From Latin America to Brazil: argentine foreign policy vis-á-vis the United States

Argentina’s relationship with the United States was historically unstable, largely through recurrent discord between the two countries. Argentina’s foreign policy, with an autonomist vocation, sought to modérate Washington's influence on its decisions and actions through alternatives aimed at o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roberto Miranda
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Nacional del Nordeste 2020-12-01
Series:Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Económicas
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unne.edu.ar/index.php/rfce/article/view/4563
Description
Summary:Argentina’s relationship with the United States was historically unstable, largely through recurrent discord between the two countries. Argentina’s foreign policy, with an autonomist vocation, sought to modérate Washington's influence on its decisions and actions through alternatives aimed at opening or expanding margins of intemational maneuverability. The target of this work is to analyze the alternative chosen by the Argentine foreign policy to confront the American hegemony in two different moments, in order to describe and evaluate the autonomist realization of such a policy. One of the moments was the Cold War scenario in which democratic governments chose to prioritize Latin America and the countries of this region. Another stage there were the first years of the current century, in which the governments kirchneristas privileged South America and the countries of this subregion. The conclusion is that Argentina, when it turned to Latin America, relegated the United States without replacing it with another powerful actor, as well as relieved its dependence on hegemon when it concentrated its foreign policy in South America, although in this case it reinforced dependence with Brazil.
ISSN:1668-6365
1668-6357