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Argentina–United States relations

Argentina and the United States have maintained bilateral relations since the United States formally recognized the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, the predecessor to Argentina, on January 27, 1823.

Argentine–American relations

United States

Argentina
Diplomatic mission
Embassy of the United States, Buenos AiresEmbassy of Argentina, Washington, D.C.
Envoy
American Ambassador to Argentina Marc StanleyArgentine Ambassador to the United States Jorge Argüello
The Obelisco (left) and the Washington Monument (right), iconic symbols of both Buenos Aires and Washington.

Relations were severely strained in the era of World War II, when Argentina refused to declare war on Nazi Germany, and became the only Latin American nation not to receive American aid. Relations continued to be difficult when the Perons were in power. Relations were strained in 1982 after the US supported the United Kingdom against Argentina. Since 1998, Argentina has been a major non-NATO ally, partly owing to Argentina's assistance to the United States in the Gulf War. Relations have been strained at times over the past few years, especially during the Cristina Fernández de Kirchner administration, but they have improved since President Mauricio Macri came to power in late 2015.

Country comparison Edit

  Argentine Republic   United States of America
Flag    
Coat of Arms    
Anthem Himno Nacional Argentino Star-Spangled Banner
Capital city Buenos Aires Washington, D.C.
Largest city Buenos Aires – 2,891,082 (15,594,428 Metro) New York City – 8,491,079 (20,092,883 Metro)
Established May 25, 1810 July 4, 1776
Government Federal presidential constitutional republic Federal presidential constitutional republic
First leader Cornelio Saavedra George Washington
Current leader Alberto Fernández Joe Biden
Main language Spanish English
Main religions 78.6% Christianity (69% Roman Catholic, 12.3% Protestantism, 1.4% Other Christian), 23.9% Non-Religious, 1.5% Other 63% Christianity (41% Protestantism, 21% Roman Catholicism, 1% other), 29% Non-Religious, 2% Jewish, 1% Islam, 1% Buddhism, 1% Hindus, 3% Other
Ethnic groups 85% European Argentines, 11.1% Mestizo Argentines, 2.9% Asian Argentines + Arab Argentines, 1.0% Indigenous Argentines[1] 60.1% White American, 18.5% Hispanic American, 12.6% African American, 5.6% Asian American, 0.9% American Indian and Alaska Native, 0.2% Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander, 2.8% two or more races[2]
Current Constitution 1 May 1853 June 21, 1788
Area 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi) 9,629,091 km2 (3,717,813 sq mi)
Population 44,938,712 324,894,500
Population density 14.4/km2 (37.3/sq mi) 34.2/km2 (83.2/sq mi)
GDP (nominal) US$444.458 billion $17.528 trillion
GDP (nominal) per capita US$9,890 $54,980
GDP (PPP) $1.033 trillion $17.528 trillion
GDP (PPP) per capita US$22,997 $54,980
Time zones 1 11

History Edit

After Argentina became independent from Spanish rule, the United States formally recognized the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, the legal predecessor to Argentina, on January 27, 1823. The bilateral relations have seesawed over the last century and a half between periods of greater cooperation and periods of tension over ideology and finance. There has never been a threat of war.[3]

Argentine leaders were disappointed when the American government refused to invoke the Monroe Doctrine during instances such as the British establishment of a colony on the Falkland Islands, or during the Anglo-French blockade of the Río de la Plata.

In 1833 US Navy shells the Falkland Islands, at the time under Argentine control, in retaliation for the seizing of American ships fishing in Argentine waters. The new constitution of 1853 was based in part on the American Constitution. In 1853, a commercial treaty was concluded between the two nations.[4]

1870–1930 Edit

Argentina was closely linked to the British economy in the late 19th century; and as such there was minimal contact with the United States. When the United States began promoting the Pan American Union, some Argentines were suspicious that it was indeed a device to lure the country into the US economic orbit, but most businessmen responded favorably and bilateral trade grew briskly after the United States and did care of duties on Argentine wool in 1893.

Relations soured when Argentina refused to join the Allies in the First World War. Argentina had large British and German populations and both countries had made large-scale investments in Argentina. However, as a prosperous neutral it greatly expanded trade with the United States during the war and exported meat, grain and wool to the Allies particularly to Britain, providing generous loans and becoming a net creditor to the Allied side, a policy known as "benevolent neutrality".[5]

1940s Edit

Argentina's policy during the Second World War was marked by two distinct phases. During the early years of the war, Argentine President Roberto M. Ortiz sought to sell food and wool to Britain. He even proposed to US President Franklin Roosevelt for both countries to join the Allies together as non-belligerents in 1940. However his proposal was snubbed at the time, as Roosevelt was trying to get re-elected.[5]

After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, US foreign policy worked to unite all of Latin America in a coalition against Germany, but Argentina's neutralist stance had hardened since the resignation of Ortiz who resigned because of poor health. The United States worked to pressure Argentina into the war against the wishes of Britain, which supported Argentine neutrality in an effort to maintain vital provisions of beef and wheat to the Allies that were safe from German U-boat attacks.[5] Most of the beef and the wheat consumed in Britain came from Argentina.[6]

US policy backfired after the military seized power in a coup in 1943. Relations grew worse, prompting the powerful US farm lobby to promote the economic and diplomatic isolation of Argentina and attempt to keep it out of the United Nations. The policy was reversed when Argentina became the last Latin American nation to declare war on Germany in March 1945. Argentina had hosted a fairly-organized pro-German element before the war that had been controlled by German ambassadors. It operated openly, unlike in Brazil, Chile, and Mexico. Historians[7] agree that the affinity between Argentina and Germany was greatly exaggerated.[8]

The Argentine government remained neutral until the closing weeks of the war and after the war quietly tolerated and in some cases aided the entry of German scientists and some notable war criminals including Josef Mengele, Adolf Eichmann, Erich Priebke, Josef Schwammberger, and Gerhard Bohne who were fleeing Europe through ratlines.[9] The voyages of German submarines U-530 and U-977 to Argentina at the end of the war led to legends, apocryphal stories, and conspiracy theories that they had transported escaping Nazi leaders (such as Adolf Hitler) and/or Nazi gold to South America. Historians have shown there was little gold and probably only a few Nazis, but the myths lived on and helped to sour relations with the United States.[10][11] When Juan Perón ran for president in 1945 and 1946, US Ambassador Spruille Braden attacked him with a "Blue Book on Argentina," but public opinion rallied behind Perón. Relations remained tense throughout the Perón years, as he held fascist sympathies, tried to remain neutral in the Cold War and continued to harbor Nazi war criminals. Washington blocked funds from international agencies and restricted trade and investment opportunities.[12] Meanwhile Peron championed Anti-Americanism across Latin America, and financed radical elements in other countries. He did not, however, support the USSR in the Cold War.[13]

1955-1980s Edit

After Perón was ousted in 1955, relations improved dramatically. President Arturo Frondizi became the first Argentine president to visit the United States in 1959. Argentina provided support for the American Alliance for Progress, the American invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965, and the isolation of Cuba after 1960.[14]

By 1976, US human rights groups were denouncing the "Dirty War" waged against leftist dissidents by the repressive military regime in Argentina.[15][16] They demanded congressional control over foreign aid funding to regimes violating human rights. The US State Department saw Argentina as a bulwark of anticommunism in South America, and in early April 1976, the US Congress approved a request by the Ford administration, written and supported by Henry Kissinger, to grant $50,000,000 in security assistance to the junta.[17]

In 1977 and 1978, the United States sold more than $120,000,000 in spare military parts to Argentina, and in 1977, the Department of Defense granted $700,000 to train 217 Argentine military officers.[18] By the mid-1970s, when détente with the Soviets softened anti-communism and President Jimmy Carter highlighted issues of human rights, US activists escalated their attacks and in 1978 secured a congressional cutoff of all US arms transfers to Argentina.[19] Argentina then turned largely to Israel for weapons sales.

Relations were strained after the US supported the United Kingdom on the Falklands Wars.

American-Argentine relations improved dramatically under the Reagan administration, which asserted that the Carter administration had weakened US diplomatic relationships with Cold War allies in Argentina, and it reversed the previous administration's official condemnation of the junta's human rights practices. The re-establishment of diplomatic ties allowed for the CIA collaboration with the Argentine intelligence service in arming and training the Nicaraguan Contras against the Sandinista government. The 601 Intelligence Battalion, for example, trained Contras at Lepaterique base, in Honduras.[20] Argentina also provided security advisors, intelligence training and some material support to forces in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras to suppress local rebel groups as part of a US-sponsored program, Operation Charly.

Argentine military and intelligence co-operation with the Reagan administration ended in 1982, when Argentina seized the British territory of the Falkland Islands in an attempt to quell domestic and economic unrest. The move was condemned by the US, which provided intelligence to the British government in its successful effort to regain control over the islands.

 
US President George W. Bush and Argentine President Nestor Kirchner during the 2005 Summit of the Americas, in Mar del Plata, Argentina

The US has a positive bilateral relationship with Argentina based on many common strategic interests, including non-proliferation, counternarcotics, counterterrorism, the fight against human trafficking, and issues of regional stability, as well as the strength of commercial ties. Argentina signed a Letter of Agreement with the US Department of State in 2004, opening the way for enhanced cooperation with the US on counternarcotics issues and enabling the US to begin providing financial assistance to the Argentine government for its counternarcotics efforts. In recognition of its contributions to international security and peacekeeping, the US government designated Argentina as a major non-NATO ally in January 1998.

The Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Argentine Ministry of Defense hold an annual Bilateral Working Group Meeting, alternating between Argentina and Washington, DC. Also, both nations exchange information through alternating annual joint staff talks, military educational exchanges, and operational officer exchange billets. Argentina is a participant in the Three-Plus-One regional mechanism (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and the US), which focuses on the co-ordination of counterterrorism policies in the triborder region.[21]

Argentina has endorsed the Proliferation Security Initiative and has implemented the Container Security Initiative and the Trade Transparency Unit, both of which are programs administered by the US Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Container Security Initiative provides for the selective scanning of shipping containers to identify weapons of mass destruction components, and the Trade Transparency Unit works jointly with Argentine Customs to identify trade-based money laundering. The Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering highlighted Argentine legislation passed during 2013 issuing new regulations strengthening suspicious transaction reporting requirements.[22] Currently, the US holds a position of neutrality on the issue of the ownership of the Falkland Islands. It acknowledges the de facto British control of the Falklands but has no position on the sovereignty claim over the islands.[23]

Trade and investment Edit

 
US President Barack Obama and Argentine President Mauricio Macri in March 2016.
 
The US delivers COVID vaccines to Argentina through the COVAX program in 2021

U.S.-Argentine cooperation also includes science and technology initiatives in the fields of space, peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and the environment. In June 2007, the U.S. and Argentina modernized a bilateral civil aviation agreement to update safety and security safeguards and allow a significant increase in flight frequencies between the two countries, which hold excellent potential for increased tourism and business travel. An active media, together with widespread interest in culture and society from the US, make Argentina a receptive environment for the information and cultural exchange work of the U.S. Embassy. The Fulbright scholarship program has more than tripled the annual number of U.S. and Argentine academic grantees since 1994, and the U.S. Embassy is actively working to increase other education exchanges.

The stock of U.S. investment in Argentina reached $13.3 billion in 2011, 14% of all foreign direct investment in Argentina at the time and second only to Spain. U.S. investment in Argentina is concentrated in the energy, manufacturing, information technology, and financial sectors. US-based firms comprised nearly 1/3 of the 100 most respected companies in Argentina published annually by Argentina's largest newspaper, Clarín.[24]

The United States is Argentina's fourth-largest export market (mainly energy staples, steel, and wine), and third-largest source of imports (mainly industrial supplies such as chemicals and machinery).[25] Argentina itself is a relatively minor trade partner for the United States, its imports from the U.S. of $9.9 billion making up 0.7% of total U.S. exports and its exports to the U.S. of $4.5 billion only 0.2% of U.S. imports; Argentina however is among the few nations with which the United States routinely maintains significant merchandise trade surpluses,[26] and the $5.4 billion surplus with Argentina in 2011 was the tenth-largest for the U.S. in the world.[27] The U.S. earned a further $4.1 billion surplus in trade in services with Argentina in 2011.[28] A record 690,000 Argentine nationals visited the United States in 2013, making Argentina the 15th largest source of foreign tourism into the U.S.[29]

In 2012 Argentina requested the assistance of the World Trade Organization in hosting consultations to discuss the United States ban on Argentine lemons.

Public opinion Edit

In 2005, Argentina was labelled as "the most anti-American country in the entire Western Hemisphere."[30] Global opinion polls taken in 2006, 2007 and 2012 show that Argentine public opinion had become skeptical of U.S. foreign policy at the time. According to the U.S. Global Leadership Report, only 19% of Argentines approved of U.S. foreign policy, the lowest rating for any surveyed country in the Americas.[31][32]

Argentine public opinion of the U.S. and its policies improved during the Obama administration, in 2010 was divided about evenly (42% to 41%) between those who approve or disapprove. As of 2015, Argentine views of the United States' policies are evenly divided with 43% of Argentines having a favorable view and 43% having an unfavorable view.[33]

U.S. Embassy functions Edit

 
US Ambassador Residence in Buenos Aires

The U.S. Mission in Buenos Aires carries out the traditional diplomatic function of representing the U.S. Government and people in discussions with the Argentine Government, and more generally, in relations with the people of Argentina. The Embassy is focused on increasing people-to-people contacts, and promoting outreach and exchanges on a wide range of issues.

Political, economic, and science officers deal directly with the Argentine Government in advancing U.S. interests but are also available to brief U.S. citizens on general conditions in the country. Officers from the U.S. Foreign Service, Foreign Commercial Service, and Foreign Agricultural Service work closely with the hundreds of U.S. companies that do business in Argentina, providing information on Argentine trade and industry regulations and assisting U.S. companies starting or maintaining business ventures in Argentina.

Consular section Edit

 
President Trump, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, First Lady Melania Trump and US Ambassador to Argentina Edward Prado in the US Embassy in Buenos Aires.

The embassy's Consular Section monitors the welfare and whereabouts of more than 20,000 U.S. citizen residents of Argentina and more than 250,000 U.S. tourists each year.

Consular personnel also provide US citizens help regarding passports, voting, Social Security, and other services. With the end of Argentine participation in the Visa Waiver Program in February 2002, Argentine tourists, students, and those who seek to work in the United States must have nonimmigrant visas. The Consular Section processes non-immigrant visa applications for persons who wish to visit the United States for tourism, studies, temporary work, or other purposes, and immigrant visas for persons who qualify to make the United States a permanent home.

Attachés Edit

Attaches accredited to Argentina from the U.S. Department of Justice (including the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation), the Department of Homeland Security (including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Customs and Border Protection), the Federal Aviation Administration, and other federal agencies work closely with Argentine counterparts on international law enforcement cooperation, aviation security, and other issues of concern. The U.S. Department of Defense is represented by the U.S. Military Group and the Defense Attache Office. These organizations ensure close military-to-military contacts, and defense and security cooperation with the armed forces of Argentina.

Principal U.S. Embassy officials Edit

Edward C. Prado was nominated to the post of Ambassador to Argentina by President Donald Trump on January 17, 2018. The post had been vacant since the resignation of Noah Mamet a year earlier, during which time Chargé d'Affaires Tom Cooney served as acting ambassador.[34]

Ambassador of Argentina to the United States Edit

Fernando Oris de Roa, an executive with extensive experience in Argentine agriculture, was appointed Ambassador to the United States by President Mauricio Macri on January 11, 2018.[35]

The post had been vacant since the April 3, 2017, resignation of Martín Lousteau over an arms procurement scandal involving a $2 billion request disclosed by the office of Congressman Pete Visclosky but not authorized by the Argentine Congress.[36] Chargé d'Affaires Sergio Pérez Gunella had served as acting ambassador in the interim.

After Alberto Fernández took office in December 2019, he designated Jorge Argüello as ambassador to the United States. Argüello's credentials were accepted in Washington, where President Donald Trump asked Argüello to tell president Fernández that "[he] can count with this President" regarding the Argentine debt with the International Monetary Fund.[37][38]

On February 22, 2020, Argüello said that he was working to pave the way for a meeting between the two presidents.[39]

Diplomatic missions Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.

  1. ^ Fernández, Francisco Lizcano. "Composición Étnica de las Tres Áreas Culturales del Continente Americano al Comienzo del Siglo XXI" (PDF) (in Spanish). Centro de Investigación en Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades, UAEM. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  2. ^ . U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on January 2, 2011. Retrieved March 29, 2011.
  3. ^ Joseph S. Tulchin, Argentina and the United States: A Conflicted Relationship (1990)
  4. ^ Bruce W. Jentleson and Thomas G. Paterson, eds. Encyclopedia of US foreign relations. (1997) 1:88-90.
  5. ^ a b c Carlos Escudé. . Archived from the original on May 23, 2006.
  6. ^ Alan Knight (2011). Porter, Andrew (ed.). The Oxford History of the British Empire: Volume III: The Nineteenth Century. Oxford University Press. p. 122. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198205654.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-820565-4.
  7. ^ Jürgen Müller, Nationalsozialismus in Lateinamerika: Die Auslandsorganisation der NSDAP in Argentinien, Brasilien, Chile und Mexiko, 1931–1945 (1997) 567pp.
  8. ^ Randall B. Woods, "Hull and Argentina: Wilsonian Diplomacy in the Age of Roosevelt," Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs (1974) 16#3 pp. 350–371 in JSTOR
  9. ^ "The 7 Most Notorious Nazis Who Escaped to South America".
  10. ^ Ronald C. Newton, The "Nazi Menace" in Argentina, 1931–1947 (Stanford U.P., 1992)
  11. ^ Daniel Stahl, "Odesa und das 'Nazigold' in Südamerika: Mythen und ihre Bedeutungen' ["Odesa and "Nazi Gold" in South America: Myths and Their Meanings"] Jahrbuch fuer Geschichte Lateinamerikas (2011) Vol. 48, pp 333–360.
  12. ^ Roger R. Trask, "Spruille Braden versus George Messersmith: World War II, the Cold War, and Argentine Policy, 1945-1947." Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 26.1 (1984): 69-95.
  13. ^ Glenn J. Dorn, "‘Bruce Plan’ and Marshall Plan: The United States's Disguised Intervention against Peronism in Argentina, 1947–1950." International History Review 21.2 (1999): 331-351.
  14. ^ Jentleson and Paterson, Encyclopedia of US foreign relations. (1997) 1:89.
  15. ^ Paul H. Lewis, Guerrillas and Generals: the ‘Dirty War’ in Argentina (Praeger, 2002)
  16. ^ Thomas C. Wright, State Terrorism in Latin America: Chile, Argentina, and International Human Rights (Rowman and Littlefield, 2007)
  17. ^ On 30th Anniversary of Argentine Coup: New Declassified Details on Repression and U.S. Support for Military Dictatorship. Gwu.edu. Retrieved August 6, 2010.
  18. ^ Guest, 1990; pg. 166
  19. ^ William Michael Schmidli, "Human rights and the Cold War: the campaign to halt the Argentine 'dirty war'’", Cold war history (2012) 12#2 pp 345–365. online
  20. ^ "Los secretos de la guerra sucia continental de la dictadura", Clarín, March 24, 2006 (in Spanish)
  21. ^ "Argentina (09/06)".
  22. ^ "Improving Global AML/CFT Compliance: on-going process". FATF. February 14, 2014.
  23. ^ Pike, John. "Argentina – US Relations". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved February 3, 2017.
  24. ^ "Doing business in Argentina". export.gov.
  25. ^ "Argentine Foreign Trade Statistics (2011)" (PDF). INDEC.[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ "Trade in goods with Argentina". U.S. Census Bureau.
  27. ^ "Top Ten Countries with which the U.S. has a Trade Surplus". U.S. Census Bureau.
  28. ^ . BEA. Archived from the original on March 25, 2017. Retrieved March 9, 2018.
  29. ^ "Argentina, entre los países que más turistas envían a EE.UU". InfoNews. May 4, 2014.
  30. ^ "Anti-American Sentiment Increases in South America | United Church of God". Ucg.org. November 6, 2005. Retrieved April 12, 2022.
  31. ^ U.S. Global Leadership Project Report – 2012 Gallup
  32. ^ (PDF). The Chicago Council on Public Affairs. December 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 20, 2013. Retrieved April 20, 2013.
  33. ^ "Argentina – Opinion of the United States". Pew Research Center. 2012.
  34. ^ "Trump nominates Edward Prado as US ambassador to Argentina". Buenos Aires Times. January 18, 2018.
  35. ^ "President appoints four ambassadors by decree". Buenos Aires Times. January 13, 2018.
  36. ^ "Renunció Lousteau". Unidiversidad. April 3, 2017.
  37. ^ Niebieskikwiat, Natasha (January 7, 2020). "El gobierno de Donald Trump aceptó a Jorge Argüello como embajador ante los Estados Unidos". Clarín (in Spanish). Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  38. ^ Mathus Ruiz, Rafael (February 6, 2020). "Trump a Jorge Argüello: "Dígale al Presidente Fernández que puede contar con este presidente"". La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  39. ^ Mercado, Silvia (February 22, 2020). "El plan oficial para concretar este año la reunión entre Alberto Fernández y Donald Trump" (in Spanish). Retrieved March 1, 2020.

Further reading Edit

  • Allison, Victoria. "White Evil: Peronist Argentina in the US Popular Imagination Since 1955," American Studies International (2004) 42#1 pp 4–48. covers 1955 to 1999
  • Bemis, Samuel Flagg. "Early Diplomatic Missions from Buenos Aires to the United States 1811–1824," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society (1939) 49 (1). pp 11–101.
  • Dorn, Glenn J. "‘Bruce Plan’and Marshall Plan: The United States's Disguised Intervention against Peronism in Argentina, 1947–1950." International History Review 21.2 (1999): 331-351. online
  • Fifer, Valerie. United States Perceptions of Latin America, 1850-1930: A 'New West' South of Capricorn? (Manchester U. Press, 1991). 203 pp.
  • Frank, Gary. Struggle for hegemony in South America: Argentina, Brazil, and the United States during the Second World War (Routledge, 2021).
  • Greenberg, Daniel J. "From Confrontation to Alliance: Peronist Argentina's Diplomacy with the United States, 1945–1951." Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 12#24 (1987): 1-23.
  • Lluch, Andrea. "US Companies in Argentina: Trade and Investment Patterns (1890–1930)." Journal of Evolutionary Studies in Business 4.1 (2018): 70-108. online 1:25-31 and passim.
  • Nisley, Thomas J. "You can’t force a friendship? An analysis of US/Argentine relations." International Politics 55.5 (2018): 612–630.
  • Norden, Deborah, and Roberto Russell. The United States and Argentina: Changing Relations in a Changing World (Routledge, 2002).
  • Peterson, Harold F. Argentina and the United States 1810-1960 (1964)
  • Rodriguez, Julio. "Argentinean Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 1, Gale, 2014), pp. 141–150. online
  • Russell, Roberto. "Argentina and the United States: a distant relationship," in Jorge I. Domínguez, Rafael Fernández de Castro, eds, Contemporary U.S.-Latin American Relations (2011) pp 101–23. online
  • Sheinin, David M. K. Argentina & the United States: An Alliance Contained (2006) 285pp. covers 1800 to 1999
  • Sullivan, Mark P., and Rebecca M. Nelson. Argentina: Background and US Relations (Congressional Research Service, 2016). online
  • Trask, Roger R. "Spruille Braden versus George Messersmith: World War II, the Cold War, and Argentine Policy, 1945-1947". Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 26.1 (1984): 69-95.
  • Tulchin, Joseph S. Argentina and the United States: A Conflicted Relationship (1990)
  • Whitaker, Arthur P. The United States and the southern cone: Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay (1976) online
  • Whitaker, Arthur P. The United States and Argentina (1954)
  • Woods, Randall B. "Hull and Argentina: Wilsonian Diplomacy in the Age of Roosevelt" Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 16#3 (1974) pp. 350–371 online
  • Woods, Randall Bennett. The Roosevelt Foreign-Policy Establishment and the Good Neighbor: The United States and Argentina, 1941-1945 (1979)

External links Edit

  • Argentina: Background and U.S. Relations Congressional Research Service
  • Between Argentina And USA[permanent dead link] from Argentina's embassy in Washington
  • History of Argentina – U.S. Relations, from U.S. State Department
  • US State Department reports recent reports
  • Foreign Relations of the United States very large compilation of diplomatic documents with all countries
    • hundreds of key documents re Argentine-US relations
      • 1952 US estimate of Argentina

argentina, united, states, relations, argentina, united, states, have, maintained, bilateral, relations, since, united, states, formally, recognized, united, provinces, río, plata, predecessor, argentina, january, 1823, argentine, american, relationsunited, st. Argentina and the United States have maintained bilateral relations since the United States formally recognized the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata the predecessor to Argentina on January 27 1823 Argentine American relationsUnited States ArgentinaDiplomatic missionEmbassy of the United States Buenos AiresEmbassy of Argentina Washington D C EnvoyAmerican Ambassador to Argentina Marc StanleyArgentine Ambassador to the United States Jorge ArguelloThe Obelisco left and the Washington Monument right iconic symbols of both Buenos Aires and Washington Relations were severely strained in the era of World War II when Argentina refused to declare war on Nazi Germany and became the only Latin American nation not to receive American aid Relations continued to be difficult when the Perons were in power Relations were strained in 1982 after the US supported the United Kingdom against Argentina Since 1998 Argentina has been a major non NATO ally partly owing to Argentina s assistance to the United States in the Gulf War Relations have been strained at times over the past few years especially during the Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner administration but they have improved since President Mauricio Macri came to power in late 2015 Contents 1 Country comparison 2 History 2 1 1870 1930 2 2 1940s 2 3 1955 1980s 2 4 Trade and investment 2 5 Public opinion 3 U S Embassy functions 3 1 Consular section 3 2 Attaches 4 Principal U S Embassy officials 5 Ambassador of Argentina to the United States 6 Diplomatic missions 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksCountry comparison Edit Argentine Republic United States of AmericaFlag Coat of Arms Anthem Himno Nacional Argentino Star Spangled BannerCapital city Buenos Aires Washington D C Largest city Buenos Aires 2 891 082 15 594 428 Metro New York City 8 491 079 20 092 883 Metro Established May 25 1810 July 4 1776Government Federal presidential constitutional republic Federal presidential constitutional republicFirst leader Cornelio Saavedra George WashingtonCurrent leader Alberto Fernandez Joe BidenMain language Spanish EnglishMain religions 78 6 Christianity 69 Roman Catholic 12 3 Protestantism 1 4 Other Christian 23 9 Non Religious 1 5 Other 63 Christianity 41 Protestantism 21 Roman Catholicism 1 other 29 Non Religious 2 Jewish 1 Islam 1 Buddhism 1 Hindus 3 OtherEthnic groups 85 European Argentines 11 1 Mestizo Argentines 2 9 Asian Argentines Arab Argentines 1 0 Indigenous Argentines 1 60 1 White American 18 5 Hispanic American 12 6 African American 5 6 Asian American 0 9 American Indian and Alaska Native 0 2 Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander 2 8 two or more races 2 Current Constitution 1 May 1853 June 21 1788Area 2 780 400 km2 1 073 500 sq mi 9 629 091 km2 3 717 813 sq mi Population 44 938 712 324 894 500Population density 14 4 km2 37 3 sq mi 34 2 km2 83 2 sq mi GDP nominal US 444 458 billion 17 528 trillionGDP nominal per capita US 9 890 54 980GDP PPP 1 033 trillion 17 528 trillionGDP PPP per capita US 22 997 54 980Time zones 1 11History EditAfter Argentina became independent from Spanish rule the United States formally recognized the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata the legal predecessor to Argentina on January 27 1823 The bilateral relations have seesawed over the last century and a half between periods of greater cooperation and periods of tension over ideology and finance There has never been a threat of war 3 Argentine leaders were disappointed when the American government refused to invoke the Monroe Doctrine during instances such as the British establishment of a colony on the Falkland Islands or during the Anglo French blockade of the Rio de la Plata In 1833 US Navy shells the Falkland Islands at the time under Argentine control in retaliation for the seizing of American ships fishing in Argentine waters The new constitution of 1853 was based in part on the American Constitution In 1853 a commercial treaty was concluded between the two nations 4 1870 1930 Edit Argentina was closely linked to the British economy in the late 19th century and as such there was minimal contact with the United States When the United States began promoting the Pan American Union some Argentines were suspicious that it was indeed a device to lure the country into the US economic orbit but most businessmen responded favorably and bilateral trade grew briskly after the United States and did care of duties on Argentine wool in 1893 Relations soured when Argentina refused to join the Allies in the First World War Argentina had large British and German populations and both countries had made large scale investments in Argentina However as a prosperous neutral it greatly expanded trade with the United States during the war and exported meat grain and wool to the Allies particularly to Britain providing generous loans and becoming a net creditor to the Allied side a policy known as benevolent neutrality 5 1940s Edit Main articles Argentina during World War II and Inter American Conference on Problems of War and Peace Argentina s policy during the Second World War was marked by two distinct phases During the early years of the war Argentine President Roberto M Ortiz sought to sell food and wool to Britain He even proposed to US President Franklin Roosevelt for both countries to join the Allies together as non belligerents in 1940 However his proposal was snubbed at the time as Roosevelt was trying to get re elected 5 After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor US foreign policy worked to unite all of Latin America in a coalition against Germany but Argentina s neutralist stance had hardened since the resignation of Ortiz who resigned because of poor health The United States worked to pressure Argentina into the war against the wishes of Britain which supported Argentine neutrality in an effort to maintain vital provisions of beef and wheat to the Allies that were safe from German U boat attacks 5 Most of the beef and the wheat consumed in Britain came from Argentina 6 US policy backfired after the military seized power in a coup in 1943 Relations grew worse prompting the powerful US farm lobby to promote the economic and diplomatic isolation of Argentina and attempt to keep it out of the United Nations The policy was reversed when Argentina became the last Latin American nation to declare war on Germany in March 1945 Argentina had hosted a fairly organized pro German element before the war that had been controlled by German ambassadors It operated openly unlike in Brazil Chile and Mexico Historians 7 agree that the affinity between Argentina and Germany was greatly exaggerated 8 The Argentine government remained neutral until the closing weeks of the war and after the war quietly tolerated and in some cases aided the entry of German scientists and some notable war criminals including Josef Mengele Adolf Eichmann Erich Priebke Josef Schwammberger and Gerhard Bohne who were fleeing Europe through ratlines 9 The voyages of German submarines U 530 and U 977 to Argentina at the end of the war led to legends apocryphal stories and conspiracy theories that they had transported escaping Nazi leaders such as Adolf Hitler and or Nazi gold to South America Historians have shown there was little gold and probably only a few Nazis but the myths lived on and helped to sour relations with the United States 10 11 When Juan Peron ran for president in 1945 and 1946 US Ambassador Spruille Braden attacked him with a Blue Book on Argentina but public opinion rallied behind Peron Relations remained tense throughout the Peron years as he held fascist sympathies tried to remain neutral in the Cold War and continued to harbor Nazi war criminals Washington blocked funds from international agencies and restricted trade and investment opportunities 12 Meanwhile Peron championed Anti Americanism across Latin America and financed radical elements in other countries He did not however support the USSR in the Cold War 13 1955 1980s Edit After Peron was ousted in 1955 relations improved dramatically President Arturo Frondizi became the first Argentine president to visit the United States in 1959 Argentina provided support for the American Alliance for Progress the American invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965 and the isolation of Cuba after 1960 14 By 1976 US human rights groups were denouncing the Dirty War waged against leftist dissidents by the repressive military regime in Argentina 15 16 They demanded congressional control over foreign aid funding to regimes violating human rights The US State Department saw Argentina as a bulwark of anticommunism in South America and in early April 1976 the US Congress approved a request by the Ford administration written and supported by Henry Kissinger to grant 50 000 000 in security assistance to the junta 17 In 1977 and 1978 the United States sold more than 120 000 000 in spare military parts to Argentina and in 1977 the Department of Defense granted 700 000 to train 217 Argentine military officers 18 By the mid 1970s when detente with the Soviets softened anti communism and President Jimmy Carter highlighted issues of human rights US activists escalated their attacks and in 1978 secured a congressional cutoff of all US arms transfers to Argentina 19 Argentina then turned largely to Israel for weapons sales Relations were strained after the US supported the United Kingdom on the Falklands Wars American Argentine relations improved dramatically under the Reagan administration which asserted that the Carter administration had weakened US diplomatic relationships with Cold War allies in Argentina and it reversed the previous administration s official condemnation of the junta s human rights practices The re establishment of diplomatic ties allowed for the CIA collaboration with the Argentine intelligence service in arming and training the Nicaraguan Contras against the Sandinista government The 601 Intelligence Battalion for example trained Contras at Lepaterique base in Honduras 20 Argentina also provided security advisors intelligence training and some material support to forces in Guatemala El Salvador and Honduras to suppress local rebel groups as part of a US sponsored program Operation Charly Argentine military and intelligence co operation with the Reagan administration ended in 1982 when Argentina seized the British territory of the Falkland Islands in an attempt to quell domestic and economic unrest The move was condemned by the US which provided intelligence to the British government in its successful effort to regain control over the islands US President George W Bush and Argentine President Nestor Kirchner during the 2005 Summit of the Americas in Mar del Plata ArgentinaThe US has a positive bilateral relationship with Argentina based on many common strategic interests including non proliferation counternarcotics counterterrorism the fight against human trafficking and issues of regional stability as well as the strength of commercial ties Argentina signed a Letter of Agreement with the US Department of State in 2004 opening the way for enhanced cooperation with the US on counternarcotics issues and enabling the US to begin providing financial assistance to the Argentine government for its counternarcotics efforts In recognition of its contributions to international security and peacekeeping the US government designated Argentina as a major non NATO ally in January 1998 The Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Argentine Ministry of Defense hold an annual Bilateral Working Group Meeting alternating between Argentina and Washington DC Also both nations exchange information through alternating annual joint staff talks military educational exchanges and operational officer exchange billets Argentina is a participant in the Three Plus One regional mechanism Argentina Brazil Paraguay and the US which focuses on the co ordination of counterterrorism policies in the triborder region 21 Argentina has endorsed the Proliferation Security Initiative and has implemented the Container Security Initiative and the Trade Transparency Unit both of which are programs administered by the US Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement The Container Security Initiative provides for the selective scanning of shipping containers to identify weapons of mass destruction components and the Trade Transparency Unit works jointly with Argentine Customs to identify trade based money laundering The Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering highlighted Argentine legislation passed during 2013 issuing new regulations strengthening suspicious transaction reporting requirements 22 Currently the US holds a position of neutrality on the issue of the ownership of the Falkland Islands It acknowledges the de facto British control of the Falklands but has no position on the sovereignty claim over the islands 23 Trade and investment Edit US President Barack Obama and Argentine President Mauricio Macri in March 2016 The US delivers COVID vaccines to Argentina through the COVAX program in 2021U S Argentine cooperation also includes science and technology initiatives in the fields of space peaceful uses of nuclear energy and the environment In June 2007 the U S and Argentina modernized a bilateral civil aviation agreement to update safety and security safeguards and allow a significant increase in flight frequencies between the two countries which hold excellent potential for increased tourism and business travel An active media together with widespread interest in culture and society from the US make Argentina a receptive environment for the information and cultural exchange work of the U S Embassy The Fulbright scholarship program has more than tripled the annual number of U S and Argentine academic grantees since 1994 and the U S Embassy is actively working to increase other education exchanges The stock of U S investment in Argentina reached 13 3 billion in 2011 14 of all foreign direct investment in Argentina at the time and second only to Spain U S investment in Argentina is concentrated in the energy manufacturing information technology and financial sectors US based firms comprised nearly 1 3 of the 100 most respected companies in Argentina published annually by Argentina s largest newspaper Clarin 24 The United States is Argentina s fourth largest export market mainly energy staples steel and wine and third largest source of imports mainly industrial supplies such as chemicals and machinery 25 Argentina itself is a relatively minor trade partner for the United States its imports from the U S of 9 9 billion making up 0 7 of total U S exports and its exports to the U S of 4 5 billion only 0 2 of U S imports Argentina however is among the few nations with which the United States routinely maintains significant merchandise trade surpluses 26 and the 5 4 billion surplus with Argentina in 2011 was the tenth largest for the U S in the world 27 The U S earned a further 4 1 billion surplus in trade in services with Argentina in 2011 28 A record 690 000 Argentine nationals visited the United States in 2013 making Argentina the 15th largest source of foreign tourism into the U S 29 Main article Argentina United States lemon dispute In 2012 Argentina requested the assistance of the World Trade Organization in hosting consultations to discuss the United States ban on Argentine lemons Public opinion Edit In 2005 Argentina was labelled as the most anti American country in the entire Western Hemisphere 30 Global opinion polls taken in 2006 2007 and 2012 show that Argentine public opinion had become skeptical of U S foreign policy at the time According to the U S Global Leadership Report only 19 of Argentines approved of U S foreign policy the lowest rating for any surveyed country in the Americas 31 32 Argentine public opinion of the U S and its policies improved during the Obama administration in 2010 was divided about evenly 42 to 41 between those who approve or disapprove As of 2015 Argentine views of the United States policies are evenly divided with 43 of Argentines having a favorable view and 43 having an unfavorable view 33 U S Embassy functions Edit US Ambassador Residence in Buenos AiresThe U S Mission in Buenos Aires carries out the traditional diplomatic function of representing the U S Government and people in discussions with the Argentine Government and more generally in relations with the people of Argentina The Embassy is focused on increasing people to people contacts and promoting outreach and exchanges on a wide range of issues Political economic and science officers deal directly with the Argentine Government in advancing U S interests but are also available to brief U S citizens on general conditions in the country Officers from the U S Foreign Service Foreign Commercial Service and Foreign Agricultural Service work closely with the hundreds of U S companies that do business in Argentina providing information on Argentine trade and industry regulations and assisting U S companies starting or maintaining business ventures in Argentina Consular section Edit President Trump Secretary of State Mike Pompeo First Lady Melania Trump and US Ambassador to Argentina Edward Prado in the US Embassy in Buenos Aires The embassy s Consular Section monitors the welfare and whereabouts of more than 20 000 U S citizen residents of Argentina and more than 250 000 U S tourists each year Consular personnel also provide US citizens help regarding passports voting Social Security and other services With the end of Argentine participation in the Visa Waiver Program in February 2002 Argentine tourists students and those who seek to work in the United States must have nonimmigrant visas The Consular Section processes non immigrant visa applications for persons who wish to visit the United States for tourism studies temporary work or other purposes and immigrant visas for persons who qualify to make the United States a permanent home Attaches Edit Attaches accredited to Argentina from the U S Department of Justice including the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation the Department of Homeland Security including Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection the Federal Aviation Administration and other federal agencies work closely with Argentine counterparts on international law enforcement cooperation aviation security and other issues of concern The U S Department of Defense is represented by the U S Military Group and the Defense Attache Office These organizations ensure close military to military contacts and defense and security cooperation with the armed forces of Argentina Principal U S Embassy officials EditEdward C Prado was nominated to the post of Ambassador to Argentina by President Donald Trump on January 17 2018 The post had been vacant since the resignation of Noah Mamet a year earlier during which time Charge d Affaires Tom Cooney served as acting ambassador 34 Ambassador of Argentina to the United States EditFernando Oris de Roa an executive with extensive experience in Argentine agriculture was appointed Ambassador to the United States by President Mauricio Macri on January 11 2018 35 The post had been vacant since the April 3 2017 resignation of Martin Lousteau over an arms procurement scandal involving a 2 billion request disclosed by the office of Congressman Pete Visclosky but not authorized by the Argentine Congress 36 Charge d Affaires Sergio Perez Gunella had served as acting ambassador in the interim After Alberto Fernandez took office in December 2019 he designated Jorge Arguello as ambassador to the United States Arguello s credentials were accepted in Washington where President Donald Trump asked Arguello to tell president Fernandez that he can count with this President regarding the Argentine debt with the International Monetary Fund 37 38 On February 22 2020 Arguello said that he was working to pave the way for a meeting between the two presidents 39 Diplomatic missions EditOf ArgentinaWashington D C Embassy Atlanta Consulate General Chicago Consulate General Houston Consulate General Los Angeles Consulate General Miami Consulate General New York City Consulate General Orlando Consulate General Of United StatesBuenos Aires Embassy See also EditUnited States Ambassador to Argentina Argentina United States lemon dispute Argentine Americans Americans in ArgentinaReferences Edit This article incorporates public domain material from U S Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets United States Department of State Fernandez Francisco Lizcano Composicion Etnica de las Tres Areas Culturales del Continente Americano al Comienzo del Siglo XXI PDF in Spanish Centro de Investigacion en Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades UAEM Retrieved November 18 2020 2010 Census Data U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 2 2011 Retrieved March 29 2011 Joseph S Tulchin Argentina and the United States A Conflicted Relationship 1990 Bruce W Jentleson and Thomas G Paterson eds Encyclopedia of US foreign relations 1997 1 88 90 a b c Carlos Escude Historia General de las Relaciones Exteriores de la Republica Argentina Archived from the original on May 23 2006 Alan Knight 2011 Porter Andrew ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume III The Nineteenth Century Oxford University Press p 122 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198205654 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 820565 4 Jurgen Muller Nationalsozialismus in Lateinamerika Die Auslandsorganisation der NSDAP in Argentinien Brasilien Chile und Mexiko 1931 1945 1997 567pp Randall B Woods Hull and Argentina Wilsonian Diplomacy in the Age of Roosevelt Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 1974 16 3 pp 350 371 in JSTOR The 7 Most Notorious Nazis Who Escaped to South America Ronald C Newton The Nazi Menace in Argentina 1931 1947 Stanford U P 1992 Daniel Stahl Odesa und das Nazigold in Sudamerika Mythen und ihre Bedeutungen Odesa and Nazi Gold in South America Myths and Their Meanings Jahrbuch fuer Geschichte Lateinamerikas 2011 Vol 48 pp 333 360 Roger R Trask Spruille Braden versus George Messersmith World War II the Cold War and Argentine Policy 1945 1947 Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 26 1 1984 69 95 Glenn J Dorn Bruce Plan and Marshall Plan The United States s Disguised Intervention against Peronism in Argentina 1947 1950 International History Review 21 2 1999 331 351 Jentleson and Paterson Encyclopedia of US foreign relations 1997 1 89 Paul H Lewis Guerrillas and Generals the Dirty War in Argentina Praeger 2002 Thomas C Wright State Terrorism in Latin America Chile Argentina and International Human Rights Rowman and Littlefield 2007 On 30th Anniversary of Argentine Coup New Declassified Details on Repression and U S Support for Military Dictatorship Gwu edu Retrieved August 6 2010 Guest 1990 pg 166 William Michael Schmidli Human rights and the Cold War the campaign to halt the Argentine dirty war Cold war history 2012 12 2 pp 345 365 online Los secretos de la guerra sucia continental de la dictadura Clarin March 24 2006 in Spanish Argentina 09 06 Improving Global AML CFT Compliance on going process FATF February 14 2014 Pike John Argentina US Relations www globalsecurity org Retrieved February 3 2017 Doing business in Argentina export gov Argentine Foreign Trade Statistics 2011 PDF INDEC permanent dead link Trade in goods with Argentina U S Census Bureau Top Ten Countries with which the U S has a Trade Surplus U S Census Bureau U S international services private services trade by area and country BEA Archived from the original on March 25 2017 Retrieved March 9 2018 Argentina entre los paises que mas turistas envian a EE UU InfoNews May 4 2014 Anti American Sentiment Increases in South America United Church of God Ucg org November 6 2005 Retrieved April 12 2022 U S Global Leadership Project Report 2012 Gallup World Publics Reject US Role as the World Leader PDF The Chicago Council on Public Affairs December 2006 Archived from the original PDF on April 20 2013 Retrieved April 20 2013 Argentina Opinion of the United States Pew Research Center 2012 Trump nominates Edward Prado as US ambassador to Argentina Buenos Aires Times January 18 2018 President appoints four ambassadors by decree Buenos Aires Times January 13 2018 Renuncio Lousteau Unidiversidad April 3 2017 Niebieskikwiat Natasha January 7 2020 El gobierno de Donald Trump acepto a Jorge Arguello como embajador ante los Estados Unidos Clarin in Spanish Retrieved March 1 2020 Mathus Ruiz Rafael February 6 2020 Trump a Jorge Arguello Digale al Presidente Fernandez que puede contar con este presidente La Nacion in Spanish Retrieved March 1 2020 Mercado Silvia February 22 2020 El plan oficial para concretar este ano la reunion entre Alberto Fernandez y Donald Trump in Spanish Retrieved March 1 2020 Further reading EditAllison Victoria White Evil Peronist Argentina in the US Popular Imagination Since 1955 American Studies International 2004 42 1 pp 4 48 covers 1955 to 1999 Bemis Samuel Flagg Early Diplomatic Missions from Buenos Aires to the United States 1811 1824 Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 1939 49 1 pp 11 101 Dorn Glenn J Bruce Plan and Marshall Plan The United States s Disguised Intervention against Peronism in Argentina 1947 1950 International History Review 21 2 1999 331 351 onlineFifer Valerie United States Perceptions of Latin America 1850 1930 A New West South of Capricorn Manchester U Press 1991 203 pp Frank Gary Struggle for hegemony in South America Argentina Brazil and the United States during the Second World War Routledge 2021 Greenberg Daniel J From Confrontation to Alliance Peronist Argentina s Diplomacy with the United States 1945 1951 Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 12 24 1987 1 23 Lluch Andrea US Companies in Argentina Trade and Investment Patterns 1890 1930 Journal of Evolutionary Studies in Business 4 1 2018 70 108 online 1 25 31 and passim Nisley Thomas J You can t force a friendship An analysis of US Argentine relations International Politics 55 5 2018 612 630 Norden Deborah and Roberto Russell The United States and Argentina Changing Relations in a Changing World Routledge 2002 Peterson Harold F Argentina and the United States 1810 1960 1964 Rodriguez Julio Argentinean Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 1 Gale 2014 pp 141 150 online Russell Roberto Argentina and the United States a distant relationship in Jorge I Dominguez Rafael Fernandez de Castro eds Contemporary U S Latin American Relations 2011 pp 101 23 online Sheinin David M K Argentina amp the United States An Alliance Contained 2006 285pp covers 1800 to 1999 Sullivan Mark P and Rebecca M Nelson Argentina Background and US Relations Congressional Research Service 2016 online Trask Roger R Spruille Braden versus George Messersmith World War II the Cold War and Argentine Policy 1945 1947 Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 26 1 1984 69 95 Tulchin Joseph S Argentina and the United States A Conflicted Relationship 1990 Whitaker Arthur P The United States and the southern cone Argentina Chile and Uruguay 1976 online Whitaker Arthur P The United States and Argentina 1954 Woods Randall B Hull and Argentina Wilsonian Diplomacy in the Age of Roosevelt Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 16 3 1974 pp 350 371 online Woods Randall Bennett The Roosevelt Foreign Policy Establishment and the Good Neighbor The United States and Argentina 1941 1945 1979 External links EditArgentina Background and U S Relations Congressional Research Service Between Argentina And USA permanent dead link from Argentina s embassy in Washington History of Argentina U S Relations from U S State Department US State Department reports recent reports Foreign Relations of the United States very large compilation of diplomatic documents with all countries hundreds of key documents re Argentine US relations 1952 US estimate of Argentina Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Argentina United States relations amp oldid 1160539727, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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