dissenting.
The Catawba Indian Tribe Division of Assets Act, 73 Stat. 592, 25 U. S. C. § 931 et seq., was passed by Congress in 1959 to divide up the Tribe’s federally supervised reservation so that individual Catawbas could sell or mortgage their allotments. The Court today concludes that the Act also had the incidental effect of applying a South Carolina statute of limitations to the Catawbas’ pre-existing and longstanding claim to lands the State purported to purchase from the Tribe in 1840. I feel this interpretation cannot be reconciled with the language of the Act under this Court’s traditional approach to statutes regulating Indian affairs. I therefore dissent.
I
Too often we neglect the past. Even more than other domains of law, “the intricacies and peculiarities of Indian law deman[d] an appreciation of history.” Frankfurter, *512Foreword to A Jurisprudential Symposium in Memory of Felix S. Cohen, 9 Rutgers L. Rev. 355, 356 (1954).
Before the arrival of white settlers, the Catawba Indians occupied much of what is now North and South Carolina. In the 1760 Treaty of Pine Tree Hill, the Catawbas relinquished the bulk of their aboriginal territory to Great Britain in exchange for assurances that they would be allowed to live in peace on a small portion of that territory, a square of land 15 miles on each side (144,000 acres), which today surrounds and includes Rock Hill, S. C. Three years later, in the Treaty of Augusta, the Tribe again agreed to “remain satisfied with the Tract of Land of Fifteen Miles square,” and the British once more promised that “the Catawba shall not in any respect be molested by any of the King’s subjects within the said Lines.” App. 35. It is the 144,000 acres reserved for the Catawbas in 1760 and again in 1763 — “a mere token of the[ir] once large domain” — that give rise to this litigation. See J. Brown, The Catawba Indians 8 (1966) (Brown).
The historical record suggests that the Catawbas were driven to the agreements of 1760 and 1763 in large part by the colonists’ repeated and continuing encroachments on tribal lands.1 Some of the land was acquired by purchase, see, e. g., id., at 165, but in South Carolina, as elsewhere, “[f]rom the very beginning abuses marred the transfer of land titles from the Indians to individuals among the English *513colonists.” F. Prucha, American Indian Policy in the Formative Years 6 (1962). Indeed, the South Carolina Provincial Council took legislative notice in a 1739 statute that lands purchased from Indians were “generally obtained . . . by unfair representations, fraud and circumvention, or by making them gifts or presents of little value, by which practices, great resentments and animosities have been created amongst the Indians toward the inhabitants of this Province.” An Act to restrain and prevent the purchasing Lands from Indians, 1 The First Laws of the State of South Carolina 160-161 (J. Cushing ed. 1981). The 1739 statute therefore barred the private acquisition of Indian lands without a grant or license from the Crown or the Governor, but such steps apparently did little to stop white encroachments on Indian territory. See Clinton & Hotopp, Judicial Enforcement of the Federal Restraints on Alienation of Indian Land: The Origins of the Eastern Land Claims, 31 U. Maine L. Rev. 17, 21 (1979). Recognizing that “great frauds and abuses have been committed in the purchasing lands of the Indians,” the Crown in October 1763 — shortly before the signing of the Treaty of Augusta — flatly forbade any further private purchases of land reserved for Indian tribes. Proclamation of 1763, reprinted in 3 W. Washburn, The American Indian and the United States 2135, 2138 (1973).
The United States from an early date followed a similar policy. Since 1790, the Nonintercourse Act, now codified as reenacted and amended at 25 U. S. C. § 177, has broadly prohibited the sale of Indian land without the consent of the Federal Government. Despite this prohibition — which in 1793 was extended to include not only outright purchases but also acquisitions of any “claim” to protected lands, see Act of Mar. 1, 1793, §8, 1 Stat. 330 — mounting pressures from settlers in the early 19th century led the State of South Carolina to enact a series of statutes purporting to authorize the leasing *514of Catawba lands to non-Indians. Initially, the leases signed under these statutes seem to have posed little threat to the Tribe. According to B. S. Massey, who knew the Catawbas during this time and later served as South Carolina’s agent to the Tribe, “[t]hey were then strong and felt themselves in their own greatness, governed by their own laws, working the best spots of their lands and leasing out the poorer portions to the white men.” Report to The Governor of South Carolina on the Catawba Indians 4 (1854), reprinted in 6 Record, Ex. 11.
By the 1830’s, however, nearly all of the 144,000 acres reserved for the Tribe in the Treaty of Augusta had been leased to non-Indians. This situation proved disastrous, because rents were “generally paid in old horses, old cows or bed quilts and clothes, at prices that the whites set on the articles taken.” Ibid. The Catawbas soon were reduced to “a state of starvation and distress,” ibid., and they ultimately gave in to repeated efforts by the State to purchase their land. In 1840, representatives of the Tribe and the State signed the Treaty of Nation Ford. Under this “treaty” — which the United States never joined or approved — the Catawbas relinquished all their land in exchange for two promises. First, the State promised the sum of $16,000 in a series of resettlement payments. Second, the State pledged that it would purchase a new reservation “of the value of five thousand dollars,” including 300 acres of “good arable lands fit for cultivation” in a thinly populated area of North or South Carolina satisfactory to the Indians. App. 38-39.2
*515The South Carolina Legislature promptly provided for the transfer of title from the State to the lessees of the 144,000 acres, requiring only that the lessees reimburse the State proportionately for its advances to the Tribe. Act of Dec. 18, 1840, §3, 7 S. C. Stats. 103 (1840). Unfortunately, the State showed less enthusiasm in fulfilling its contractual obligations to the Indians. After allowing the Catawbas to wander homeless and uncompensated for 272 years, the State reportedly spent $2,000 to buy back 630 agriculturally undesirable acres of the Catawbas’ original 18th-century treaty lands as a “new” reservation for the Tribe.3 The State continues to hold these 630 acres for the Catawbas. It is unclear from the record before us whether the Tribe ever received the resettlement payments promised by the State.
In the 146 years that have passed since the Nation Ford agreement, the Catawbas repeatedly have pressed their claim to the 144,000 acres, which they feel were taken from them illegally. In the early 1900’s, the Tribe petitioned both the Federal Government and the State of South Carolina for relief, arguing that the 1840 transfer was void because the United States had not approved it. The Commissioner of Indian Affairs advised the Catawbas in 1906 and again in 1909 that the Department of the Interior would not seek relief on their behalf. He explained that the Catawbas were “state Indians” for whom the United States had no responsibility, and, consequently, that the absence of federal participation in *516the Treaty of Nation Ford did not void the transaction.4 In 1908, the South Carolina Attorney General reached the same conclusion, and advised the state legislature that the Tribe had no outstanding claim to any of the 144,000 acres. 1908 Op. S. C. Atty. Gen. 17, 18, 29-32. The Tribe nonetheless continued to press its claim to the land. A federal Indian agent visiting the Catawbas in December 1910, for example, was asked about the Tribe’s prospects for recovering “their old reservation of 15 miles square”; he told them the Department of the Interior would not take their case into court. 6 Record, Ex. 21, pp. 11-12 (letter from C. Davis to Comm’r of Indian Affairs, Jan. 5, 1911).
The seeds of the legislation found dispositive by the Court today were planted in 1943, when the Tribe, the State of South Carolina, and the Department of the Interior concluded a Memorandum of Understanding providing for a new reservation for the Catawbas, and placing the Tribe and the new reservation under federal supervision. Evidently concerned about the Tribe’s continued grievances concerning the 1840 agreement, South Carolina sought, unsuccessfully, to include in the Memorandum a waiver of any outstanding claims the Catawbas had against the State. Id., Ex. 48 (letter from Ass’t Comm’r of Indian Affairs to S. C. State Auditor, Aug. 28, 1941). Preliminary drafts of the Memorandum included such a waiver, see id., Ex. 49, p. 5, but federal officials ultimately dropped the provision because they doubted the legality of using the agreement to deprive the Indians of claims that otherwise might be enforceable in court, see App. *51743-44 (memorandum from Interior Dept. Solicitor to Comm’r of Indian Affairs, Jan. 13, 1942).
In 1958, after representatives from the Bureau of Indian Affairs suggested to the Catawbas that their financial difficulties could be alleviated by distributing the Tribe’s federally supervised assets and ending federal restrictions on alienation, the Indians expressed concern about their claims against the State, but they were assured that the proposal would not jeopardize those claims. 6 Record, Ex. 53, pp. 7-8 (memorandum from program officer to Tribal Programs Branch Chief, Jan. 30, 1959) (quoted by the Court, ante, at 510, n. 23). The Tribe then adopted a resolution calling on its Congressman, Robert Hemphill, to introduce and secure passage of legislation to remove restraints on alienation and to distribute tribal assets; the resolution specifically requested, however, that “nothing in this legislation shall affect the status of any claim against the State of South Carolina by the Catawba Tribe.” App. 103.
Representative Hemphill asked the Bureau of Indian Affairs to draft legislation “to accomplish the desires set forth in the Resolution.” Id., at 50. He then presented the draft bill to the Catawbas and told them that it had been “drawn up to carry out the intent of the resolution.” Id., at 111. After a majority of the Tribe expressed approval, Representative Hemphill introduced the bill in Congress, explaining that the Tribe had given its consent. See 105 Cong. Rec. 5462 (1959). The result was the 1959 Division of Assets Act, which the Court today concludes may bar the Tribe from pursuing its claim to the lands reserved for it in 1760 and 1763.
In the 1970’s, spurred by favorable legal rulings elsewhere in the country, Catawba leaders renewed their request to the Department of the Interior to seek relief for the Tribe. In 1977, the Solicitor of the Department concluded that the rebuffs given the Catawbas in 1906 and 1909 had been legally unjustified, and that the Tribe could establish a prima facie claim to the 144,000 acres. He further concluded that the *518Division of Assets Act operated prospectively only, and did not affect pre-existing rights. Accordingly, the Solicitor formally requested the Department of Justice to institute legal action on behalf of the Catawbas and to support the settlement discussions that the Tribe already had initiated with South Carolina officials. See App. to Brief in Opposition 3a. The litigation request was later withdrawn in an effort to emphasize that the Interior Department favored a negotiated settlement if at all possible, and settlement legislation backed by the Tribe was introduced in Congress. See Hearing, at 15-17 (statement of Leo M. Krulitz, Solicitor of the Department of the Interior). The legislative efforts apparently proved fruitless, and in October 1980 the Tribe filed this suit.
I — I hH
The Tribe’s complaint asserts a right to possession of the reserved portion of its aboriginal territory under the Nonintercourse Act, the Federal Constitution, and the treaties of 1760 and 1763.5 These are federal claims, see Oneida Indian Nation v. County of Oneida, 414 U. S. 661, 666-678 (1974) (Oneida I), and the statute of limitations is thus a matter of federal law, see County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian Nation, 470 U. S. 226, 240-244 (1985) (Oneida II). Where,as here, Congress has not specified a statute of limitations, federal courts generally borrow the most closely analogous limitations period under state law, but only if application of the state limitations period would not frustrate federal policy. See, e. g., Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U. S. 261, 266-267 (1985); DelCostello v. Teamsters, 462 U. S. 151, 158-163 *519(1983); Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. EEOC, 432 U. S. 355, 367 (1977).
In Oneida II, the Court recognized that application of state statutes of limitations to Indian land claims generally would violate federal policy. The Court noted that a 1950 federal statute giving New York courts jurisdiction over most civil disputes involving Indians had been carefully crafted to exempt pre-existing land claims from the operation of a New York statute of limitations. See Act of Sept. 13, 1950, 64 Stat. 845, 25 U. S. C. § 233. Furthermore, in a later series of more general enactments imposing a federal statute of limitations on certain tort and contract actions brought anywhere in the United States by Indians or by the United States on behalf of Indians, Congress specifically excluded from the limitations period all actions “to establish the title to, or right of possession of, real or personal property.” 28 U. S. C. § 2415(c).6 The Court in Oneida II concluded that *520the text and legislative history of these statutes evinced a congressional belief that actions brought to enforce Indian property rights were not, and should not be, subject to filing deadlines other than those provided by federal statute. Borrowing a state statute of limitations in such a case “would be a violation of Congress’ will.” 470 U. S., at 244.
In determining whether the 1959 Division of Assets Act exempts the Catawbas’ claim from this general principle, analysis must begin with the firmly established rule — which the Court today implicitly reaffirms, see ante, at 506 — that ambiguities in statutes regulating Indian affairs are to be construed in the Indians’ favor. See, e. g., Oneida II, 470 U. S., at 247-248; Bryan v. Itasca County, 426 U. S. 373, 392 (1976); Northern Cheyenne Tribe v. Hollowbreast, 425 U. S. 649, 655, n. 7 (1976); DeCoteau v. District County Court, 420 U. S. 425, 444 (1975); United States v. Santa Fe Pacific R. Co., 314 U. S. 339, 353-354 (1941); Alaska Pacific Fisheries v. United States, 248 U. S. 78, 89 (1918); Choate v. Trapp, 224 U. S. 665, 675 (1912); see generally F. Cohen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law 221-225 (1982). This rule is not simply a method of breaking ties; it reflects an altogether proper reluctance by the judiciary to assume that Congress has chosen further to disadvantage a people whom our Nation long ago reduced to a state of dependency. The rule is particularly appropriate when the statute in question was passed primarily for the benefit of the Indians, as was the 1959 Division of Assets Act. Absent “clear and plain” language to the contrary, Santa Fe Pacific, 314 U. S., at 353, it must be assumed that Congress did not intend to belie its *521“avowed solicitude” for the Indians, id., at 354, with a “backhanded” abrogation or limitation of their rights, Menominee Tribe v. United States, 391 U. S. 404, 412 (1968).
The Court today evidently finds in §5 of the Division of Assets Act “the clearly expressed intent of Congress,” ante, at 506, that the Catawbas’ tribal land claim was to be subject to South Carolina’s statute of limitations. The Court relies largely on two provisions of § 5. The first renders inapplicable to the Catawbas all “special services performed by the United States for Indians because of their status as Indians,” and “all statutes of the United States that affect Indians because of their status as Indians.” The second provides that state laws shall “apply to [the Catawbas] in the same manner they apply to other persons or citizens.” 25 U. S. C. §935. Neither of these provisions, in my view, is able to bear the weight the Court places upon it.
A
The first provision merely renders federal Indian “services” and “statutes” inapplicable to the Catawbas. I agree with the Court that this provision makes the Nonintercourse Act, along with other Indian statutes, inapplicable both to individual Catawbas and to the Tribe. See ante, at 505-509. But that simply means that after the Division of Assets Act went into effect, the Tribe no longer was statutorily barred from selling or leasing its land. The services-and-statutes clause of the Act does not expressly abrogate or place procedural conditions on any pre-existing claims the Catawbas may have had, and the broad federal policy against application of state statutes of limitations to Indian land claims is neither a “service” nor a “statute.”
The majority nonetheless asserts that this Court has “long recognized that, when Congress removes restraints on alienation by Indians, state laws are fully applicable to subsequent claims.” Ante, at 508. The cases it cites for that proposition all were decided well before the emergence during the *522past 35 years of a clear congressional policy against the application of state statutes of limitations to Indian land claims. See Oneida II, 470 U. S., at 240-244. More importantly, all the cases cited by the majority involve lands for which patents had been issued to individual Indians, not lands alleged to remain tribal property. This Court made clear in Oneida I that claims arising under such patents are not federal claims at all, because, “[o]nce patent issues, the incidents of ownership are, for the most part, matters of local property law to be vindicated in local courts.” 414 U. S., at 676. In this case, however, as in Oneida I, “the assertion of a federal controversy does not rest solely on the claim of a right to possession derived from a federal grant of title whose scope will be governed by state law. Rather, it rests on the substantial claim that federal law now protects, and has continuously protected from the time of the formation of the United States, possessory right to tribal lands, wholly apart from the application of state law principles which normally and separately protect a valid right of possession.” Id., at 677. Here, as in Oneida I, the complaint thus “asserts a present right to possession under federal law.” Id., at 675.
I do not see how a statute removing restraints on alienation can fairly be said to signal unambiguously a congressional intent to subject pre-existing tribal land claims arising under federal law to state statutes of limitations. But even if I agreed with the majority that the removal of restraints on alienation should trigger the application of state limitations periods, the 1959 Act lifted only statutory restrictions on the alienation of Catawba land, and the requirement that the Federal Government approve any transfer of the property at issue in this case did not, and does not, stem solely from any federal statute. The land set aside for the Catawbas in 1760 and 1763 was within the Tribe’s aboriginal territory,7 and *523their claim to the land thus derives from original title8 as well as from the 18th-century treaties.9 With respect to original title, at least, the Nonintercourse Act merely “‘put in statutory form what was or came to be the accepted rule— that the extinguishment of Indian title required the consent of the United States.’” Oneida II, 470 U. S., at 240, quoting Oneida I, 414 U. S., at 678.10
There is nothing in the 1959 legislation that indicates that Congress intended to exempt the Catawbas from this *524common-law protection of undistributed tribal property as well as from its statutory codification. Nor is there anything to indicate that Congress meant to abrogate the protection promised to the Tribe under the treaties of 1760 and 1763, which the Tribe claims provide an independent source of continuing federal protection. Indeed, in rejecting an argument that a similar provision of the Menominee Termination Act destroyed treaty rights to hunt and fish, this Court noted: “The use of the word ‘statutes’ is potent evidence that no treaty was in mind.” Menominee Tribe, 391 U. S., at 412 (emphasis in original). In the same way, Congress’ use in 1959 of the terms “services” and “statutes” suggests, if anything, that the Division of Assets Act was not intended to remove other sources of protection. Surely the selection of these terms provides no support for the view that Congress meant to impose new procedural requirements on preexisting tribal land claims based not only on statutory provisions, but also on treaty rights and federal common law.11
*525B
The second provision of the 1959 Act relied on by the Court directs that “the laws of the several States shall apply to them in the same manner they apply to other persons or citizens within their jurisdiction.” I agree with the Court that the word “them” must be understood to refer not only to individual Catawbas, but also to the Tribe. See ante, at 506-507. Clearly, however, “them” does not refer to claims brought by the Catawbas; the term encompasses the plaintiff in this case, but not the cause of action.
This distinction is critical. The “laws of the several States” provision of the Division of Assets Act placed the Catawbas on the same footing as non-Indians with regard to the application of state law. Just as a non-Indian’s action based on South Carolina law must be brought within the time specified by the State, so a state-law action brought by a Catawba — or by the Catawba Tribe — must meet the same requirement. If a non-Indian in South Carolina brings a federal claim, however, the limitations period is determined by federal law. The same must hold for the federal claims raised by the Catawbas in this litigation.
Of course, the real question in this case is not whether federal law governs the limitations question, but whether federal law should borrow South Carolina’s period of limitations, notwithstanding the general federal policy against such borrowing in the context of Indian land claims. My point here is that this question is not answered by the statutory instruction to apply state law to the Catawbas “in the same manner” as it is applied to non-Indians. Subjecting a group of Indians to state law to the same extent as other citizens is far different from subjecting their unique federal claims to a state statute of limitations. For non-Indians as well as Indians, *526the decision whether to apply a state limitations period to a federal claim depends on whether such application is deemed contrary to federal policy. And nothing in § 5 of the Division of Assets Act unambiguously directs that, as a matter of federal policy, the Catawbas’ unsettled tribal claims should be treated any differently for statute-of-limitations purposes from other tribal land claims. Indeed, there is no indication that Congress thought about such claims at all.12
C
The Court does not rely exclusively on the terms of the two provisions discussed above; it also emphasizes that the Division of Assets Act as a whole represented an “explicit redefinition of the relationship between the Federal Government and the Catawbas,” terminating “special federal protection” for the Tribe and its members. Ante, at 508; see also ante, at 510.13 But if we take seriously the “eminently sound and vital canon” that all ambiguities in statutes passed for the benefit of Indians are to be construed in the Indians’ favor, Northern Cheyenne Tribe, 425 U. S., at 655, n. 7, then surely the effect of such an “explicit redefinition” must be limited to its explicit terms. The Court recognized as much in Menominee Tribe, supra, when it refused to read into the Menominee Termination Act an abrogation of the Menomi*527nees’ treaty rights to hunt and fish. Regardless of the general thinking behind the termination policy of the 1950’s, we are faced here with a particular statute, and we should not “ ‘strain to implement [an assimilationist] policy Congress has now rejected.’” Bryan v. Itasca County, 426 U. S., at 389, n. 14, quoting Santa Rosa Band of Indians v. Kings County, 532 F. 2d 655, 663 (CA9 1975).
Such straining is particularly inappropriate in this case, where the statute in question was passed at the Indians’ behest, was apparently intended to carry out the Indians’ wishes, and received the Indians’ support based on federal assurances that it would not “affect the status” of their claim against the State. One, of course, can distinguish formally, as the majority does, see ante, at 510, between preserving the “status” of the claim and preserving the claim’s immunity from the state statute of limitations. But the distinction smacks of the kind of semantic trap that this Court consistently has attempted to avoid when construing governmental agreements with Indians and statutes ostensibly passed for the benefit of Indians. In cases involving Indian treaties, for example, it has long been the rule not only that doubtful expressions must be construed in the Indians’ favor, but also that the entire treaty must be interpreted as the Indians would have understood it. See, e. g., Choctaw Nation v. Oklahoma, 397 U. S. 620, 631 (1970); Jones v. Meehan, 175 U. S. 1, 11 (1899); Worcester v. Georgia, 6 Pet. 515, 582 (1832).
The Catawbas were assured in unqualified terms that the 1959 legislation would not jeopardize their century-old grievance against the State of South Carolina. The Act itself said nothing about the claim, and nothing about statutes of limitations. No one told the Indians or the voting Members of Congress that the statute might someday prevent the Tribe from pursuing its claim in court. The Court nevertheless concludes today that the 1959 Act bars the Catawbas’ claim if the limitations period under South Carolina law expired be*528tween the passage of the Act and the initiation of this lawsuit in 1980, and that this interpretation of the statute comports with the promises made to the Catawbas in the 1950’s. I cannot agree with either conclusion. In my view, this decision breaks faith once again with the Tribe, and it does so in a way the statute does not require. Nothing in the text or legislative history of the Act evinces a congressional desire to mislead the Indians, or an understanding that the Act sometime might be construed as it is by the Court today.
I — I HH hH
Apparently, there no longer are any full-blood Catawbas, and no one now speaks the Catawba language. See Charlotte Observer, Mar. 6, 1977, p. 1C, reprinted in Hearing, at 420. Of the 1,200 or so persons currently on the tribal roll, only about 5 or 10 percent live on the 630-acre reservation still held for the Tribe by the State of South Carolina.14 The reservation itself does not differ conspicuously from other rural neighborhoods in South Carolina. Indeed, “[a]n unobservant tourist may well drive through the reservation unawares, and many do.” C. Hudson, The Catawba Nation 3 (1970). For the most part, modern-day Catawbas “think and live like ordinary Americans of the Southeast.” Ibid.
When an Indian Tribe has been assimilated and dispersed to this extent — and when, as the majority points out, thousands of people now claim interests in the Tribe’s ancestral homeland, see ante, at 499-500, and n. 4 — the Tribe’s claim to that land may seem ethereal, and the manner of the Tribe’s dispossession may seem of no more than historical interest. But the demands of justice do not cease simply because a wronged people grow less distinctive, or because the rights of innocent third parties must be taken into account in fash*529ioning a remedy. Today’s decision seriously handicaps the Catawbas’ effort to obtain even partial redress for the illegal expropriation of lands twice pledged to them, and it does so by attributing to Congress, in effect, an unarticulated intent to trick the Indians a century after the property changed hands. Prom any perspective, there is little to be proud of here.
Because I do not believe that Congress in 1959 expressed an unambiguous desire to encumber the Catawbas’ claim to their 18th-century treaty lands, and because I agree with Justice Black that “[g]reat nations, like great men, should keep their word,” FPC v. Tuscarora Indian Nation, 362 U. S. 99, 142 (1960) (dissenting opinion), I do not join the judgment of the Court.
In letters written in 1754 to the Catawbas and to the President of the Council of North Carolina, Governor Glen of South Carolina noted that the Catawbas repeatedly had complained about whites’ settling too close to them. 6 Record, Exs. 1 and 2. In response to these complaints, Governor Glen forbade whites to settle within 30 miles of Catawba towns, ibid., but that prohibition was frequently ignored. See C. Hudson, The Catawba Nation 49 (1970). For general discussions of early colonial encroachments on Catawba land, see Brown, at 163-166; P. Dammann, D. Miller, & D. Israel, A History of the Catawba Tribe and its Reservation Lands, reprinted in Settlement of the Catawba Indian Land Claims, Hearing before the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs on H. R. 3274, 96th Cong., 1st Sess., 135, 151-153 (1979) (Hearing).
According to Massey, the Indians “were driven to” this agreement “by being surrounded by white men, [who] cheat[ed] them out of their rights, and [by] partaking of the vices of the whites and but few of their virtues.” Report to The Governor of South Carolina on the Catawba Indians 5 (1854), reprinted in 6 Record, Ex. 11. The “vices” to which Massey referred may have included the consumption of alcohol; the Catawbas later charged that state representatives negotiated the treaty by setting out a whiskey barrel and tin cups and inviting the Indians to help themselves. This charge was reported to the Department of the Interior in a 1908 *515memorandum by Catawba tribal attorney Chester Howe. See Plaintiffs’ Response to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss in No. 80-2050-6 (CA4) p. 23, n. 30, citing Record Group 75, National Archives Central Files 1907-1939, BIA File No. 1753-1906.
See Brown, at 317, 320-322. Assuming this account is correct, the new reservation was less than one-half of one percent of the Tribe’s 1763 treaty lands. The price paid by the State for the new reservation — which works out to roughly $3.17 per acre — contrasts strikingly with the price paid for the same land when purchased from the Indians 2'A years earlier— the approximate equivalent of 15 cents per acre payable in installments over 10 years.
6 Record, Exs. 18, 20. But see United States v. Candelaria, 271 U. S. 432, 442 (1926) (construing the term “Indian Tribe” in the Nonintercourse Act to refer to any “ ‘body of Indians of the same or a similar race, united in a community under one leadership or government, and inhabiting a particular though sometimes ill-defined territory,’ ” quoting Montoya v. United States, 180 U. S. 261, 266 (1901); Joint Tribal Council of Passamaquoddy Tribe v. Morton, 528 F. 2d 370, 376-378 (CA1 1975) (applying Non-intercourse Act to Tribe lacking federal recognition).
Although the complaint asks in part that the Tribe “be restored to immediate possession” of virtually the entire 144,000 acres, App. 25, the available remedies, even if the Tribe prevailed, well might be limited by equitable considerations. See Yankton Sioux Tribe v. United States, 272 U. S. 351, 357 (1926). The question currently before the Court, of course, is not whether part or all of the land claimed by the Catawbas should be given back to them, but whether the Tribe’s ability to seek any judicial relief at all is governed by South Carolina’s statute of limitations.
The federal statute of limitations for certain tort and contract actions brought by the United States on behalf of Indian Tribes was first adopted in 1966; the limitations period was not applied to suits brought by Indians themselves until 1982. “In 1972 and again in 1977, 1980, and 1982, as the statute of limitations was about to expire for pre-1966 claims, Congress extended the time within which the United States could bring suits on behalf of the Indians.” Oneida II, 470 U. S., at 242. The debates over these amendments to § 2415 indicate that Congress extended the filing deadline in part to allow additional time for preparation and negotiation of tort claims for trespass damages arising from allegedly illegal expropriations of tribal lands — including the 144,000 acres claimed by the Catawbas. See, e. g., 128 Cong. Rec. 22166-22167 (1977) (Rep. Cohen, discussing Catawba claim and others); id., at 22168 (Rep. Walsh); id., at 22170 (Rep. Hanley); 126 Cong. Rec. 5748-5749 (1980) (Rep. Holland, discussing Catawba claim); id., at 5750 (Rep. Udall). Members of Congress emphasized repeatedly that Indian land claims were difficult to research, that Indians historically had lacked adequate legal assistance and administrative resources, and that the United States had not played its proper role in bringing suits on the Indians’ behalf. See, e. g., 123 Cong. Rec. 22170 (1977) (Rep. Collins); id., at 22171 (Rep. Johnson); 126 Cong. Rec. 3289 (1980) (Sen. Cranston); id., at 5745-5746 (Rep. Clausen); id., at 5747 (Rep. Danielson); id., at 5750 (Rep. Swift). See also 123 Cong. Rec. 22171 (1977) (Rep. Weiss) (“[A]s a *520result of the numerous injustices suffered by American Indians during the last 150 years — many at the hands of the American Government — it is incumbent on the United States to give these people — our country’s first inhabitants —a full chance to redress their grievances”); 126 Cong. Rec. 3287 (1980) (Sen. Melcher) (failure to extend statute of limitations could lead to “mass injustices”). Similar considerations presumably motivated Congress’ decision to exempt entirely all claims for title or possession from the limitations period prescribed in § 2415.
John Stuart, the King’s Superintendent of Indian Affairs, who had negotiated the Treaty of Augusta, noted in a 1772 letter to the South Carolina . Governor that the 144,000 acres reserved for the Catawbas in that treaty *523were, “as well as a very considerable Extent of Country besides[,] possessed by them when the Subjects of England first Settled in this part of the World.” 6 Record, Ex. 7, p. 1.
See generally F. Cohen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law 486-493 (1982); Cohen, Original Indian Title, 32 Minn. L. Rev. 28 (1947); Note, Indian Title: The Rights of American Natives in Lands They Have Occupied Since Time Immemorial, 75 Colum. L. Rev. 655 (1975).
This Court long has respected grants of land to Indian tribes by prior governments. See, e. g., United States v. Title Insurance & Trust Co., 265 U. S. 472, 484 (1924), quoting Barker v. Harvey, 181 U. S. 481, 491-492 (1901) (‘“There is an essential difference between the power of the United States over lands to which it has had full title, and of which it has given to an Indian tribe a temporary occupancy, and that over lands which were subjected by the action of some prior government to a right of permanent occupancy, for in the latter case the right, which is one of private property, antecedes and is superior to the title of this government, and limits necessarily its powers of disposal’ ”); Mitchel v. United States, 9 Pet. 711 (1835).
The federal common-law rule against alienation of aboriginal title without the consent of the sovereign was recognized as early as 1823 in Chief Justice Marshall’s opinion for the Court in Johnson v. McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543, 573-574 (1823), and it is reflected in the Constitution’s Indian Commerce Clause, Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, which made “Indian relations . . . the exclusive province of federal law,” Oneida II, 470 U. S., at 234, and n. 4. See Clinton & Hotopp, Judicial Enforcement of the Federal Restraints on Alienation of Indian Land: The Origins of the Eastern Land Claims, 31 U. Maine L. Rev. 17, 28-29 (1979). In Oneida II, the Court rejected a suggestion that Indian common-law rights to tribal lands were somehow swallowed up or pre-empted by the Nonintercourse Act; it made clear that the common law still furnishes an independent basis for legal relief. See 470 U. S., at 236-240.
The Tribe’s complaint requests relief under the treaties of 1760 and 1763, the Nonintercourse Act, the Indian Commerce Clause, Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, and the constitutional prohibition against state treaties, Art. I, § 10, cl. 1. App, 24. Reading the complaint liberally “so . . . as to do substantial justice,” Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 8(f), I would conclude that the constitutional references suffice to invoke the rule that original Indian title may not be alienated without federal approval. Cf. Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae in Connecticut v. Mohegan Tribe, O. T. 1980, No. 80-1365, p. 7 (describing the rule as “constitutionally based”). A narrower construction of the complaint would be especially inappropriate because the Tribe adopted the United States’ brief in Mohegan Tribe as part of its response in the District Court to the defendants’ motion to dismiss, making clear that the constitutional claims raised in the complaint were to be read to embrace the common-law rule. See Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Support of Motion for Leave to File Supplemental Memorandum and Supplemental Memorandum, 1 Record, Ex. 15.
Because, under my view, the Tribe’s treaty claims add nothing material for present purposes to its common-law claim, I would not decide at this time whether the 1760 and 1763 treaties independently required the United States, as successor to Great Britain, to approve any sale or lease of the 144,000 acres. Why the majority finds no need to discuss this ques*525tion, or the issue of common-law restraints on alienation, is harder to understand.
The Senate and House Reports both explained that the purpose of the 1959 legislation was “to distribute the bulk of the [Catawbas’] tribal assets” among the members of the Tribe. S. Rep. No. 863, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 1 (1959); H. R. Rep. No. 910, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 2 (1959). Each Report contained a list of the Tribe’s assets; the list made no mention of the Catawbas’ claim to their 18th-century treaty lands. See S. Rep. No. 863, at 3; H. R. Rep. No. 910, at 4.
The majority rightly places little weight on the fact that § 5 of the 1959 Act revoked the Tribe’s Constitution. The Catawbas had no tribal constitution until 1944, when they adopted one pursuant to the 1943 Memorandum of Understanding. See, e. g., H. R. Rep. No. 910, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 5 (1959). Revocation of the Constitution therefore can hardly be understood as a statement that the Tribe should cease existence or lose any pre-existing claims.
See, e. g., Hearing, at 20 (statement of Leo M. Krulitz, Interior Department Solicitor); id., at 39 (statement of Claude Ayres, Member, Catawba Indian Nation Land Claim Committee); Proposed Catawba Indian Reservation Land Use Analysis 4 (1977), reprinted in Hearing, at 251, 258.