Foreign Relations of Germany - Americas

Americas

Country Formal Relations Began Notes
Barbados 1967-03-14 See Barbados–Germany relations
  • Barbados is represented in Germany through its embassy in Brussels, (Belgium).
  • Germany is represented in to Barbados from its embassy in Port of Spain, (Trinidad and Tobago).
Bolivia
  • Diplomatic relations between the two states were broken during the First World War.
  • Relations were restored after the war under the agreement concluded on July 20, 1921.
Canada See Canada–Germany relations

Until 2005 Canada's embassy was in Bonn, but in April 2005 a new embassy opened in Berlin. Canada also operates consulates in Munich, Düsseldorf and Hamburg. The provinces of Ontario and Alberta have representatives in Germany, co-located in the consulates. Quebec runs a stand-alone bureau in Munich, with an “antenne culturelle” office in Berlin. In addition to its embassy in Ottawa, Germany maintains consulates in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Additional diplomats responsible for specialized files are also accredited from Washington.

Paraguay 1860-08-01
  • Germany has an embassy in Asuncion.
  • Paraguay has an embassy in Berlin.
  • German Federal Foreign Office about relations with Paraguay
  • Paraguayan Ministry of Foreign Relations about relations with Germany
United States See Germany–United States relations

Since 2006, the current chancellor Angela Merkel has sought warmer relations with the United States and to rebuild political ties on common values and beliefs.

Uruguay See Germany–Uruguay relations

Germany has an embassy in Montevideo. Uruguay has an embassy in Berlin, a general consulate in Hamburg and 6 honorary consulate (in Bremen, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt am Main, Munich, Potsdam and Stuttgart). Germany is the Uruguay's principal trading partner in the European Union.

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Famous quotes containing the word americas:

    The only history is a mere question of one’s struggle inside oneself. But that is the joy of it. One need neither discover Americas nor conquer nations, and yet one has as great a work as Columbus or Alexander, to do.
    —D.H. (David Herbert)