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Embassy [1] [10] Honduras: Tegucigalpa: Embassy [1] San Pedro Sula: Consulate-General [3] Mexico: Mexico City: Embassy [1] Cancún (Quintana Roo) Consulate-General [3] Monterrey (Nuevo León) Consulate-General [3] Oaxaca City (Oaxaca) Consulate-General [3] San Luis Potosí City (San Luis Potosí) Consulate-General [3] Tapachula (Chiapas ...
This is a list of diplomatic missions in the United States.At present, 175 nations maintain diplomatic missions to the United States in the capital, Washington, D.C. Being the seat of the Organization of American States, the city also hosts missions of its member-states, separate from their respective embassies to the United States.
Toggle Consular missions subsection. 2.1 Flores (Petén) 2.2 Quetzaltenango. 2.3 Ayutla (Tecún Umán) 3 Gallery. ... This is a list of diplomatic missions in Guatemala.
Also known as the Guatemalan CID card, Guatemala began issuing this consular identification card in the United States in August 2002 [1] following the lead of the Mexican government's foreign consular agents in the United States who began lobbying states, municipalities and financial institutions in the United States to accept the Mexican CID ...
Bolivia is accredited to Guatemala from its embassy in San José, Costa Rica. Brazil: 21 November 1906: Brazil has an embassy in Guatemala City. Guatemala has an embassy in Brasília. Canada: 16 September 1961: Canada has an embassy in Guatemala City. [17] Guatemala has an embassy in Ottawa and a consulate-general in Montreal. [18] Chile: 8 ...
"U.S. Diplomatic chiefs of mission to Guatemala". The Political Graveyard. March 10, 2005; United States Department of State: Background notes on Guatemala This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.
Guatemala is bordered by the North Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Honduras (also known as the Caribbean Sea). It shares land borders with Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras and Belize. Due to Guatemala's proximity to the United States, fear of the Soviet Union creating a beachhead in Guatemala created panic in the United States government during the ...
Starting in the 19th century, right after independence from Spain was signed, the public administration was slowly organized. There was a first stage when Guatemala was a part of the United Provinces of Central America, and a second stage starting in 1847, when Guatemala became an independent, free and sovereign republic to administer its own public affairs.