If you are stating that all charged were dismissed, then you have no conviction and it would be a waste of time to bring a motion to have your non-existent conviction set aside. But that raises the question of why you would lie to us and say "I made a plea deal with the prosecutor at the time" if in fact you made no plea deal and did not plead guilty to any charges.
Again, an international driver's license is a translation of a driver's license. It can merely assist you if you're in a foreign nation where an officer or other person doesn't understand the language on your actual driver's license.
I know that the claims about a "right to travel" predicated on international law have not worked for you in traffic or criminal court because that is a crackpot theory that has been rejected every single time it has been raised. You have no right to drive without a license. You have no right to drive when drunk. An article that confirms that the argument has no valid legal basis, but argues that people felt differently more than a century ago at the dawn of the automobile era, changes nothing about that.

