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Brazil and the European Union established diplomatic relations in 1960. [1] The European Union and Brazil have close historical, cultural, economic and political ties. [ 1 ] At the 1st EU-Brazil summit , in 2007, Brazil entered in a strategic partnership with the European Union, strengthening their ties. [ 2 ]
The new foreign policy focused on a reapprochement with major governments especially the United States and Colombia in the Americas; Israel, Japan and South Korea in Asia; United Kingdom, Italy and Greece in Europe. The Brazil–Portugal relations were also strengthened, and despite disagreements over the crisis in Venezuela, Brazil remained ...
See Brazil–United States relations. The United States was the second country to recognize the independence of Brazil, doing so in 1824. Brazil-United States relations have a long history, characterized by some moments of remarkable convergence of interests but also by sporadic and critical divergences on sensitive international issues. [10]
Spain is Brazil's 16th largest trading partner globally. [5] Spain is Brazil's third largest foreign investor and in 2015, Spain had US$5 billion worth of investments in the country. [4] Brazilian multinational company Embraer operates in Spain. Spanish multinational companies such as Banco Santander, Mapfre, Repsol, Telefónica and Zara ...
South America's leaders will gather in Brazil's capital on Tuesday as part of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's attempt to reinvigorate regional integration efforts that have previously ...
While Brazilian-American relations have been significantly strengthened since the 1990s, there has been a period of tension in relations over the June 2013 revelation of US mass surveillance programs in Brazil after there had been proof of American spying on Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff. She cancelled a scheduled visit to the US in ...
America is strongest when working with our allies, but a “Europe first” movement in response to Trump’s “America first” may leave the U.S. short of allies when we most need them.
The conventional wisdom is that America’s refusal to retrench from Europe was a prudent decision — that the extension of security guarantees to Poland, the Baltics and other East European ...