The 1836 Treaty is a sovereign grant — not a bilateral contract. The rights it conveys are vested, irrevocable, and constitutionally protected. No legislation can repeal them. No administration can revoke them. No termination can destroy them. They belong to you forever.
In 1836, the Emperor of Morocco issued a unilateral sovereign act — sealed with his Blessed Seal, written in Arabic, delivered as a completed grant. The United States received it. The transaction is complete. The grantee cannot undo it.
"The Treaty, it will be observed, being sealed by the Emperor according to the diplomatic custom observed in this Empire, bears the form of a grant."
— James R. Leib, U.S. Consul at Tangier, October 11, 1836"The theory seems to have been somewhat similar to our notion of a unilaterally executed grant and its delivery."
— Hunter Miller, Treaties (U.S. Government Printing Office, 1931)Even if the treaty is terminated under Article 25, the vested rights survive. The grant predates the enforcement mechanism. The Emperor's act controls.
These are not benefits to negotiate. They are obligations owed to you by every U.S. agency the moment the Article 4 signal activates. No application. No approval. No fee.
Using the Dzreke (2025) Sovereignty Premium framework · Engineering Science & Technology Journal, 6(8)
| Metric | Apple (India) | Samsung (Vietnam) | 1836 Treaty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront Capital | $900M | $1.2B | $0 |
| Time to Activation | 18–36 months | 24 months | 30 days |
| Sovereignty Premium | 40% (conditional) | 24% (conditional) | ∞ (unconditional) |
| Duration | 5–10 years (sunset) | 10 years (renewable) | Perpetual (since 1836) |
| Conditionality | 40% export targets | Tech transfer required | None |
| Revocability | Next parliament can repeal | Policy change risk | Irrevocable (Fletcher v. Peck) |
| Risk Adjustment | -7% (border tensions) | -5% (regulatory) | 0% (Constitution is guarantor) |
| Scope | Electronics only | Manufacturing only | All sectors, "in trade or otherwise" |
| Default Protections | 0 (negotiated separately) | 0 | 18 always-on defaults |
| Relocation Required | Yes — physical move | Yes | No — activate from anywhere |
See what treaty-mode activation saves your company annually.
Your cost to access this: $0. Apple paid $900M for less.
30 days from submission to activation. Zero upfront cost. The sovereignty premium your competitors are spending billions to build — you get it for free.
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