Timbo, I have given you quotations from F1 officials who have publicly said that the RRA is a legally binding contract. I think we can take this as fact. It is also covered by publications that the FiA refused to enter into a CA in July 2009 unless all the teams of the 2010 championship had signed the RRA. This list is known and there are twelve teams left which will compete in 2011. Again we have facts that can be checked against official data recorded at the FiA and FOM websites. Leaving the FOTA organization does not change a mutual commitment that a team has made to the other eleven teams in a contract that covers the years 2010-2012.
A gentleman's agreement would be a form of contract that is based on honor and not on a national or supra national system of law. It is true that we do not know which court of law would be eventually dealing with violations of the RRA if disputes cannot be resolved by FOTA internal mechanisms. But there is no reason to believe that commitments under the RRA are not legally enforceable only because the contract is secret.
The question of a possible exclusion of a team from the FiA F1 championship is subject to speculation. I have said that before. But one can take an educated guess. If a team consistently refuses to honor it's commitment to fair competition under the RRA I would have little personal doubt that the FiA would impose sanctions on that team in addition to the penalties awarded by the court. It is well known that the FiA shares the view that the sporting competition should not be fought on unlimited resources. In fact the policy of the federation calls for a return to budgets under $60m as they have been common before 1995. This is also a known fact that has been documented in the publication quoted in this thread.
I would like to introduce another source into this thread.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJrgCil1dJo[/youtube]
If you go to 4:00 in the video Paul Stoddard claims that Minardi never spend more than $28m until they went out of business with the sale to Red Bull in 2005. Why is that significant? Because it shows that every one of the current minions in F1 has at least twice the budget of a team that has competed 20 years in F1 from 1985 to 2005. We have a constant sniping by some parties that claim those poor teams - of which one has a budget exceeding $100m - do not belong into F1. Bernard Ecclestone and Luca di Momtezemolo are the exponents of that thinking. Comparing historical budget and current budget levels reveal that the minion teams are well positioned to be competitive in a historical view. The problem is that the budgets of the leading team have to be more restricted if there is a need for closer competition. Contrary to Montezemolo's position this cannot be achieved alone by technical and sporting rules. Budget or resource restrictions are unavoidable in my view and they should ideally be lower than they are now.