition and pursue consultations instead, it could not guarantee that the risks associated with the remote supply of gambling would not recur. Such an outcome, according to the United States, cannot be reconciled with the finding of the Appellate Body in EC � Asbestos that a Member is not required to adopt a measure that would render that Member vulnerable to the very risks sought to be avoided by the allegedly WTO-inconsistent measure. 32. The United States additionally contends that the mere fact that a Member made a specific commitment in its Schedule cannot, as the Panel found, imply some obligation to carry out consultations if that measure is to be justified under Article XIV. The Panel failed to explain how the inscription of the term "None" in the United States Schedule provided textual support for its conclusion. Moreover, according to the United States, the Panel's finding of a prerequisite of consultations is incompatible with the opening text of Article XIV, which provides that "nothing in this Agreement"�including in the Schedules of Members�can prevent Members from adopting measures that meet the requirements of Article XIV. 33. Finally, the United States asserts that the alleged failure to consult with Antigua was the sole basis for the Panel's findings that the United States' measures are not provisionally justified under paragraph (a) or (c) of Article XIV. Without the requirement of consultations, then, the Appellate Body is left with the Panel's finding that the measures serve important interests and with the absence of any finding on a reasonably available alternative measure. In this light, the United States argues, the Appellate Body has sufficient basis to complete the analysis and conclude that the United States' measures are provisionally justified under paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XIV. 34. For the foregoing reasons, the United States requests that, in the event that the Appellate Body reaches the issues under Article XIV, it reverse the Panel's findings under Article XIV(a) and XIV(c), complete the analysis, and find that the Wire Act, the Travel, and the Illegal Gambling Business Act are "provisionally" justified under those provisions.
35. The United States claims that the Panel applied the wrong legal standard when interpreting the chapeau of Article XIV of the GATS, because it required the United States to demonstrate "consistent" treatment of foreign and domestic supply of services. The United States observes that the chapeau prohibits "arbitrary" and "unjustifiable" discrimination, and "disguised restriction[s] on trade in services". The United States argues that "inconsistent" treatment as between services supplied domestically and services supplied from other Members, in and of itself, does not necessarily constitute arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination, or a disguised restriction on trade in services.57 36. The United States additionally contends that the Panel improperly made the rebuttal for Antigua under the chapeau of Article XIV. The United States emphasizes that, in its analysis under Article XIV, the Panel "recycled" certain evidence and argumentation brought forward by Antigua in the context of its national treatment claim under Article XVII58, as to which the Panel exercised judicial economy. Given the distinct legal standard of the chapeau�in particular, its focus only on discrimination that is "arbitrary" or "unjustifiable"�the United States argues that reliance on Antigua's argumentation and evidence in relation to its national treatment claim is inapposite when analyzing the United States' defence under Article XIV.59 37. Furthermore, the United States alleges that, "[a]s a matter of law"60, the fact that three domestic service suppliers have not been prosecuted under United States law, and that an Antiguan supplier has been prosecuted, does not rise to the level of "arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination" or a "disguised restriction on trade" under the chapeau of Article XIV, and the Panel erred in finding otherwise. In addition, the United States contends that a relatively small sampling of cases, where a government has not prosecuted allegedly criminal acts, is not probative because "neutral considerations", such as resource limitations, prevent prosecutors from pursuing all violations of the law in a given jurisdiction.61 38. The United States also claims that the Panel failed to satisfy its obligations under Article 11 of the DSU in its evaluation of the evidence relating to the chapeau of Article XIV. According to the United States, the Panel erred in assessing the United States' enforcement of certain federal laws because the Panel did not take into account "uncontroverted" evidence of the overall enforcement of United States law.62 The Panel is said to have also erred by failing to recognize that the Interstate Horseracing Act ("IHA") could not repeal pre-existing criminal statutes, including those challenged by Antigua and found by the Panel to be inconsistent with Article XVI of the GATS. 39. Should the Appellate Body reverse the Panel's findings under the chapeau, the United States requests that the Appellate Body complete the analysis and find that the Wire Act, the Travel Act, and the Illegal Gambling Business Act meet the requirements of the chapeau of Article XIV and are thus justified under Article XIV of the GATS. 40. The United States challenges the Panel's finding, in the course of its analysis of the measures at issue, that "practice" can be considered an autonomous measure that can be challenged "in and of itself".63 The United States contends that, in arriving at this finding, the Panel erred in two respects. First, it went beyond its terms of reference, as Antigua had not challenged any of the items that the Panel indicated could be considered "practice". Secondly, the Panel based its conclusion that "practice" can be challenged "as such" on a mischaracterization of prior WTO decisions with respect to what constitutes a "measure" under WTO law.64 The United States therefore requests that the Appellate Body reverse this finding of the Panel.
41. Antigua requests the Appellate Body to uphold the Panel's findings that Antigua made a prima facie case of GATS-inconsistency with respect to the relevant federal and state statutes. Antigua argues that, although the Panel should have considered this case on the basis of the "total prohibition" that the United States maintains against the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services, Antigua had in any event made out its case under Article XVI with respect to discrete federal and state legislation. 42. Antigua contends that, after searching through United States federal and state laws to identify those statutes it believed to be the source of the prohibition on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services, it provided the Panel with the text and a summary of each statute. Antigua referred in its submissions to specific laws, such as the Wire Act, the Travel Act and the Illegal Gambling Business Act, as prohibiting the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services. Antigua emphasizes that it submitted evidence as to how the United States' authorities themselves understood various laws as operating to prohibit the cross-border supply of gambling services. In addition, Antigua referred the Panel to secondary sources that confirmed this understanding. According to Antigua, the discussion and evidence it presented were sufficient to substantiate its allegation that the United States acts inconsistently with Article XVI of the GATS as a result of this prohibition. 43. Antigua contests the argument that the United States has been denied a fair opportunity to defend itself in this case. The United States admitted on several occasions�including during consultations�that the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services is prohibited. Furthermore, the federal and state laws challenged by Antigua were identified at the outset of the dispute in Antigua's panel request. As a result, Antigua contends, the United States was aware that it would be expected to defend itself with respect to those laws. 44. As regards the United States' claim under Article 11 of the DSU, Antigua maintains that the Panel did not exceed its authority in determining that Antigua had established a prima facie case. In arguing to the contrary, Antigua submits, the United States fails to recognize the discretion afforded panels in the assessment of parties' prima facie cases, as determined by relevant WTO decisions. 45. Antigua accordingly requests that the Appellate Body uphold the Panel's findings regarding the United States measures identified by Antigua as the subject of its challenge. 46. Antigua requests the Appellate Body to uphold the Panel's findings that the term "sporting" does not include gambling and that, consequently, the United States undertook a specific market access commitment in its Schedule with respect to gambling and betting services. 47. Antigua argues that when examining the words of a treaty, a treaty interpreter must seek to determine the "common intention" of the parties. Although this should be done in accordance with Article 31 of the Vienna Convention, Antigua submits that this provision should be regarded as one "general rule of interpretation" rather than a hierarchical sequence of tests.65 48. In Antigua's submission, the ordinary meaning of the word "sporting" does not include gambling and betting services. Because a Schedule is a classification of mutually exclusive services categories, an entry in such a classification can have only one meaning.66 Thus, it is inappropriate to interpret an entry in the United States' Schedule on the basis of the entry's divergent dictionary definitions. In order to determine the ordinary meaning of the term "sporting" in the United States' Schedule, it is more appropriate to examine the term in the light of other classifications, such as W/120, the CPC, other classification systems, and other WTO Members' GATS Schedules. Antigua submits that the Panel properly analyzed these classifications and found that they do not support the conclusion that "sporting" includes gambling, a result confirmed by the fact that the United States could not point to any classification that uses the word "sporting" to refer to gambling. 49. Given that, as the Panel itself observed, GATS Schedules simply cannot be understood without reference to the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines, Antigua urges the Appellate Body to uphold the Panel's findings that W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines are "context" for the interpretation of the United States' Schedule and Article XVI of the GATS. In addition, the revised Scheduling Guidelines of 2001 should be considered a "subsequent agreement" and/or "subsequent practice", as provided for in Article 31(3)(a) and 31(3)(b) of the Vienna Convention. According to Antigua, the 2001 Scheduling Guidelines confirm that the existing GATS Schedules were prepared in accordance with the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines and W/120. 50. Antigua emphasizes that the United States' attempt to distinguish the structure of the W/120 from the meaning of its categories is without merit. When a Member uses the structure of the W/120, Antigua argues, it "inevitably" uses the content of its categories, unless this Member indicates explicitly that it is diverging from that content with respect to a sector or subsector.67 Antigua notes, in this respect, that the United States' Schedule includes no such indication with respect to "sporting" or "other recreational services".
51. Antigua requests the Appellate Body to uphold the Panel's findings with respect to Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) of the GATS. According to Antigua, a good faith interpretation of Article XVI:2 of the GATS, on the basis of its text, context, and object and purpose, reveals the flaws in the United States' understanding, and supports the Panel's interpretation of the relevant provisions. 52. Antigua contests the United States' understanding of the coverage of Article XVI:2 as limited to measures that take a certain "form", without regard to the effects of those measures. Instead, Antigua contends that the text of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) is intended to provide a broad description of the types of measures caught by these provisions. For example, the word "whether" in these provisions suggests an illustrative list of prohibited measures, while the absence of any definition in the GATS of the terms "numerical quotas", "monopolies", "exclusive service suppliers", or "economic needs test" supports the view that these terms cannot be used to restrict the scope of Article XVI:2 to precisely defined "forms".68 53. Antigua emphasizes that the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines and the Schedules of the United States and other WTO Members confirm that the United States' "narrow"69 interpretation does not represent the common intention of the parties. Antigua finds support in other Members' Schedules, including that of the United States, that list measures, including prohibitions, that are not caught by the United States' interpretation of Article XVI:2.70 According to Antigua, this context validates the Panel's view that Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) capture measures that are equivalent to a zero quota. 54. Antigua submits that the Panel did not err in interpreting Article XIV of the GATS or in applying its interpretation to the Wire Act, the Travel Act, and the Illegal Gambling Business Act.
55. According to Antigua, the Panel correctly found that the United States had not established that the laws in question were "necessary" within the meaning of Article XIV(a) and XIV(c) of the GATS. Antigua argues that, contrary to the United States' understanding of the Panel's conclusion, the Panel determined that the United States had failed to meet its burden of proof as to the necessity of the three federal laws, and that the lack of consultations with Antigua "was simply evidence of that failure".71 56. With respect to Article XIV(a), Antigua submits that the United States bore the burden of proving that its three federal laws were "necessary" to protect its citizens from organized crime and underage gambling in the context of the services from Antigua at issue in this dispute, but the United States submitted no evidence in this regard. Similarly, as regards Article XIV(c), it was incumbent on the United States to prove that the three federal statutes were "necessary" to secure compliance with the RICO statute in order to protect United States citizens against organized crime in the context of gambling and betting services from Antigua. Again, Antigua asserts, the United States submitted no evidence in this regard. 57. Antigua underlines that the United States would have met its burden of proof had it proven that there were no WTO-consistent alternative measures reasonably available that would provide the United States with the same level of protection. Instead, the United States argued that it was for Antigua or the Panel to establish that one or more reasonably available WTO-consistent alternatives to prohibition existed.72 In Antigua's submission, such a reversal of the burden of proof would not be justified in the light of previous WTO decisions examining affirmative defences.
58. Antigua recalls that it is for the party invoking an Article XIV defence to prove all elements of the defence, including the requirements laid down in the chapeau of Article XIV. According to Antigua, the United States did not accomplish this task. 59. Antigua submits that the Panel did not act inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in finding that, in the light of the evidence of: (i) the legality of inter-state remote access gambling under the IHA; and (ii) the non-enforcement of laws against major domestic suppliers of internet gambling services, the United States had not met its burden of proof. In particular, the IHA, on its face, allows interstate betting on horseracing over the telephone and over the internet. The United States' arguments regarding this statute amount to an assertion that the law has no legal effect and this, submits Antigua, is simply "not credible".73 60. For these reasons, Antigua requests the Appellate Body to uphold the Panel's findings that the United States did not prove that the three federal laws at issue were "necessary" within the terms of Article XIV(a) or XIV(c) of the GATS. 61. With respect to the Panel's finding that practice "can be considered as an autonomous measure that can be challenged in and of itself"74, Antigua submits that this finding is obiter dictum.75 Because, however, there may be circumstances under which the "practice" of a WTO Member should be considered as a measure for purposes of dispute resolution, Antigua requests the Appellate Body to dismiss the United States' appeal on this issue.
62. Antigua argues that the Panel erred by failing to assess Antigua's claims on the basis of the "total prohibition" of the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services in the United States. Antigua requests that the Appellate Body so find and that it complete the analysis and find the "total prohibition" to be inconsistent with Article XVI of the GATS. 63. According to Antigua, the Panel erroneously concluded that Antigua had not identified the "total prohibition" as a "measure" in the panel request. Antigua states that its characterization of the prohibition as "total" was "nothing but a description"76 that did not alter the focus of Antigua's challenge from the outset of the dispute, which was the undisputed prohibition on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services. Although it did not expressly state in the panel request that the "total prohibition" is a measure "in and of itself", Antigua submits that it clearly identified the "total prohibition" in the panel request in a manner consistent with panel requests previously examined by panels and the Appellate Body. In the alternative, Antigua contends that any ambiguity regarding its challenge to the "total prohibition", in and of itself, was resolved by reading its first submission to the Panel. 64. Antigua also contests the Panel's legal conclusion that, in any event, the "total prohibition" does not constitute a measure that could be challenged in and of itself in WTO dispute settlement proceedings. According to Antigua, the Panel misinterpreted US � Corrosion-Resistant Steel Sunset Review in finding that a measure must be an "instrument", and that the total prohibition "is a description of an effect rather than an instrument containing rules or norms."77 According to Antigua, in that case, the Appellate Body regarded any act or omission attributable to a WTO Member as a "measure". 65. In addition, Antigua argues that the United States admitted not only the existence of the "total prohibition", but also its effect as prohibiting the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services in the United States.78 The Panel's failure to accord weight to this admission is inconsistent with the Panel's obligation under Article 11 of the DSU to "make an objective assessment of the facts of the case". Antigua asserts that, on the basis of the United States' admission and the other evidence submitted to the Panel, it had met its burden of proving the existence of the "total prohibition" and its effect, and that it was entitled to proceed in making out a case that the "total prohibition", as such, is inconsistent with the United States' obligations under the GATS. 66. Should the Appellate Body reverse the Panel's legal interpretation of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) of the GATS, as requested by the United States in its appeal, Antigua seeks reversal of the Panel's erroneous conclusion that Article XVI:2 exhaustively defines those measures that would be inconsistent with the obligation in Article XVI:1. As a result of the Panel's interpretation, Antigua argues, a Member would be permitted to maintain measures inconsistent with the broad prohibition in Article XVI:1, provided only that they are not among those listed in Article XVI:2. Antigua submits that such an interpretation reduces Article XVI:1 to an introductory clause with no legal effect of its own, contrary to the principles of treaty interpretation. Therefore, Antigua requests the Appellate Body to find that the Panel erred in concluding that Article XVI:1 is limited by Article XVI:2 of the GATS and to complete the analysis by concluding that the United States' measures are inconsistent with Article XVI:1, regardless of their consistency with Article XVI:2.
67. Antigua challenges the Panel's conclusion that measures preventing consumers from using services supplied by a service provider in another WTO Member are not inconsistent with sub-paragraph (a) or (c) of Article XVI:2. 68. The Panel found that certain state laws of the United States are not inconsistent with sub-paragraph (a) or (c) of Article XVI:2 on the ground that they are not directed at "service suppliers", nor to "service operations" and "service output", but, rather, are directed at service consumers. In Antigua's submission, if the Panel were correct in its distinction between prohibitions directed at consumers and those directed at suppliers, then a Member that has made a full commitment on mode 1 would still be able to eliminate the possibility of cross-border supply of services, and thus circumvent that commitment, by imposing restrictions on the ability of its citizens to consume those services. It is argued that this would be an "absurd" result.79 69. Instead, for the same reasons that the Panel found that a prohibition on the supply of a service falls within the scope of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c)�because it has the effect of a zero quota�the Panel should have found that a prohibition on the consumption of a service also falls within those provisions. A measure that imposes a prohibition on the consumption of services also has the effect of a zero quota on "service suppliers", "service operations" and "service output" within the meaning of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c). Antigua submits that such an interpretation nevertheless preserves Members' right to regulate because a Member that wants to maintain such a prohibition may continue to do so, provided that the Member either clarifies this in its Schedule or leaves the sector unbound. 70. Accordingly, Antigua requests the Appellate Body to reverse the findings of the Panel in paragraphs 6.383, 6.398, 6.402, and 6.406 of the Panel Report. 71. Antigua challenges the Panel's decision to consider the defence raised by the United States under Article XIV of the GATS. Antigua also argues that the Panel erroneously relieved the United States of its burden of proof with respect to Article XIV. In so doing, the Panel denied Antigua the right to respond to the defence, contrary to principles of due process and equality of arms, and inconsistent with the Panel's duty under Article 11 of the DSU. In addition, the Panel erred in its evaluation under paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XIV, as well as under the chapeau of Article XIV. Antigua contends that the Panel's errors in this regard include a failure to make an objective assessment of the matter and the facts before it, contrary to Article 11 of the DSU.
72. According to Antigua, the Panel should not have evaluated the United States' defence in this proceeding. The United States' invocation of Article XIV only in its second written submission�and even then in an ambiguous manner�constituted an "extraordinary delay" and a "simple litigation tactic", contrary to the obligation in Article 3.10 of the DSU for parties to participate in dispute settlement proceedings in good faith.80 Antigua emphasizes that due process requires that a party be given fair opportunity to respond to claims made and evidence submitted by the other party in a dispute, and that the delay of the United States in invoking Article XIV prejudiced Antigua's ability to rebut the defence. As an example of such prejudice, Antigua contends that the evidence and argumentation relied upon by the Panel for much of its discussion under the chapeau was originally presented by Antigua in the context of its claim under Article XVII of the GATS, relating to national treatment afforded to "like" foreign service suppliers. In this regard, Antigua asserts that Article XVII is "a different GATS provision altogether with completely different issues and context".81 Therefore, those arguments may not necessarily be the same as those Antigua would have advanced had it been provided the opportunity required by due process.
73. Antigua asserts that because Article XIV is an affirmative defence, the United States bears the burden of proving it. Yet, in this case, the Panel made the defence for the United States and, in doing so, failed to comply with its obligations under Article 11 of the DSU. 74. With respect to Article XIV(a), Antigua claims that the Panel added defences that the United States never made and created a coherent argument in support of the United States' defence under this provision. Although the United States raised only two concerns regarding public morals or public order�organized crime and underage gambling�the Panel examined Article XIV(a) in relation to five concerns, including money laundering, fraud, and health concerns. Thus, the Panel added to the United States' defence three concerns that the United States itself never raised.82 75. Antigua argues that the Panel also erred in taking into account health concerns in its Article XIV(a) discussion because such concerns expressly come under the scope of Article XIV(b). With respect to Article XIV(c), Antigua contends that the United States did not identify sufficiently the RICO statute and its relevance for the United States' defence under Article XIV(c). Finally, Antigua claims that the Panel should not have addressed the chapeau of Article XIV at all, because the argumentation and evidence contained in the Panel's discussion under the chapeau was not submitted by the United States in the context of its Article XIV defence.
76. With regard to Article XIV(a), Antigua submits that the Panel erred in three respects: (i) it failed to consider the entire text of Article XIV(a); (ii) it improperly assessed the United States' defence under Article XIV(a), particularly in the light of the standard set out by the Appellate Body in Korea � Various Measures on Beef; and (iii) it failed to make an objective assessment of the evidence before it. 77. Antigua asserts that the Panel's analysis of Article XIV(a) is incomplete because, although the Panel recognized the relevance of footnote 5 to Article XIV(a) when interpreting the provision, the Panel failed to assess whether the interests that the United States purports to protect through its challenged measures meet the standard set forth in that footnote. 78. Furthermore, Antigua contends that the Panel misinterpreted the Appellate Body's decision in Korea � Various Measures on Beef, with respect to the standards and the level of scrutiny to be employed by a panel reviewing a defence. More specifically, in that decision, the Appellate Body established a "weighing and balancing" test with three particular components to assess whether a measure is "necessary". Yet, the Panel's analysis of the three components in this dispute falls short of the demanding inquiry outlined by the Appellate Body in that decision. Most notably, according to Antigua, in the absence of a factual finding that the United States' concerns as regards "remote" gambling relate to "actually existing" risks, the measures at issue are not justifiable under Article XIV(a).83 79. Antigua also argues that the Panel failed to make an objective assessment of the facts and evidence before it when applying the "weighing and balancing" test mandated by the Appellate Body in Korea � Various Measures on Beef. First, in its analysis of whether the measures at issue are designed to protect public morals or maintain public order, the Panel considered only evidence submitted by the United States, without discussing or taking into account the contrary evidence submitted by Antigua. Secondly, as to the importance of the interests or values protected, the Panel "ignored" a contemporary assessment by the United States Supreme Court of the prevailing attitude in the United States towards gambling, while taking into account Congressional hearings and political statements made more than 40 years ago.84 Thirdly, the Panel relied on no evidence at all when concluding that the challenged measures contributed to the realization of the ends that the United States claimed are pursued through those measures. Finally, with respect to the trade impact of the measures, Antigua objects to the fact that none of the evidence cited by the Panel relates to factual matters involving the cross-border gambling and betting services provided specifically by Antigua. Antigua adds that "substantially all" of the evidence on this particular issue is "unsubstantiated statements of United States government employees or elected public officials"85 that were taken into account by the Panel without consideration of Antiguan evidence to the contrary.
80. Antigua argues that the Panel should not have considered the RICO statute in its evaluation of the United States' defence under Article XIV(c) because the RICO statute is "wholly dependent" on a violation of other federal or state laws for its effective operation.86 The other federal statutes before the Panel were found to be inconsistent with the GATS, and the Panel determined that no state laws were before it for consideration under Article XIV(c). As a result, Antigua reasons, no other laws could form part of the Panel's evaluation under Article XIV(c). Furthermore, the societal interest allegedly pursued by the RICO statute relates exclusively to organized crime, whereas the Panel had already determined that organized crime does not constitute a societal interest of particularly greater significance in the context of the remote (as opposed to non-remote) supply of gambling services. 81. Finally, Antigua claims that, as in its analysis under Article XIV(a), the Panel did not satisfy its obligations under Article 11 of the DSU, because the Panel's conclusions were premised either on "unsubstantiated"87 or "conclusory"88 statements of United States government officials, or on no evidence at all.
82. With respect to the chapeau of Article XIV, Antigua argues that the Panel erred, first, in deciding to continue its evaluation of the United States' defence under the chapeau, even though the Panel had found that none of the federal laws was provisionally justified under paragraph (a) or (c) of Article XIV. Secondly, Antigua contends that the Panel improperly "segmented" the gambling industry and limited its discussion to the remote supply of gambling services. Instead, the Panel should have examined how the United States addresses the supply of gambling services with respect to the entire industry and compared this treatment with that given to foreign suppliers of gambling services. Finally, Antigua alleges that the Panel failed to comply with its obligations under Article 11 of the DSU by again drawing its conclusions on the basis of "unsubstantiated assertions"89 of the United States, rather than on the "independent"90 evidence submitted by Antigua, and thereby effectively "shift[ing]"91 the burden of proof to Antigua. 83. For these reasons, Antigua requests the Appellate Body to find that the Panel erroneously considered the defence by the United States under Article XIV and, in doing so, also relieved the United States of the burden of justifying its measures under Article XIV. In the alternative, Antigua requests that the Appellate Body find that the Panel erred in its evaluation of the United States' defence under paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XIV and the chapeau of Article XIV.
84. The United States agrees with the Panel that Antigua did not identify the "total prohibition" as such in its panel request and that, even if Antigua had properly identified it, a "total prohibition" cannot be a "measure in and of itself" subject to WTO dispute settlement proceedings. 85. The United States submits that Antigua did not challenge, in its panel request, the "total prohibition" as a distinct measure because the panel request makes clear that, in discussing a "prohibition", Antigua was referring to the effect of one or more laws listed in the Annex. According to the United States, therefore, the Panel correctly concluded that a challenge to the "total prohibition" as a distinct measure was beyond its terms of reference. 86. The United States claims that the Panel's conclusion�that the "total prohibition" cannot be deemed a single and autonomous measure that can be challenged in and of itself�finds support in the record in this dispute as well as in the Appellate Body's reasoning in past disputes. Both parties agreed before the Panel that the alleged "total prohibition" was a description of the purported effect of the laws at issue.92 The effect of a measure may not itself become a "measure" subject to WTO dispute settlement. The United States adds that the Panel's conclusion in this regard is also in line with the Appellate Body's analysis in US � Oil Country Tubular Goods Sunset Reviews, because in this dispute, Antigua's interpretation of the effect of the United States law as a "total prohibition" has no "normative value" in United States municipal law.93 87. The United States accordingly requests that the Appellate Body reject Antigua's appeal relating to whether Antigua may rely on the "total prohibition" as a measure challenged in and of itself in this dispute. As a result, the United States submits, it is not necessary for the Appellate Body to complete the analysis on the consistency of the "total prohibition" with Article XVI of the GATS, as requested by Antigua. 88. The United States requests that the Appellate Body uphold the Panel's finding that the only limitations falling within the scope of Article XVI of the GATS are those listed in paragraph 2 of Article XVI. According to the United States, Article XVI:2, on its face, exhaustively defines, by means of a "closed list", the limitations that cannot be maintained by a Member that undertook a full market access commitment.94 If, as Antigua suggests, Article XVI:1 alone prohibits any limitation to the supply of services in the market of a Member, then all limitations would be covered by this Article. Such an interpretation would render Article XVI:2 ineffective. Therefore, the United States requests the Appellate Body to find that the Panel did not err in its interpretation of the relationship between Article XVI:1 and XVI:2 of the GATS.
89. The United States supports the Panel's interpretation that sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2 do not cover measures addressed to consumers of services rather than to service suppliers or output. The United States emphasizes that sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2 cover only the limitations that are precisely mentioned in their text�limitations on service suppliers, operations, or output�and that a prohibition on consumers should not be read into the text of that provision. Therefore, the United States requests the Appellate Body to uphold the Panel's conclusion that sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2 do not cover measures directed towards consumers of services. 90. The United States requests that the Appellate Body reject Antigua's appeal with respect to Article XIV of the GATS in its entirety. In particular, the United States asserts that the Panel correctly decided to consider the United States' arguments under Article XIV, and the Panel did not make the defence for the United States. The United States submits further that the Panel's evaluation of the United States' "concerns" under paragraph (a) of Article XIV was consistent with previous WTO decisions examining general exceptions, and that the Panel properly recognized that the RICO statute operated independently of other federal and state laws. With respect to the chapeau of Article XIV, the United States contends that Antigua has failed to identify how the Panel erred in allegedly "segment[ing]" the industry.95
91. According to the United States, the Panel properly considered the United States' defence under Article XIV. The United States emphasizes that Antigua had sufficient opportunity to respond to the defence after the United States invoked Article XIV in its second written submission to the Panel. The United States argues that this is confirmed by the fact that Antigua made no allegation of prejudice to its interests as a result of the alleged tardiness of the United States in raising its Article XIV defence. The United States finds support in the WTO decisions where it is established that the complaining party can bring new arguments in its second submission or even later.96
92. The United States agrees with Antigua that panels cannot make the case for a complaining party. The United States argues that, contrary to Antigua's arguments, the United States met its burden of proof and did not leave it to the Panel to prove the Article XIV defence. In addition, the United States contests Antigua's submission that the Panel acted inconsistently with the principles of due process and the equality of arms, and with Article 11 of the DSU. 93. The United States asserts that it provided evidence of how the relevant statutes were enacted and the operation and purpose of each statute. The United States also contends that it made arguments regarding the relevant legal standards under Article XIV and provided argumentation and evidence that the specific measures satisfy the legal requirements of an Article XIV defence. 94. According to the United States, all five concerns acknowledged by the Panel with respect to gambling activities had been identified by the United States in its submissions to the Panel. Thus, in recognizing these concerns, the Panel did nothing more than what the United States requested it to do. With respect to the "health concerns", the United States asserts that the health risks associated with addiction to gambling fall within the scope of protection of public morals and/or public order under Article XIV(a), and the Panel was correct in so finding. Finally, regarding the chapeau of Article XIV, the United States asserts that it did allege that the United States' measures satisfy the requirements set out in the chapeau of Article XIV and referred the Panel to evidence in support of its claim.97
95. The United States disagrees with Antigua's allegations of error regarding certain aspects of the Panel's analysis under paragraph (a) of Article XIV. The United States contends that it provided specific evidence of grave threats to public morals and public order, and made an argument that the evidence provided met the specific requirements of Article XIV(a), including its footnote 5. According to the United States, the Panel fully understood and applied the requirements laid down in footnote 5 of Article XIV, as is evident from its discussion in the Panel Report. Furthermore, the Panel correctly applied the "weighing and balancing" test from the Appellate Body's decision in Korea � Various Measures on Beef. The United States argues that, in doing so, the Panel found, first, that the concerns identified by the United States "actually did exist"98 with respect to the remote supply of gambling services; secondly, that prohibiting this activity contributes to the realization of the ends pursued; and thirdly, that potential alternatives to the measures at issue existed.99
96. In the same vein, the United States argues that the Appellate Body should dismiss Antigua's appeal with respect to the Panel's findings under Article XIV(c). The United States contests Antigua's characterization that the RICO statute depends on other laws for its effective operation, stating instead that the RICO statute imposes criminal liability not only for gambling under state laws, but also for other acts not related to gambling or to other prohibitions under the laws of the states. Thus, according to the United States, the RICO statute "has independent meaning and protects independent interests and values apart from any other law."100 In addition, the United States argues, the "ends pursued" by the RICO statute include remote supply of gambling as well as organized crime, and Antigua is incorrect in its assumption that the "ends pursued" by a law being enforced must relate only to the precise service to which the enforcement measure applies. Finally, the United States asserts that Antigua's claims under Article 11 of the DSU do not meet the "high standard of argumentation required of Article 11 claims"101 and appear to hinge on the notion that the Panel was wrong to give weight to statements by United States government officials and testimony before Congress.
97. The United States requests that the Appellate Body dismiss Antigua's appeal with respect to the chapeau of Article XIV of the GATS. According to the United States, Antigua did not explain in its other appellant's submission where and how the Panel allegedly "segmented" the industry, nor did Antigua provide a legal basis for its argument that a panel may not segment an industry in its evaluation. The United States also submits that Antigua's claims with respect to the Panel's alleged failure to comply with Article 11 of the DSU do not meet the "high standard" required of successful claims under that provision relating to a panel's assessment of evidence.102
98. The European Communities agrees with the Panel's conclusions regarding the interpretation of the United States' Schedule of specific commitments. The European Communities further supports the Panel's conclusion that Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) of the GATS prohibit measures that have the effect of a quota, even if they are not expressly cast in the form of numerical ceilings. In the European Communities' submission, however, the Panel erred in ruling that measures directed at consumers may not be limitations within the terms of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) and, therefore, the Appellate Body should correct this finding. In addition, if the Appellate Body reaches the issue of the Panel's interpretation and application of Article XIV of the GATS, the European Communities would encourage it to review fully the Panel's reasoning. 99. The European Communities contests the United States' challenge to the Panel's interpretation of the United States' Schedule of specific commitments. The European Communities asserts that Members' Schedules form an integral part of the WTO Agreement and constitute an agreement of all the Members. Therefore, the Panel correctly resorted to the interpretative rules of the Vienna Convention when evaluating the United States' commitments in its Schedule. In particular, the European Communities argues, the Panel correctly followed Article 33 of the Vienna Convention in comparing the terms of the Schedule used in the French and Spanish texts. 100. The European Communities disagrees, however, with the Panel's characterization of W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines. According to the European Communities, the fact that Members entrusted the GATT Secretariat with producing a document, and that Members used such a document for negotiations, cannot render that document one produced by the Members themselves. Therefore, the European Communities submits, W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines are better understood as "preparatory work" within the meaning of Article 32 of the Vienna Convention. Nevertheless, according to the European Communities, qualifying W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines as preparatory work does not alter the Panel's conclusion regarding the scope of the United States' commitments. 101. The European Communities agrees with the Panel that Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) cover measures that are not expressly cast in the form of numerical ceilings, because a contrary interpretation would permit Members easily to evade market access commitments undertaken in their Schedules. The European Communities argues, however, that the Panel erred in interpreting the scope of sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2. The European Communities contends that the GATS covers not only measures regulating trade in services, but also those measures "affecting" trade in services. Such a measure may include a prohibition on the consumption of a given service, which, although directed at consumers, has the effect of restricting the activity of suppliers. The European Communities finds no limitation in sub-paragraph (a) or (c) that suggests that measures may not be covered "by reason of their impact". 102. Regarding Article XIV of the GATS, the European Communities contends that this Article seeks to preserve the right of WTO Members to regulate the supply of services. The European Communities contends that Article XIV is to be interpreted in the light of the pertinent acquis with regard to Article XX of the GATT 1994, as the wording and function of the two Articles correspond closely. Should the Appellate Body reach this issue, the European Communities requests that it make a "full review" of the Panel's reasoning and of the justification for the Article XIV defence, based on the uncontested facts and evidence on record.103 103. The European Communities asserts that consultations with other Members "cannot be an absolute condition to justify a measure under GATS Article XIV".104 Contrary to the finding of the Panel, neither Article XIV nor the United States' market access commitment in its Schedule supports such a conclusion. Nevertheless, a respondent may rely on a good faith attempt to negotiate a resolution with other Members as evidence in support of its claim that it explored reasonably available WTO-consistent alternatives before adopting a particular WTO-inconsistent measure. According to the European Communities, however, such evidence would be insufficient, on its own, to show that reasonable alternatives were exhausted. 104. With respect to the Panel's conclusions on the chapeau of Article XIV, the European Communities emphasizes that evidence of a limited number of cases of non-enforcement against domestic business operators in comparable situations would not ipso facto rebut a prima facie case of consistency of a measure with the chapeau. The European Communities contrasts that situation with one where a complaining party demonstrates a discernible pattern of application of a measure to the detriment of foreign operators in comparable situations. Although enforcement in all cases may not be practicable for a number of legitimate reasons, Members' authorities can and should be expected to intervene and correct enforcement that has occurred on a discriminatory basis against foreign operators.
105. Japan agrees with the Panel's conclusions relating to the commitments in the United States' Schedule and the interpretation of Article XVI:1 and XVI:2. Japan contends that the Panel erred, however, with respect to its interpretation and application of Article XIV. 106. Japan submits that W/120 and the 1993 Scheduling Guidelines are "context" or "preparatory work" for the interpretation of Members' GATS Schedules. In the absence of language in the United States' Schedule expressly indicating a departure from W/120 or providing an alternative definition, the Panel was correct to turn to W/120 and the corresponding CPC numbers in order to give meaning to the terms in the United States' Schedule. In doing so, however, the Panel should not have referred to French and Spanish translations of "sporting", because the United States' Schedule clearly indicates it to be "authentic in English only". Nevertheless, Japan supports the Panel's conclusion that the United States undertook in its Schedule a commitment regarding gambling and betting services. 107. Japan submits that the Panel properly understood the relationship between Article XVI:1 and XVI:2, namely, that the limitations specified in Article XVI:2 are exhaustive of the measures covered by Article XVI:1. In addition, Japan agrees with the Panel that measures having the effect�even if not the form�of a quota may also be prohibited by virtue of sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XVI:2, but that these provisions do not cover measures imposed on service consumers rather than on "service suppliers", "service operations", or "service output". 108. Japan argues that the Panel erred in its interpretation of Article XIV by imposing a requirement that a Member must "explore and exhaust"105 less trade-restrictive alternatives to the measure at issue. Furthermore, the Panel erroneously concluded that a Member is obliged to engage in multilateral consultations, including with non-complaining Members, to identify less trade-restrictive alternatives prior to and during application of the challenged measure. Japan submits that these conclusions of the Panel, if upheld by the Appellate Body, would undermine Members' rights and obligations under the WTO Agreement. 109. According to Japan, the focus of GATT and WTO decisions regarding Article XX of the GATT 1994 has been whether, as a matter of the objective evidence before the panel, reasonably available alternative measures existed not the extent to which they have been explored before adopting the challenged measure. The Panel, however, disregarded this approach and added the "explore and exhaust" standard as a new "open-ended requirement".106 According to Japan, this resulted from the Panel's misinterpretation of the Appellate Body's decision in Korea � Various Measures on Beef and the Panel's improper reliance on the unadopted report of the GATT panel in US � Tuna (Mexico). Japan emphasizes that this new requirement would go well beyond the negotiated commitments of WTO Members. 110. Japan also disagrees with the Panel's findings that Members invoking the affirmative defence of Article XIV must enter into multilateral consultations to identify less trade-restrictive alternatives. According to Japan, the Panel's approach is a "substantial departure"107 from the obligations contained in the covered agreements and from the relevant GATT and WTO decisions.
111. The Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu requests the Appellate Body to reverse the Panel's findings that the prohibitions of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c) include all measures that may have an "effect" on the Member's market access commitments. Furthermore, the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu requests that the Appellate Body reverse the Panel's erroneous conclusion under Article XIV(a) and XIV(c) that Members are required to consult with other Members concerning possible alternative WTO-consistent measures. 112. The Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu supports the United States' reading of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c). The text of these provisions suggests that the treaty drafters did not intend to cover all measures that can have an effect on market access. Although the Panel appeared to recognize this understanding when it found that Article VI and Article XVI are mutually exclusive provisions, the Panel "contradict[ed]"108 itself by subsequently concluding that a measure with any effect on market access falls within the scope of Article XVI:2. Furthermore, the Panel disregarded the fact that the United States' measures " in totality regulate the means of supply for a specific sector, rather than creating a quota system" for foreign service suppliers, as would be required in order to bring the measures within the text of Article XVI:2(a) and XVI:2(c).109 113. In addition, the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu disagrees with the Panel's interpretation of the term "necessary" in Article XIV(a) and (c) as requiring Members to conduct consultations with other Members to identify alternative WTO-consistent measures. The Panel erroneously found that the standard for the "necessity" test in paragraphs (a) and (c) of Article XIV is whether a reasonably available WTO-consistent alternative has been "explored and exhausted"110 by the Member in question. This interpretation contravenes the Appellate Body rulings in EC � Asbestos and Korea � Various Measures on Beef. Based on this erroneous understanding of the "necessity" requirement, the Panel constructed a similarly erroneous requirement of consultations. In addition, the Panel erred in basing its conclusion, in part, on the fact that a commitment has been undertaken in the United States' Schedule. The Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu asserts that Article XIV allows Members to deviate not only from their general obligations, but also from their specific commitments, in order to pursue legitimate national objectives through measures that would otherwise be inconsistent with the GATS. III. Issues Raised in This Appeal 114. The following issues are raised in this appeal:
115. We begin with the participants' appeals relating to the measures at issue. First, we review the Panel's finding that the "'total prohibition' on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services" (the "total prohibition"111) cannot constitute an autonomous measure that can be challenged per se.112 Next, we consider whether the Panel erred in stating that "'practice' can be considered as an autonomous measure that can be challenged in and of itself".113 Finally, we evaluate the United States' allegation that Antigua failed to make a prima facie case of inconsistency with Article XVI with respect to certain federal and state laws and that, therefore, the Panel should not have ruled on these claims.
116. In its panel request, Antigua identified the "total prohibition" as the "effect" of various United States federal and state laws.114 In its first written submission, Antigua claimed that it was not necessary to show that these laws produced the effect of a "total prohibition" because the United States Ambassador had acknowledged, during the DSB meeting considering Antigua's first panel request, the existence of such a prohibition.115 Therefore, Antigua asserted, "[t]he subject of this dispute is the total prohibition on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services�and the parties are in agreement as to the existence of that total prohibition."116 117. In the course of responding to a United States request for preliminary rulings, prompted by alleged deficiencies in Antigua's description of the measures it was challenging, the Panel stated:
In its responses to the Panel's first set of questions, and in its second written submission to the Panel, Antigua asserted that it was challenging the "total prohibition" as a "measure in and of itself".118 Antigua disputed the United States' contention that the "total prohibition" could not constitute a measure per se for purposes of WTO dispute settlement.119 118. In its report, the Panel found that, "in the circumstances of this case", a "total prohibition" could not constitute a "measure" per se.120 The Panel based its conclusion on three factors. First, the Panel found that the "total prohibition" did not constitute an "instrument containing rules or norms".121 Secondly, the Panel stated that Antigua had not sufficiently identified the "total prohibition" in its panel request as a measure at issue, including the precise relevant United States laws that give rise to this prohibition.122 Thirdly, the Panel stated that it "fail[ed] to see how the United States could be requested to implement a DSB recommendation to bring a 'prohibition' into compliance with the GATS pursuant to Article 19.1 of the DSU when an imprecisely defined 'puzzle' of laws forms the basis of the 'total prohibition'."123 119. Antigua appeals the Panel's finding and emphasizes that Article XXVIII(a) of the GATS defines a "measure" broadly, as do the Appellate Body's decisions in US � Corrosion-Resistant Steel Sunset Review and US � Oil Country Tubular Goods Sunset Reviews. Antigua also relies on the alleged "concessions"124 made by the United States Ambassador during DSB meetings in her statements responding to Antigua's panel requests. Antigua argues that, in the light of this statement, the Panel erred in not proceeding to evaluate Antigua's challenge on the basis of the "total prohibition". Antigua therefore requests the Appellate Body to reverse the Panel's finding that Antigua was not entitled to rely on the "total prohibition" as a measure per se in this dispute. Antigua further requests the Appellate Body to complete the analysis with respect to the consistency of the "total prohibition" with Article XVI.125 120. The question before us, therefore, is whether an alleged "total prohibition" on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services constitutes a measure that may be challenged under the GATS.126 121. The DSU provides for the "prompt settlement" of situations where Members consider that their benefits under the covered agreements "are being impaired by measures taken by another Member".127 Two elements of this reference to "measures" that may be the subject of dispute settlement are relevant. First, as the Appellate Body has stated, a "nexus" must exist between the responding Member and the "measure", such that the "measure"�whether an act or omission�must be "attributable" to that Member.128 Secondly, the "measure" must be the source of the alleged impairment, which is in turn the effect resulting from the existence or operation of the "measure". 122. Similarly, consultations at the outset of a dispute are based on:
This provision contemplates that "measures" themselves will "affect" the operation of a covered agreement. Finally, we note that this distinction between measures and their effects is also evident in the scope of application of the GATS, namely, to "measures by Members affecting trade in services".130 123. We are therefore of the view that the DSU and the GATS focus on "measures" as the subject of challenge in WTO dispute settlement. To the extent that a Member's complaint centres on the effects of an action taken by another Member, that complaint must nevertheless be brought as a challenge to the measure that is the source of the alleged effects. 124. Viewed in this light, the "total prohibition" described by Antigua does not, in itself, constitute a "measure". As Antigua acknowledged before the Panel131 and on appeal132, the "total prohibition" is the collective effect of the operation of several state and federal laws of the United States. And it is the "total prohibition" itself�as the effect of the underlying laws�that constitutes the alleged impairment of Antigua's benefits under the GATS. 125. We note also that, if the "total prohibition" were a measure, a complaining party could fulfil its obligation to identify the "specific measure at issue", pursuant to Article 6.2 of the DSU, merely by explicitly mentioning the "prohibition". Yet, without knowing the precise source of the "prohibition", a responding party would not be in a position to prepare adequately its defence, particularly where, as here, it is alleged that numerous federal and state laws underlie the "total prohibition". 126. Therefore, we conclude that, without demonstrating the source of the prohibition, a complaining party may not challenge a "total prohibition" as a "measure", per se, in dispute settlement proceedings under the GATS. Accordingly, we uphold the Panel's finding, in paragraph 6.175 of the Panel Report, that "the alleged 'total prohibition' on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services describes the alleged effect of an imprecisely defined list of legislative provisions and other instruments and cannot constitute a single and autonomous 'measure' that can be challenged in and of itself". 127. Antigua also contests the Panel's finding that Antigua could not rely on the "total prohibition" as a measure in this dispute because Antigua had failed to identify such a measure in its panel request.133 Having found that, in any event, the "total prohibition", as posited by Antigua, is not a measure that can be challenged in itself, we need not rule on whether Antigua's panel request identifies the "total prohibition" as a specific measure at issue in this dispute, as would be required by Article 6.2 of the DSU. 128. Finally, Antigua challenges, under Article 11 of the
DSU, the Panel's failure to accord sufficient weight to the alleged United
States admission as to the existence of a "total prohibition". Antigua advances
this contention in the context of its broader claim on appeal that the Panel
erred in not considering the "total prohibition" as "measure". Because, however,
we have upheld this finding of the Panel, we need not consider whether the
Panel satisfied its duties under Article 11 of the DSU, in its treatment of the
alleged "admission" by the United States.
1 WT/DS285/R, 10 November 2004. 2 Panel Report, para. 1.1. 3 Ibid., paras. 6.154, 6.156-6.157. 4 Panel Report, para. 2.1(a). 5 Ibid., para. 2.1(b). 6 Panel's Decision on the Request for Preliminary Rulings, para. 49, attached as Annex B to Panel Report, p. B-13. 7 Panel's Decision on the Request for Preliminary Rulings, para. 51, attached as Annex B to Panel Report, p. B-14. 8 Panel's Decision on the Request for Preliminary Rulings, para. 50, attached as Annex B to Panel Report, p. B-13. (footnote omitted) 9 Panel's Decision on the Request for Preliminary Rulings, para. 40, attached as Annex B to Panel Report, p. B-9. 10 United States' first written submission to the Panel, paras. 40-58; United States' statement at the first substantive panel meeting, paras. 11-21; United States' second written submission to the Panel, paras. 6‑9; United States' statement at the second substantive panel meeting, paras. 2-3 and 8-18. 11 Panel Report, para. 6.148. 12 Ibid., para. 6.185. 13 Panel Report, para. 6.219. 14 See ibid., para. 6.249. 15 Panel Report, paras. 7.2(a)-(d). 16 Panel Report, para. 6.383. 17 Ibid., paras. 6.397-6.398. 18 Ibid., para. 6.402. 19 Ibid., para. 6.406. 20 Ibid., para. 7.2(e). 21 Ibid., para. 7.5. 22 Notification of an Appeal by the United States, WT/DS285/6, 13 January 2005 (attached as Annex I to this Report). 23 WT/AB/WP/5, 4 January 2005. 24 Notification of Other Appeal by Antigua and Barbuda, WT/DS285/7, 16 February 2005; WT/DS285/7/Corr.1, 17 February 2005 (attached as Annexes II and II(a), respectively, to this Report). 25 Pursuant to Rule 21(1) of the Working Procedures. 26 Pursuant to Rule 23(3) of the Working Procedures. 27 Pursuant to Rule 22 and Rule 23(4) of the Working Procedures. 28 Pursuant to Rule 24(1) of the Working Procedures. 29 Pursuant to Rule 24(2) of the Working Procedures. 30 United States' appellant's submission, para. 43. 31 Ibid., para. 8 (quoting Antigua's first written submission to the Panel, para. 136). (emphasis omitted) 32 United States' appellant's submission, paras. 12-14 (referring to Appellate Body Report, Japan � Agricultural Products II, paras. 125-131; and Appellate Body Report, Canada � Wheat Exports and Grain Imports, para. 191). 33 Ibid., paras. 31-35 (citing Appellate Body Report, Canada � Autos, para. 184; and Appellate Body Report, Thailand � H-Beams, para. 136). 34 Ibid., para. 36 (quoting Panel Report, para. 6.164). 35 Ibid., para. 38. 36 Ibid., para. 39. 37 Ibid., para. 42. 38 Ibid., para. 39. 39 United States' appellant's submission, heading II.A.10, p. 23. 40 Ibid., para. 3. (footnote omitted) 41 Done at Vienna, 23 May 1969, 1155 UNTS 331; 8 International Legal Materials 679. 42 United States' appellant's submission, para. 51. 43 Services Sectoral Classification List: Note by the Secretariat, MTN.GNS/W/120, 10 July 1991. 44 Scheduling of Initial Commitments in Trade in Services: Explanatory Note, MTN.GNS/W/164, 3 September 1993. 45 United States' appellant's submission, para. 65. 46 Provisional Central Product Classification, Statistical Papers, Series M No.77, United Nations (1991). 47 United States' appellant's submission, para. 75 (quoting Panel Report, paras. 6.103-6.106). 48 United States' appellant's submission, para. 3. (footnote omitted) 49 Ibid., para. 97. 50 Ibid., para. 109 (quoting Panel Report, para. 6.332). 51 United States' appellant's submission, para. 129. 52 United States' appellant's submission, paras. 3 and 101. (footnote omitted) 53 Ibid., para. 136. 54 Ibid., para. 138. 55 Ibid., paras. 147-152. 56 Ibid., para. 152. 57 United States' appellant's submission, para. 183. 58 Ibid., para. 188. 59 Ibid., para. 189. 60 Ibid., para. 184. 61 Ibid., para. 185. 62 Ibid., para. 194. 63 United States' appellant's submission, para. 205 (quoting Panel Report, para. 6.197). 64 Ibid., paras. 209-211 (citing Appellate Body Report, US � Corrosion-Resistant Steel Sunset Review, para. 84; Appellate Body Report, US � Countervailing Measures on Certain EC Products, paras. 12-16; and Appellate Body Report, US � Carbon Steel, para. 157). 65 Antigua's appellee's submission, para. 44 (quoting Article 31 of the Vienna Convention). 66 Ibid., para. 50. 67 Antigua's appellee's submission, para. 52. 68 Ibid., para. 61. 69 Antigua's appellee's submission, para. 64. 70 Ibid. Antigua submits a summary of listed measures of several Schedules in Annex B of its appellee's submission. 71 Ibid., para. 76. 72 Antigua's appellee's submission, para. 89 (citing United States' appellant's submission, paras. 152-153 and 157, and footnote 227 to para. 153). 73 Ibid., para. 106. 74 Ibid., para. 108 (quoting Panel Report, para. 6.197). 75 Ibid., para. 109. 76 Antigua's opening statement at the oral hearing. 77 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 24 (referring to Panel Report, para. 6.176). 78 Ibid., para. 45. 79 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 57. 80 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 72. 81 Ibid., para. 76. 82 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 81. 83 Ibid., para. 96. 84 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 110. 85 Ibid., para. 113. 86 Ibid., para. 127. 87 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 133. 88 Ibid., paras. 136-137. 89 Ibid., para. 143. 90 Ibid. 91 Ibid., para. 144. 92 United States' appellee's submission, para. 16 (citing Panel Report, para. 6.176). 93 Ibid., para. 17. 94 Ibid., paras. 27-28. 95 United States' appellee's submission, para. 78. 96 Ibid., para. 37 (citing Appellate Body Report, EC � Bananas III, para. 145; and Appellate Body Report, Chile � Price Band System, paras. 154-162). 97 United States' appellee's submission, para. 48 (referring to United States' appellant's submission, para. 187, and United States' second submission to the Panel, paras. 117-122). 98 Ibid., para. 55. 99 This last finding is challenged by the United States in its appellant's submission. See supra, paras. 29-34. 100 United States' appellee's submission, para. 71. 101 Ibid., para. 76. 102 Ibid., para. 80. 103 European Communities' third participant's submission, para. 49. 104 Ibid., paras. 14 and 91. 105 apan's third participant's submission, para. 8 (quoting Panel Report, para. 6.496). 106 Ibid., para. 12. 107 Japan's third participant's submission, para. 14. 108 Third participant's submission of the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu, para. 6. 109 Ibid., para. 9. (original emphasis) 110 Third participant's submission of the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu, para. 13. 111 The Panel refers throughout the Panel Report to the "'total prohibition' on the cross-border supply of gambling and betting services" as the "total prohibition". (See, for example, Panel Report, paras. 6.139 and 6.154) In this Report we use the term "total prohibition" in the same manner. 112 Panel Report, para. 6.175. 113 Ibid., para. 6.197. 114 Request for Establishment of a Panel by Antigua and Barbuda, WT/DS285/2, 13 June 2003, p. 1. 115 Antigua's first written submission to the Panel, para. 136 (citing Minutes of the DSB Meeting held on 24 June 2003, WT/DSB/M/151, p. 11). 116 Ibid., para. 136. (original emphasis) 117 Panel's decision on the United States' request for preliminary rulings, para. 17, Panel Report, p. B-4. The Panel did not grant the United States' request to invite Antigua to file another submission detailing with greater specificity the measures being challenged. The Panel also made no ruling relating to the "total prohibition" as a measure per se. 118 Antigua's response to Question 10 posed by the Panel, Panel Report, p. C-34; Antigua's second written submission to the Panel, para. 8. 119 Antigua's second written submission to the Panel, paras. 9-18. 120 Panel Report, para. 6.175. 121 Ibid., 6.176 (citing Appellate Body Report, US � Corrosion-Resistant Steel Sunset Review, paras. 81-82 and 88). 122 Ibid., paras. 6.177-6.180. 123
Ibid., para. 6.182 (quoting Antigua's response to
Question 32 posed by the Panel, Panel Report, 124 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 48. 125 Antigua's other appellant's submission, para. 51. 126 Panel Report, para. 6.175. 127 Article 3.3 of the DSU. (emphasis added) 128 Appellate Body Report, US � Corrosion-Resistant Steel Sunset Review, para. 81. 129 Article 4.2 of the DSU. 130 Article I:1 of the GATS. 131 See page 1 of Antigua's Request for the Establishment of a Panel, supra,footnote 114; Antigua's response to Question 10 posed by the Panel, Panel Report, p. C-34; Antigua's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 140-143. 132 Antigua's other appellant's submission, paras. 5, 43, and 45; Antigua's opening statement at the oral hearing. 133 Panel Report, para. 6.171. |
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