Foreign Policy Blogs

Tag Archives: U.S.-Brazil Relations

America’s changing role in the Americas

America’s changing role in the Americas

While democracy struggles to take hold in Myanmar and the Maldives, last weekend’s Summit of the Americas in Colombia raised some interesting questions about development and democracy in the Western Hemisphere. Events at the conference itself have been addressed elsewhere in FPA blogs (and here); I’d like to examine what the conference indicates about the […]

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Clinton in Brazil

Clinton in Brazil

In so many ways this event mirrored bilateral relations today, cordial, but increasingly thorny as an accumulating list of important issues, from immigration to international trade and non-proliferation, lead more and more Brazilians to the conclusion that the United States is part of the problem, not the solution.

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For Haiti, Brazil and the United States Need to Get it Right, Now

For Haiti, Brazil and the United States Need to Get it Right, Now

Can Brazil find its proper role in the long term efforts to rebuild Haiti and send it along a path to peace and prosperity

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Mr. Shannon goes to Brasilia

Mr. Shannon goes to Brasilia

Finally after seven months of a senate hold on his ambassadorial confirmation, veteran diplomat Thomas Shannon goes to Brasilia to smooth out the rougher edges of U.S.-Brazil relations and steer these two nations toward greater cooperation on such pending issues as energy and climate change, bilateral commerce, the Iran nuclear program, the G-20 deliberations, and […]

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