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Topic: Foreign relations of Chile


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In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
 Foreign relations of Bolivia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Relations with Chile, strained since Bolivia's defeat in the War of the Pacific (1879-83) and its loss of the coastal province of Atacama, were severed from 1962 to 1975 in a dispute over the use of the waters of the Lauca River.
Relations were resumed in 1975 but broken again in 1978 over the inability of the two countries to reach an agreement that might have granted Bolivia a sovereign access to the sea.
Bolivia traditionally has maintained normal diplomatic relations with all hemispheric states except Chile.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Foreign_relations_of_Bolivia   (422 words)

  
 United States and the Bolivian Sea Coast - Chapter 9
The foreign ministers met in February 1967 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, to discuss the preparatory agenda for the summit; this agenda was prepared initially by a committee comprised of the foreign ministers of Chile, Colombia, Guatemala and Mexico.
The United States voted in favor, despite the opposing opinion of the Chilean ambassador, who had stated that it was not an attribute of the OAS to deal with this type of problems.
The request was presented first to the foreign ministers’ preparatory committee and then at the Conference of Foreign Ministers.
www.boliviaweb.com /mar/sea/chapter9.htm   (9115 words)

  
 Foreign relations of Bolivia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Relations with Chile, strained since Bolivia's defeat in the War of the Pacific (1879-83) and its loss of the coastal province of Atacama, were severed from 1962 to 1975 in a dispute over the use of the waters of the Lauca River.
Relations were resumed in 1975 but broken again in 1978 over the inability of the two countries to reach an agreement that might have granted Bolivia a sovereign access to the sea.
Bolivia traditionally has maintained normal diplomatic relations with all hemispheric states except Chile.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Foreign_relations_of_Bolivia   (422 words)

  
 The EU's relations with Bolivia - Overview
Bolivia’s main foreign policy objective is to recover sovereign access to the Pacific which it lost to Chile following the War of the Pacific (1879-1883), leaving Bolivia landlocked.
Relations between Bolivia and Chile became rather cool during the Mesa presidency as this objective was pursued frontally by Bolivia, but under President Rodríguez there has been a marked thaw as the two governments have sought successfully to identify common interests which helped to bring about a rapprochement.
Relations are also carried out within the framework of the
europa.eu.int /comm/external_relations/bolivia/intro   (2281 words)

  
 Greater Great Kato
Foreign Relations Data Bank >> South Mondesia, the Union of South Mondesia
Foreign Relations Data Bank >> Chile, Nuevo Republica de Chile
Foreign Relations Data Bank >> Amerada, the Republic of Amerada
www.geocities.com /quantumkato/ofa/ofa.html   (382 words)

  
 Governments on the WWW: Venezuela
Embajada de Venezuela en Santiago, Chile [Embassy of Venezuela in Santiago, Chile]
Embajada de Venezuela en Copenhague, Dinamarca [Embassy of Venezuela in Copenhagen, Denmark]
Delegación de Venezuela anta la UNESCO en París [Delegation of Venezuela to the UNESCO in Paris]
www.gksoft.com /govt/en/ve.html   (760 words)

  
 Bolivia - Country information - Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Includes Heads of State, Prime Ministers, Foreign, Trade and Aid Ministers.
Bolivia - Country information - Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Country and Regional Information - Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
www.dfat.gov.au /geo/bolivia   (83 words)

  
 Foreign relations of Uruguay - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Foreign relations of: Argentina· Bolivia · Brazil · Chile· Colombia · Ecuador · Guyana · Panama · Paraguay · Peru · Suriname · Trinidad and Tobago · Uruguay · Venezuela
Uruguay's international relations also reflect its drive to seek export markets and foreign investment.
Uruguay is a strong advocate of constitutional democracy, political pluralism, and individual liberties.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Foreign_relations_of_Uruguay   (471 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Foreign relations of Uruguay
Foreign relations of: Argentina· Bolivia · Brazil · Chile· Colombia · Ecuador · Guyana · Panama · Paraguay · Peru · Suriname · Trinidad and Tobago · Uruguay · Venezuela
Uruguay's international relations also reflect its drive to seek export markets and foreign investment.
Uruguay is a member of the Rio Group, an association of Latin American states that deals with multilateral security issues (under the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance).
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Foreign-relations-of-Uruguay   (1007 words)

  
 Peru - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Republic of Peru, (Spanish: República del Perú), or Peru, is a country in western South America, bordering Ecuador and Colombia to the north, Brazil to the east, Bolivia to the east, south-east and south, Chile to the south, and the Pacific Ocean to the west.
Peru is rich in cultural anthropology, and is well-known as the cradle of the Inca empire.
Peru declared its independence from Spain on July 28, 1821 thanks to an alliance between the Argentine army of José de San Martín, and the Neogranadine Army of Simón Bolívar.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Peru   (2076 words)

  
 Foreign relations of Bolivia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Relations with Chile, strained since Bolivia's defeat in the War of the Pacific (1879-83) and its loss of the coastal province of Atacama, were severed from 1962 to 1975 in a dispute over the use of the waters of the Lauca River.
Relations were resumed in 1975 but broken again in 1978 over the inability of the two countries to reach an agreement that might have granted Bolivia a sovereign access to the sea.
In the 1960s, relations with Cuba were broken following Castro's rise to power but resumed under the Paz Estenssoro Administration in 1985.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Foreign_relations_of_Bolivia   (422 words)

  
 Bolivia - FOREIGN RELATIONS
Of these, the War of the Pacific, in which Bolivia lost the Littoral Department to Chile, was clearly the most significant; it still accounted for a large part of Bolivia's foreign policy agenda in the late 1980s.
Bolivia's relations with Brazil and Argentina improved significantly, owing in part to a common bond that appeared to exist between these weak democratic governments emerging from military rule and facing the challenges of economic chaos.
Bolivia's foreign relations have been determined by its geographical location and its position in the world economy.
countrystudies.us /bolivia/89.htm   (516 words)

  
 Improving Trade with Uruguay: Cementing Economic Reforms and Advancing a Hemispheric Pact
Uruguay has a long history of stable democracy, and following Chile's example, it is reducing its foreign debt and gradually moving toward a free market economy.
Thus, U.S. and Uruguayan negotiators agreed on a bilateral investment treaty that guarantees equal treatment for domestic and foreign businesses for broad commercial sectors and establishes methods to redress commercial grievances.
The Oriental Republic of Uruguay is an important South American ally of the United States, even though it is barely the size of Oklahoma and has a population of only 3.3 million.
www.heritage.org /Research/TradeandForeignAid/em944.cfm   (1054 words)

  
 Europe and Brazil Foreign Relations
Brazil and its Mercosul partners want to strengthen their trading bloc to include not only Chile but also Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela before 2005, to be able to negotiate as a bloc with NAFTA, as opposed to bilateral negotiations as favored by the administration of President William Jefferson Clinton.
Relations with the EU are economically important, but even more so from a North-South political perspective.
By 1995 German investments in Brazil were second only to the United States, but Britain, Italy, and France also have important investments, mostly in industrial manufacturing, heavy equipment and automobiles, and consumer goods.
www.floridabrasil.com /brazil/about-Brazil-Foreign-Relations-Europe.htm   (253 words)

  
 Bolivia - Atlapedia Online
During 1992 relations with the US again soured as a result of rumors that US soldiers were building a secret Drug Enforcement Agency base in the Beni district while the joint US-Bolivian operations to eradicate 7,000 ha (17,290 ac) of coca crops resulted in the destruction of only 1,000 ha by May 1992.
In Feb. 1991 relations with the US soured when Col. Faustino Rico Toro, a former commander of military intelligence during the Meza regime, was appointed as head of the anti-narcotics police.
It is bound by Brazil to the north and east, Peru to the northwest, Chile to the southwest, Argentina to the south and Paraguay to the southeast.
www.atlapedia.com /online/countries/bolivia.htm   (1413 words)

  
 Isolated States - Cambridge University Press
The remainder of the study is devoted to an analysis of the enforced isolation of Taiwan, Israel, Chile and South Africa.
Using a wealth of statistical material, he demonstrates their varying degrees of isolation in the diplomatic, military, economic and socio-cultural arenas of the international community.
This book examines a largely neglected phenomenon in the field of international relations - the concept of the isolated state.
www.cambridge.org /catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521402689   (124 words)

  
 Chile Information Project -- "Santiago Times" -- Political, Environment, Human Rights, Economic News; January 8, 1996
Peru's foreign relations minister had warned of a forthcoming counterproposal to the Lima Conventions as he protested the highway project last week.
Diplomatic relations with Cuba were broken in 1973 when a military coup overthrew the democratically elected Socialist government of President Salvador Allende.
The report says in 2000, 75 percent of the 2.3 million hectares of foreign species plantations will contain pine, 14 percent eucalyptus and 10 percent other species.
ssdc.ucsd.edu /news/chip/h96/chip.19960108.html   (2826 words)

  
 Dodging Security - Council on Foreign Relations
In light of this, the Bush administration should call a meeting among the convening foreign ministers of the Community of Democracies—including Chile, the Czech Republic, India, Korea, Mali, Mexico, Poland, Portugal, South Africa, and the United States—when the UN General Assembly holds its delayed opening session this fall.
Formerly director of policy planning at the Department of State (1998–2001), Morton H. Halperin is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
These may include complete or partial interruption of economic relations and of rail, sea, air, postal, telegraphic, radio, and other means of communication, and the severance of diplomatic relations.
www.cfr.org /publication.html?id=4055   (2427 words)

  
 Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Homepage
The Australian Foreign Minister has congratulated Dr Michelle Bachelet on her election as President of the Republic of Chile.
The Australian Foreign Minister has expressed his disappointment at Iran's removal of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) seals at its Natanz uranium enrichment research facility.
The Treaty establishes a framework for the exploitation of the Greater Sunrise gas and oil reservoir.
www.dfat.gov.au   (256 words)

  
 Foreign Relations Of Chile
Foreign relations of Chile - Term Explanation on IndexSuche.Com
Records for Cuba -- Foreign relations -- Chile.
Records for United States -- Foreign relations -- Chile.
www.publicrelationspoint.info /resources/foreign-relations-of-chile.php   (161 words)

  
 Announcement Foreign Relations Series Volume Released
The U.S. Department of State released on September 23, 2004, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964-1968, Volume XXXI, South and Central America; Mexico.
Many of the bilateral compilations document the Johnson administration's responses to a series of crises: the 1964 Panama Canal flag incident; the 1964 coup d'etat in Brazil; the 1964 presidential election in Chile; the 1966 coup in Argentina; the 1967 hunt for Ernesto "Che" Guevara in Bolivia; the 1968 coups in Peru and Panama.
Although the war in Vietnam would soon intervene, Johnson essentially kept his promise, devoting considerable attention over the next five years to political and economic affairs "south of the border." Johnson moved quickly to make his mark in the region.
www.unc.edu /depts/diplomat/archives_roll/2004_07-09/frus_la.html   (558 words)

  
 Mario Profaca: Americas and Caribbean: Brazil
President Hu Jintao's visit to Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Cuba was of great importance, which is also the first state visit to the four Latin American countries by the new top leader of the Chinese Government.
Spain would help pushforward the relations between China and Latin American countries
Military experts from Brazil visited the Russian launch site at Baikonur and witnessed the launch of a space cargo rocket as part of plans by the two countries to develop cooperation in the manufacture and launch of space vehicles, ITAR-TASS news agency reported.
mprofaca.cro.net /brazil.html   (361 words)

  
 SHAFR: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
SHAFR: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
Relations between Chile and the United States during the 1960s," Vanderbilt U., 1998, DA 9841620, Jan. 1999.
Klees, Michael S. "The German Question in the Political Culture of West Germany in the 1980s: Influence on German-American Relations between Anti-Americanism and the Recognition of the German-Polish Border," Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy," 1998 (PS), DA 9831862, Nov. 1998.
www.ohiou.edu /shafr/NEWS/2000/MAR/fa.htm   (3888 words)

  
 Bangladesh - Merchandise
The landscape of Bangladesh is dominated by about 250 rivers which flow...
Bangladesh Belgium and Luxembourg Belize Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Brasil Brunei Bulgaria Cambodia Canada - English Canada - French Chile China Colombia Costa Rica Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Ecuador Egypt...
Muslin, the world famous fabric from ancient Bangladesh became a valued merchandise to the people in the west.
www.atlastraveldirectory.com /dir/528/275   (247 words)

  
 Summit of the Americas Information Network
QUITO, Ecuador -- Civil society plays an increasingly important role in the consolidation of democracy and decision making in the region, affirmed the Minister of Foreign Relations of Ecuador, Patricio Zuquilanda, today, hours before the formal inauguration of the General Assembly of the Organization of the American States (OAS).
The Profile was elaborated in conjunction with the Regional Coordinator of Economic and Social Research (CRIES), the Department of Political Science at the University of the Andes in Colombia (UNIANDES), FLACSO-Chile, FOCAL of Canada, and ESQUEL Foundation of the United States.
This creates a dynamic of antagonism and paradoxical exclusion of "foreigners" in their "homeland."
www.summit-americas.org /Quebec-CivilSociety/civilsoc-archives-eng.htm   (2545 words)

  
 Argentina Country Analysis Brief
Argentina also supplies Paraguay and Uruguay with crude oil via tanker.
The GCDS project also includes a concession covering a possible extension from Uruguay to Porto Alegre in southern Brazil; major partners in the GCDS project are British Gas (40%) and Pan American Energy (30%).
Argentina is Chile’s sole source of natural gas imports, and the continued supply disruptions have created considerable tension between the two countries.
www.eia.doe.gov /emeu/cabs/argentna.html   (3104 words)

  
 Foreign Relations Of Chile
Foreign relations of Chile - Term Explanation on IndexSuche.Com
Records for Cuba -- Foreign relations -- Chile.
Records for United States -- Foreign relations -- Chile.
www.publicrelationspoint.info /resources/foreign-relations-of-chile.php   (161 words)

  
 Publius Pundit - Blogging the democratic revolution
March 2, 2005 Bolivia’s lower house of Congress gets ready to enact a new hydrocarbons law likely to chase out foreign investment in the country due to new high royalty requirements.
The two states have been in a rift over a passage to the sea for Bolivia, for 126 years, so the accord is a sign of significantly improved relations.
March 1, 2005 Bolivia and Chile, in Montevideo, Uruguay for President Tabare Vazquez’s inauguration, sign a visa agreement to enable their citizens to travel across the common border without visas or passports.
www.publiuspundit.com /?p=598   (2893 words)

  
 SHAFR: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
SHAFR: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
Relations between Chile and the United States during the 1960s," Vanderbilt U., 1998, DA 9841620, Jan. 1999.
Klees, Michael S. "The German Question in the Political Culture of West Germany in the 1980s: Influence on German-American Relations between Anti-Americanism and the Recognition of the German-Polish Border," Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy," 1998 (PS), DA 9831862, Nov. 1998.
www.ohiou.edu /shafr/NEWS/2000/mar/fa.htm   (3888 words)

  
 The Government of the Bahamas - Foreign Affairs Ministry of
represents The Bahamas abroad; has oversight of international treaties and agreements, and refugee matters; develops friendly relations with other states and their representatives; promotes and protects the interest of Bahamian nationals and businesses in foreign countries;
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is the channel through which initial representation should be made to The Bahamas Government, both by other countries and regional and international organizations, including the United Nations, the Commonwealth and Caribbean Community (CARICOM).
The Government of the Bahamas > Agency > Foreign Affairs, Ministry of
www.bahamas.gov.bs /bahamasweb2/home.nsf/0/ED5BBA89FF25AC9106256F0000705847   (484 words)

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