PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Argentine Republic
Geography
Area: 2.8 million sq. km. (1.1 million sq. mi.);
about the size of the U.S. east of the
Mississippi River; second-largest country in
South America.
Climate: Varied--predominantly temperate with
extremes ranging from subtropical in the north
to arid/sub- Antarctic in far south.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Argentine(s).
Population (2005 est.): 38.6 million.
Annual population growth rate (2001): 1.05%.
Ethnic groups: European 97%, mostly of Spanish
and Italian descent; Mestizo, Amerindian or
other nonwhite groups 3%.
Religions: Roman Catholic 92%, Protestant 2%,
Jewish 2%, other 4%.
Language: Spanish.
Education: Years compulsory--10. Adult
literacy (2001)--97%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--16.16/1,000.
Life expectancy (2000 est.)--75.48 yrs.
Work force: Industry and commerce--36%;
agriculture--19%; transport and
communications--6%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Constitution: 1853; revised 1994.
Independence: 1816.
Branches: Executive--president, vice
president, cabinet. Legislative--bicameral
Congress (72-member Senate, 257-member Chamber
of Deputies). Judicial--Supreme Court,
federal and provincial trial courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 23 provinces and
one autonomous district (Federal Capital).
Political parties: Justicialist (Peronist),
Radical Civic Union (UCR), numerous smaller
national and provincial parties.
Suffrage: Universal adult.
Economy (2004)
GDP: $152.0 billion.
Annual real growth rate: +9%.
Per capital GDP: $4,000.
Natural resources: Fertile plains (pampas);
minerals--lead, zinc, tin, copper, iron,
manganese, oil, and uranium.
Agriculture (9% of GDP, about 50% of exports by
value, including agribusiness): Products--grains,
oilseeds and by-products, livestock products.
Industry (22.3% of GDP): Types--food
processing, oil refining, machinery and
equipment, textiles, chemicals and
petrochemicals.
Trade: Exports ($34.5 billion)--grains,
meats, oilseeds, fuels, manufactured products.
Major markets-- MERCOSUR 19.7%; EU
17.7%; NAFTA 14.6%.
Year 2004 Argentine Exports--Millions
of U.S. Dollars
|
Total |
EU |
MERCOSUR |
NAFTA |
Rest |
All products |
34,453 |
6,081 |
6,770 |
5,041 |
16,561 |
Primary Products |
6,828 |
1,538 |
1,062 |
182 |
4,046 |
Agribusiness |
11,932 |
3,557 |
787 |
1,038 |
6,550 |
Industrial Products |
9,522 |
958 |
3,549 |
2,091 |
2,924 |
Fuels |
6,171 |
28 |
1,372 |
1,730 |
3,041 |
Pct Share of Total |
100.0 |
17.7 |
19.7 |
14.6 |
48.1 |
Pct Growth 2003/2004 |
16.5 |
4.4 |
19.8 |
21.6 |
18.8 |
Imports ($22.3 billion in
2004)--machinery, vehicles and transport
products, chemicals. Major suppliers--MERCOSUR
36.8%; EU 18.8%; NAFTA 19.4%. Imports from the
United States were 15.4% of total Argentine
imports, and 79.4% of Argentine imports from
NAFTA in 2004.
Year 2004 Argentine Imports--Millions of
U.S. Dollars
Total Argentine Imports |
22,320 |
1. From MERCOSUR |
8,211 |
2. From European Union |
4,199 |
3. From NAFTA |
4,320 |
(of which, from U.S.) |
3,431 |
PEOPLE
Argentines are a fusion of diverse national and
ethnic groups, with descendants of Italian and
Spanish immigrants predominant. Waves of
immigrants from many European countries arrived
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Syrian, Lebanese, and other Middle Eastern
immigrants number about 500,000, mainly in urban
areas. Argentina's population is overwhelmingly
Catholic, but it also has the largest Jewish
population in Latin America, estimated between
280,000 to 300,000 strong, and is home to one of
the largest Islamic mosques in Latin America. In
recent years, there has been a substantial
influx of immigrants from neighboring Latin
American countries. The indigenous population,
estimated at 700,000, is concentrated in the
provinces of the north, northwest, and south.
The Argentine population has one of Latin
America's lowest growth rates. Eighty percent of
the population resides in cities or towns of
more than 2,000, and over one-third lives in the
greater Buenos Aires area. With 13 million
inhabitants, this sprawling metropolis serves as
the focus for national life. Argentines enjoy
comparatively high standards of living; however,
following the economic crisis in 2002, 38.5% of
the population was still living below the
poverty line in the 28 largest urban areas as of
June 2005.
HISTORY
Europeans arrived in the region with the 1502
voyage of Amerigo Vespucci. Spanish navigator
Juan Diaz de Solias visited what is now
Argentina in 1516. Spain established a permanent
colony on the site of Buenos Aires in 1580,
although initial settlement was primarily
overland from Peru. The Spanish further
integrated Argentina into their empire by
establishing the Vice Royalty of Rio de la Plata
in 1776, and Buenos Aires became a flourishing
port. Buenos Aires formally declared
independence from Spain on July 9, 1816.
Argentines revere Gen. Jose de San Martin, who
campaigned in Argentina, Chile, and Peru as the
hero of their national independence. Following
the defeat of the Spanish, centralist and
federationist groups waged a lengthy conflict
between themselves to determine the future of
the nation. A modern constitution was
promulgated in 1853, and a national unity
government was established in 1861.
Two forces combined to create the modern
Argentine nation in the late 19th century: the
introduction of modern agricultural techniques
and integration of Argentina into the world
economy. Foreign investment and immigration from
Europe aided this economic revolution.
Investment, primarily British, came in such
fields as railroads and ports. As in the United
States, the migrants who worked to develop
Argentina's resources--especially the western
pampas--came from throughout Europe.
From 1880 to 1930 Argentina became one of the
world's 10 wealthiest nations based on rapid
expansion of agriculture and foreign investment
in infrastructure. Conservative forces dominated
Argentine politics until 1916, when their
traditional rivals, the Radicals, won control of
the government. The Radicals, with their
emphasis on fair elections and democratic
institutions, opened their doors to Argentina's
rapidly expanding middle class as well as to
groups previously excluded from power. The
Argentine military forced aged Radical President
Hipolito Yrigoyen from power in 1930 and ushered
in another decade of Conservative rule. Using
fraud and force when necessary, the governments
of the 1930s attempted to contain the currents
of economic and political change that eventually
led to the ascendance of Juan Domingo Peron (b.
1897). New social and political forces were
seeking political power, including a modern
military and labor movements that emerged from
the growing urban working class.
The military ousted Argentina's
constitutional government in 1943. Peron, then
an army colonel, was one of the coup's leaders,
and he soon became the government's dominant
figure as Minister of Labor. Elections carried
him to the presidency in 1946. He aggressively
pursued policies aimed at empowering the working
class and greatly expanded the number of
unionized workers. In 1947, Peron announced the
first 5-year plan based on the growth of
industries he nationalized. He helped establish
the powerful General Confederation of Labor (CGT).
Peron's dynamic wife, Eva Duarte de Peron, known
as Evita (1919-52), played a key role in
developing support for her husband. Peron won
reelection in 1952, but the military sent him
into exile in 1955. In the 1950s and 1960s,
military and civilian administrations traded
power, trying, with limited success, to deal
with diminished economic growth and continued
social and labor demands. When military
governments failed to revive the economy and
suppress escalating terrorism in the late 1960s
and early 1970s, the way was open for Peron's
return.
On March 11, 1973, Argentina held general
elections for the first time in 10 years. Peron
was prevented from running, but voters elected
his stand-in, Dr. Hector Campora, as President.
Peron's followers also commanded strong
majorities in both houses of Congress. Campora
resigned in July 1973, paving the way for new
elections. Peron won a decisive victory and
returned as President in October 1973 with his
third wife, Maria Estela Isabel Martinez de
Peron, as Vice President. During this period,
extremists on the left and right carried out
terrorist acts with a frequency that threatened
public order. The government resorted to a
number of emergency decrees, including the
implementation of special executive authority to
deal with violence. This allowed the government
to imprison persons indefinitely without charge.
Peron died on July 1, 1974. His wife
succeeded him in office, but a military coup
removed her from office on March 24, 1976, and
the armed forces formally exercised power
through a junta composed of the three service
commanders until December 10, 1983. The armed
forces applied harsh measures against terrorists
and many suspected of being their sympathizers.
They restored basic order, but the human costs
of what became known as "El Proceso," or the
"Dirty War" were high. Conservative counts list
between 10,000 and 30,000 persons as
"disappeared" during the 1976-83 period. Serious
economic problems, mounting charges of
corruption, public revulsion in the face of
human rights abuses and, finally, the country's
1982 defeat by the United Kingdom in an
unsuccessful attempt to seize the
Falklands/Malvinas Islands all combined to
discredit the Argentine military regime. The
junta lifted bans on political parties and
gradually restored basic political liberties.
On October 30, 1983, Argentines went to the
polls and chose Raul Alfonsin, of the Radical
Civic Union (UCR), as President. He began a
6-year term of office on December 10, 1983. In
1985 and 1987, large turnouts for mid-term
elections demonstrated continued public support
for a strong and vigorous democratic system. The
UCR-led government took steps to resolve some of
the nation's most pressing problems, including
accounting for those who disappeared during
military rule, establishing civilian control of
the armed forces, and consolidating democratic
institutions. However, failure to resolve
endemic economic problems, and an inability to
maintain public confidence undermined the
effectiveness of the Alfonsin government, which
left office 6 months early after Peronist
candidate Carlos Saul Menem won the 1989
presidential elections.
President Menem imposed peso-dollar parity
(convertibility) in 1992 to break the back of
hyperinflation and adopted far-reaching
market-based policies. Menem's accomplishments
included dismantling a web of protectionist
trade and business regulations, and reversing a
half-century of statism by implementing an
ambitious privatization program. These reforms
contributed to significant increases in
investment and growth with stable prices through
most of the 1990s. Unfortunately, widespread
corruption in the administrations of President
Menem and President Fernando De la Rua (elected
in 1999) shook confidence and weakened the
recovery. Also, while convertibility defeated
inflation, its permanence undermined Argentina's
export competitiveness and created chronic
deficits in the current account of the balance
of payments, which were financed by massive
borrowing. The contagion effect of the Asian
financial crisis of 1998 precipitated an outflow
of capital that gradually mushroomed into a
4-year depression that culminated in a financial
panic in November 2001. In December 2001, amidst
bloody riots, President De la Rua resigned, and
Argentina defaulted on $88 billion in debt, the
largest sovereign debt default in history.
A legislative assembly on December 23, 2001,
elected Adolfo Rodriguez Saa to serve as
President and called for general elections to
elect a new president within 3 months. Rodriguez
Saa announced immediately that Argentina would
default on its international debt obligations,
but expressed his commitment to maintain the
currency board and the peso's 1-to-1 peg to the
dollar. Rodriguez Saa, however, was unable to
rally support from within his own party for his
administration and this, combined with renewed
violence in the Federal Capital, led to his
resignation on December 30. Yet another
legislative assembly elected Peronist Eduardo
Duhalde President on January 1, 2002. Duhalde--differentiating
himself from his three predecessors--quickly
abandoned the peso's 10-year-old link with the
dollar, a move that was followed by currency
depreciation and inflation. In the face of
rising poverty and continued social unrest,
Duhalde also moved to bolster the government's
social programs.
In the first round of the presidential
election on April 27, 2003, former President
Carlos Menem (Justicialist Party--PJ) won 24.3%
of the vote, Santa Cruz Governor Nestor Kirchner
(PJ) won 22%, followed by Ricardo Murphy with
16.4% and Elisa Carrio with 14.2%. Menem
withdrew from the May 25 runoff election after
polls showed overwhelming support for Kirchner.
President Kirchner took office on May 25, 2003.
He took office following the immense social and
economic upheaval stemming from the financial
crisis caused by a failed currency
convertibility regime. Kirchner has focused on
consolidating his political strength and
alleviating social problems. He forced changes
in the Supreme Court and military and undertook
popular measures, such as raising government
salaries, pensions, and the minimum wage. The
wave of public demonstrations that coincided
with the economic downturn has stabilized.
President Kirchner won a major victory in the
October 23, 2005 legislative elections, giving
him a strengthened mandate and a stronger
position in the Senate and Chamber of Deputies
as he attempts to set Argentina's economic
course and consolidate the impressive economic
recovery of the past three years.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Democracy returned to Argentina in 1983, with
Raul Alfonsin of the country's oldest political
party, the Radical Civic Union (UCR), winning
the presidency. Three general elections followed
in the next 16 years--a remarkable feat in
Argentine political history--with the
Justicialist Party (PJ) candidate Carlos Menem
winning two and the UCR's Fernando De la Rua
one.
President De la Rua was forced to resign in
December 2001 after bloody riots. A legislative
assembly elected Adolfo Rodriguez Saa to serve
out the remainder of De la Rua's term, but he
too failed to garner political support in the
face of continued unrest and resigned that same
month. Yet another legislative assembly then
chose Eduardo Duhalde to succeed Rodriguez Saa.
Duhalde took office on January 1, 2002, in the
midst of a profound economic crisis and a
widespread public rejection of the "political
class" in Argentina, a rejection directed at all
three branches of government. Another factor
contributing to the perception of institutional
instability in Argentina was conflict between
the three branches of government in early 2002,
culminating in the legislature's attempt to
impeach the members of the Supreme Court.
Despite widespread concern, democracy and
democratic institutions survived the crisis, and
Nestor Kirchner has taken firm hold as
President. Since taking office, he has focused
on building his political strength from the 22%
popular vote he received in national elections
April 27, 2003.
Argentina's constitution of 1853, as revised
in 1994, mandates a separation of powers into
executive, legislative, and judicial branches at
the national and provincial level. Each province
also has its own constitution, roughly mirroring
the structure of the national constitution. The
president and vice president are directly
elected to 4-year terms. Both are limited to two
consecutive terms; they are allowed to stand for
a third term or more after an interval of at
least one term. The president appoints cabinet
ministers, and the constitution grants him
considerable power, including authority to enact
laws by presidential decree under conditions of
"urgency and necessity" and the line-item veto.
Since 2001, senators have been directly
elected, with each province and the Federal
Capital represented by three senators. Senators
serve 6-year terms. One-third of the Senate
stands for reelection every 2 years. Members of
the Chamber of Deputies are directly elected to
4-year terms. Voters elect half the members of
the lower house every 2 years. Both houses are
elected via a system of proportional
representation. Female representation in
Congress--at nearly one-third of total
seats--ranks among the world’s highest, with
representation comparable to European Union (EU)
countries such as Austria and Germany. Female
senators include Christina Fernández de
Kirchner, who was a nationally known member of
the Senate for the Province of Santa Cruz before
her husband was elected President, and was
reelected on October 23, 2005 as a Senator for
the Province of Buenos Aires.
The constitution establishes the judiciary as
an independent government entity. The president
appoints members of the Supreme Court with the
consent of the Senate. The president on the
recommendation of a magistrates' council
appoints other federal judges. The Supreme Court
has the power to declare legislative acts
unconstitutional.
Political Parties
The two largest political parties are the
Justicialist Party (PJ--also called Peronist),
founded in 1945 by Juan Domingo Peron, and the
Union Civica Radical (UCR), or Radical Civic
Union, which claims 1890 as its founding date.
Traditionally, the UCR has had more urban
middle-class support and the PJ more labor
support, but both parties have become more
broadly based. Smaller parties, such as the
center-right Propuesta Republicana (PRO) and the
more-leftist-leaning Argentina for a Republic of
Equals (ARI), occupy various positions on the
political spectrum, and some are active only in
certain provinces. Historically, organized
labor--largely tied to the Peronist Party--and
the armed forces also have played significant
roles in national life. However, labor's
political power has declined somewhat, and the
armed forces are firmly under civilian control.
Repudiated by the public after a period of
military rule (1976-83)--marked by human rights
violations, economic decline, and military
defeat in the 1982 Falkland/Malvinas Islands
conflict--the Argentine military today is a
downsized, volunteer force.
Since taking office in 2003, President
Kirchner had been engaged in a struggle with
former President Eduardo Duhalde and other party
leaders for control of the PJ. The President's
candidates in the October 2005 legislative
elections, many running under the banner of
Frente Para la Victoria (FPV), won roughly 40%
of the vote nationwide, nearly three times the
15% won by the Radical Civic Union (UCR).
President Kirchner's victory was decisive enough
to leave him largely in control of the political
direction of the country and the PJ. The UCR,
although still the second most powerful
political party after the PJ on a national
scale, has declined significantly since UCR
President de la Rua was forced from office in
December 2001. In the April 2003 presidential
elections, the UCR received only 2% of the
national vote, the lowest tally in the party's
history. The UCR continues to retain significant
strength in many parts of the country and
governs roughly one-third of the provinces. The
UCR is the only opposition political party with
a nationwide structure.
Government Policy
The reform agenda remains incomplete and has
been on hold since the late 2001-early 2002
acute political and economic crisis. The Central
Bank's independence is weak, and the reform of
the state has not yet been completed. Although
the government's broad policy remains one of
allowing private initiative to operate,
President Kirchner’s government has said it
would increase the role of the state in an
effort to boost economic growth and recovery.
Principal Government Officials
President--Nestor Kirchner
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Jorge Taiana
Ambassador to the United States--Jose Bordon
Ambassador to the Organization of American
States--Rodolfo Gil
Ambassador to the United Nations--Cesar Mayoral
Argentina maintains an embassy in the United
States at 1600 New Hampshire Ave. NW, Washington
DC 20009; tel (202) 238-6400; fax (202)
332-3171. It has consular offices in the
following locations: 245 Peachtree Center Ave.,
Suite 2101 Atlanta, GA 30303, tel. (404)
880-0805, fax (404) 880-0806; 205 North Michigan
Ave., Suite 4209 Chicago, IL 60601, tel. (312)
819-2610, fax (312) 819-2612; 1990 Post Oak
Blvd., Suite 770 Houston, TX 77056, tel. (713)
871-8935, fax (713) 871-0639; 5055 Wilshire
Blvd., Suite 210 Los Angeles, CA 90036, tel.
(323) 954-9155, fax (323) 934-9076; 800 Brickell
Ave., PH1 Miami, FL 33131, tel. (305) 373-7794,
fax (305) 371-7108; 12 West 56th St., New York,
NY 10019, tel. (212) 603-0400, fax (212)
541-7746; 1600 New Hampshire Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20009, tel. (202) 238-6460, fax
(202) 238-6471.
ECONOMY
Argentina's economy began a recovery in
March 2002 that has been far more impressive and
robust than anticipated by leading international
and domestic analysts. An export-led boom
triggered three consecutive years of 8-9% growth
in real gross domestic product (GDP). Industrial
activity and construction activity also
performed well, growing 6.5% and 18.5%,
respectively, during January-October 2005.
Tourism activity boomed: Argentina received 3.7
million foreign tourists in 2005, another record
high. The expansion is creating jobs, and
unemployment dipped from 20.4% in the first
quarter of 2003 to 11.1% in the third quarter of
2005. Investment in real terms jumped 34%, and
capital flight has reversed. A higher tax burden
and the recovery’s strong impact on revenue
levels let the Government of Argentina achieve
an exceptional 3.6% of GDP primary fiscal
surplus, in spite of a 19% real growth in public
expenditure during January-October 2005.
Meanwhile, the move to a market-based
exchange rate regime and high global commodity
prices have lifted exports to record levels and
assured hefty surpluses in the trade and current
account balances of the balance of payments, in
spite of high import growth. The favorable
balance of payments performance and Argentina’s
non-payment of its private debt obligations
before the defaulted debt exchange in June 2005
allowed a strong accumulation of foreign
exchange reserves, which reached nearly $26.9
billion at the end of 2005. The demand for pesos
grew a real 148% between November 2002 and
November 2005. Argentina’s Central Bank has
deftly managed monetary policy in support of a
competitive peso but with some problems in the
inflation field. Inflation was an estimated
12.0% in 2005. Banks are back in the black, and
net credit levels to the private sector are
positive. In December 2005, President Kirchner
announced that Argentina would pay its $9.8
billion in International Monetary Fund (IMF)
debt out of the country's international reserves
at the end of the year.
Argentina’s impressive recovery is a function
of a number of factors. First, following a
decade of market reforms, the economy was
fundamentally sound except for the high level of
indebtedness. Second, the adoption of a market
exchange rate and favorable international
commodity and interest rate trends were
catalytic factors in the export-led boom. Third,
the government has applied moderate fiscal and
monetary policies. Argentina has sound
fundamentals and should continue to perform
well, with growth projected to be 6% for 2006.
Nevertheless, slowness in addressing public
service contract renegotiations, capacity
constraints, potential energy shortages in the
face of continued high levels of economic
growth, demand for higher wages, inflation and
the government's heterodox policies to contain
it (including pressure on the private sector for
"voluntary" price controls), and a still-weak
investment climate are potential obstacles to
sustaining the recovery.
Foreign Trade
In 2004, foreign trade equaled about 37.3% of
GDP--up from 11% in 1990--and plays an
increasingly important role in Argentina's
economic development. Exports represented about
23% of GDP in 2004, up from 14% from 2002.
Argentina’s trade surplus was $12.1 billion in
2004.
MERCOSUR Trade Pact
MERCOSUR, the customs union that includes
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay,
remains the cornerstone of Argentina's
international trade policy. Close cooperation
between Brazil and Argentina--historic
competitors--is the key to the integration
process of MERCOSUR, which includes political
and military elements in addition to a customs
union. Chile and Bolivia have become associate
members. MERCOSUR members are active
participants in the negotiation of the Free
Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). MERCOSUR also
continues to pursue an active program of trade
negotiations with other countries and regional
groups, including Mexico and the European Union.
Argentina adheres to most treaties and
international agreements on intellectual
property. It is a member of the World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and
the World Trade Organization (WTO). The
Argentine Congress ratified the Uruguay Round
agreements, including the provisions on
intellectual property, as Law 24425 on January
5, 1995. However, extension of adequate patent
protection to pharmaceuticals has been a highly
contentious bilateral issue. In May 1997, the
U.S. suspended 50% of Argentina's generalized
system of preferences (GSP) benefits because of
its unsatisfactory pharmaceutical patent law. In
November 2000, after years of protracted debate,
a new patent law took effect, and a number of
pharmaceutical patents were issued. This law
improved earlier Argentine patent legislation
but provides less protection than that called
for in the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS).
In April 2002, negotiations between the
Governments of the United States and Argentina
clarified aspects of the latter's intellectual
property system, such as provisions related to
the patentability of microorganisms and the
import restriction regime. In addition, the
Government of Argentina agreed to amend its
patent law so as to provide protection for
products obtained from a process patent and to
ensure that preliminary injunctions are
available in intellectual property court
proceedings, among other steps. Congress was
expected to pass the outstanding amendment by
the end of 2003. Finally, on the outstanding
issues that remain, including data protection,
the U.S. Government retains its right to seek
resolution under the WTO dispute settlement
mechanism. In return, the U.S. Government is
committed to considering all Argentine requests
to expand market access for Argentine products
as soon as U.S. legislation reauthorizing trade
preferences under the GSP is enacted.
Investment
U.S. investment is concentrated in financial
services, telecommunications, energy,
petrochemicals, food processing, and motor
vehicle manufacturing. However, the economic
crisis and subsequent government decisions
clouded the country's investment climate, and
many U.S. firms substantially wrote down the
value of their Argentine investments. Other
major sources of investment include Spain,
Chile, Italy, France, Canada, and Japan. Several
bilateral agreements generated significant U.S.
private investment during the 1990s. Argentina
has an Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC)
agreement and an active program with the U.S.
Export-Import Bank. Under the 1994
U.S.-Argentina Bilateral Investment Treaty, U.S.
investors enjoy national treatment in all
sectors except shipbuilding, fishing, nuclear
power generation, and uranium production. The
treaty allows for international arbitration of
investment disputes, and some U.S. investors are
currently pursuing arbitration claims against
the Government of Argentina.
NATIONAL SECURITY
The president and a civilian minister of defense
control the Argentine armed forces. The Interior
Ministry controls the paramilitary Gendarmeria
(border police) and the Prefectura Naval (coast
guard). The Argentine armed forces maintain
close defense cooperation and military supply
relationships with the United States. Other
countries also have military relationships with
the Argentine forces, principally Israel,
Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Brazil, Chile,
and Venezuela.
Lack of budgetary resources is the most
serious problem facing the Argentine military
today. Current economic conditions and the
government's commitment to reduce public sector
spending have slowed modernization and
restructuring efforts. Argentina's traditionally
difficult relations with its neighbors have
improved dramatically, and Argentine officials
do not see a potential threat from any
neighboring country. MERCOSUR has exercised a
useful role in supporting democracy in the
region.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
In recent years, Argentina has had a strong
partnership with the United States in support of
UN peacekeeping. Argentina was the only Latin
American country to participate in the 1990-91
Gulf war and all phases of the 1994 Haiti
operation. It has contributed Argentine soldiers
and policy to UN peacekeeping operations
worldwide. In recognition of its contributions
to international security and peacekeeping, the
U.S. Government designated Argentina as a major
non-NATO ally in January 1998. Under President
Kirchner, Argentina's enthusiasm for the Summit
of the Americas process and the Free Trade Area
of the Americas initiative (FTAA) has cooled
somewhat, with more emphasis placed on
sub-regional initiatives with the other MERCOSUR
members, including Venezuela.
The U.S. and Argentina continue to maintain
positive relations despite President Kirchner's
sometimes populist rhetoric and stated
opposition to the FTAA. President Bush’s efforts
in 2003 to reach out to the newly elected
President and support with the IMF were key
elements in maintaining good relations. In
response, Argentina has actively cooperated with
the U.S. in counterterrorism operations in the
Tri-border region as a committed member of the
3+1 framework (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and
the U.S.). Despite popular opposition, Argentina
sent a sizeable contingent of troops to Haiti in
support of UN peacekeeping operations. Since
meeting with Evo Morales instead of Bolivian
President Mesa at the 2003 Ibero-American
Summit, President Kirchner has become an active
supporter of Bolivia’s political and economic
stability. In Venezuela, President Kirchner
played a constructive role in pressing President
Chavez to hold a recall referendum, although we
need to keep him engaged. Despite the populist
rhetoric, the Kirchner administration has
remained fiscally conservative and has not
resorted to large-scale state intervention in
the economy. In September 2004, following 10
years of negotiations, the Government of
Argentina signed a Letter of Agreement with the
Department of State, both demonstrating its
increasing willingness to work with the U.S. on
counternarcotics issues, and enabling the U.S.
to begin providing assistance to the Government
of Argentina.
U.S.-ARGENTINE RELATIONS
President George W. Bush and President Kirchner
met most recently in November 2005 in Mar del
Plata during the IV Summit of the Americas, and
many senior U.S. officials visited Argentina to
discuss issues of mutual concern. The Office of
the Secretary of Defense and the Argentine
Ministry of Defense hold an annual Bilateral
Working Group Meeting, alternating between
Argentina and Washington, DC.
U.S. Embassy Functions
The U.S. Mission in Buenos Aires carries out the
traditional diplomatic function of representing
the U.S. Government and people in discussions
with the Argentine Government, and more
generally, in relations with the people of
Argentina. The positive political relationship
between the United States and Argentina is
increasingly reflected in the U.S. Embassy's
efforts to facilitate cooperation in
nontraditional areas such as counter-terrorism,
anti-narcotics, and scientific cooperation on
space, peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and the
environment. The Embassy also provides a wide
range of services to U.S. citizens and
businesses in Argentina. Officers from the U.S.
Foreign Service, Foreign Commercial Service, and
Foreign Agricultural Service work closely with
the hundreds of U.S. companies which do business
in Argentina, providing information on Argentine
trade and industry regulations and assisting
U.S. companies starting or maintaining business
ventures in Argentina.
Attaches accredited to Argentina from the
Department of Justice--including the Drug
Enforcement Administration and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation--U.S. Customs, the
Federal Aviation Administration, and other
federal agencies work closely with Argentine
counterparts on international crime and other
issues of concern. An active, sophisticated
media environment, together with growing
positive interest in American culture and
society, make Argentina an uncommonly receptive
environment for the information and cultural
exchange work of the U.S. Embassy as well. The
Fulbright fellowship program has more than
tripled the annual number of U.S. and Argentine
academic grantees since 1994.
The Embassy's Consular Section monitors the
welfare and whereabouts of more than 20,000 U.S.
citizen residents of Argentina and more than
300,000 U.S. tourists each year. Consular
personnel also provide American citizens
passport, voting, notary, Social Security, and
other services. With the end of Argentine
participation in the visa waiver program in
February 2002, Argentine tourists, students, and
those who seek to work in the United States must
have nonimmigrant visas. The Consular Section
processes nonimmigrant visa applications for
persons who wish to visit the United States as
tourists, students, temporary workers and other
purposes, and immigrant visas for persons who
qualify to make the United States a permanent
home.
The Department of Defense is represented by
the U.S. Military Group and the Defense Attaché
Office. These organizations ensure close
military-to-military contacts and defense, and
security cooperation with the armed forces of
Argentina.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Lino
Gutierrez
Deputy Chief of Mission--Hugo Llorens
Political Counselor--Phillip Egger
Economic Counselor--Perry Ball
Commercial Counselor--Brian Brisson
Consul General--Susan Abeyta
Science & Environment Counselor--Kathleen Barmon
Management Counselor--Gustavo Mejia
Defense Attaché--Col. Douglas Lengenfelder, USAF
U.S. Military Group Commander--Col. Joseph
Napoli, USA
Public Affairs Officer--Robert Banks
The
U.S.
Embassy and Consulate General in Argentina
are located at 4300 Colombia Avenue in the
Palermo district of Buenos Aires. Mission
offices can be reached at by phone at (54)(11)
5777-4533/34 or by fax at (54)(11) 5777-4240.
Mailing addresses: U.S. Embassy Buenos Aires,
APO AA 34034; or 4300 Colombia, 1425 Buenos
Aires, Argentina.
Other Contact Information
American Chamber of Commerce in Argentina
Viamonte 1133, 8th floor
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Tel (54)(11) 4371-4500; Fax (54)(11) 4371-8400