Menú
Inicio
Visitar el Sitio Zona Militar
Foros
Nuevos mensajes
Buscar en los foros
Qué hay de nuevo
Nuevos mensajes
Última actividad
Miembros
Visitantes actuales
Entrar
Registrarse
Novedades
Buscar
Buscar
Buscar sólo en títulos
Por:
Nuevos mensajes
Buscar en los foros
Menú
Entrar
Registrarse
Inicio
Foros
Area Militar General
Temas de Defensa General
Militares Chilenos Que Espiaron A Argentina No Iran A La Carcel.
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
Estás usando un navegador obsoleto. No se pueden mostrar estos u otros sitios web correctamente.
Se debe actualizar o usar un
navegador alternativo
.
Responder al tema
Mensaje
<blockquote data-quote="Brunner" data-source="post: 201078" data-attributes="member: 70"><p>Sorry PEdro..pero aqui va la definicion del termino en inglés:</p><p>Embassies </p><p>Embassies are the official missions through which nations conduct their foreign affairs. Embassies are headed by ambassadors, the highest-ranking diplomats stationed abroad. In the United States, the president, with the consent of the Senate, appoints ambassadors. From these outposts, ambassadors and their staffs promote the interests of their nation, work to protect citizens traveling abroad, and gather information about the host country.</p><p></p><p>Since the American Revolution (1775–1783), the United States has sent diplomats to and exchanged them with other nations. By the early part of the nineteenth century, the United States had nearly two hundred over-seas posts. However, none of the foreign missions was officially an embassy, since U.S. leaders did not consider their dealings with other nations important enough to warrant either the creation of embassies or the naming of ambassadors. In the late-nineteenth century, however, this attitude changed, and the United States began to aspire to the rank of a great power with a more assertive foreign policy. Consequently, in 1893, President Grover Cleveland established the first American embassies in England, France, Germany, and Italy. During World War II (1939–1945), President Franklin D. Roosevelt nearly doubled the number of ambassadors and embassies so that the United States had thirty-six embassies in 1945. But the most rapid increase in the number of embassies came in the postwar era, when the United States emerged as the dominant world power. In 2002, the United States had embassies in more than 140 nations.</p><p></p><p>An American embassy not only serves as the headquarters of the ambassador, who acts as the president's representative in the host country, but it is also a busy office for lower-ranking diplomats, U.S. Department of State employees, and officials from other foreign affairs agencies. The embassy's staff of Foreign Service officers is divided into four sections: political, economic, consular, and administrative. Political officers are responsible for keeping the ambassador and State Department informed about the political climate in the host country. They analyze developments in light of American foreign policy goals. Economic officers assess the host country's financial dealings, including exports and imports, and conduct commercial negotiations over matters such as patent rights and trade regulations. Consular officers work to ensure the safety of Americans traveling or working abroad and determine whether foreigners should receive immigrant or tourist visas to enter the United States. Administrative officers manage the day-to-day operations of the embassy. Foreign service officers normally spend two to three years serving in one embassy. They are then transferred to another foreign post or brought back to the State Department in Washington, D.C.</p><p></p><p>Most embassies include employees of other foreign affairs agencies, such as the Agency for International Development, the U.S. Information Agency, the Commerce Department, the Defense Department, and the Central Intelligence Agency. U.S. marines and other military personnel provide security for embassies. In most embassies, foreign nationals make up some of the administrative staff. An embassy's staff can be as small as the U.S. embassy in Dublin, which in 1995 had 36 employees, or as big as the Moscow embassy, which had a staff of 288.</p><p></p><p><strong>Embassies are considered an extension of the home country's territory, so no one is permitted to enter an embassy without the ambassador's permission. </strong></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brunner, post: 201078, member: 70"] Sorry PEdro..pero aqui va la definicion del termino en inglés: Embassies Embassies are the official missions through which nations conduct their foreign affairs. Embassies are headed by ambassadors, the highest-ranking diplomats stationed abroad. In the United States, the president, with the consent of the Senate, appoints ambassadors. From these outposts, ambassadors and their staffs promote the interests of their nation, work to protect citizens traveling abroad, and gather information about the host country. Since the American Revolution (1775–1783), the United States has sent diplomats to and exchanged them with other nations. By the early part of the nineteenth century, the United States had nearly two hundred over-seas posts. However, none of the foreign missions was officially an embassy, since U.S. leaders did not consider their dealings with other nations important enough to warrant either the creation of embassies or the naming of ambassadors. In the late-nineteenth century, however, this attitude changed, and the United States began to aspire to the rank of a great power with a more assertive foreign policy. Consequently, in 1893, President Grover Cleveland established the first American embassies in England, France, Germany, and Italy. During World War II (1939–1945), President Franklin D. Roosevelt nearly doubled the number of ambassadors and embassies so that the United States had thirty-six embassies in 1945. But the most rapid increase in the number of embassies came in the postwar era, when the United States emerged as the dominant world power. In 2002, the United States had embassies in more than 140 nations. An American embassy not only serves as the headquarters of the ambassador, who acts as the president's representative in the host country, but it is also a busy office for lower-ranking diplomats, U.S. Department of State employees, and officials from other foreign affairs agencies. The embassy's staff of Foreign Service officers is divided into four sections: political, economic, consular, and administrative. Political officers are responsible for keeping the ambassador and State Department informed about the political climate in the host country. They analyze developments in light of American foreign policy goals. Economic officers assess the host country's financial dealings, including exports and imports, and conduct commercial negotiations over matters such as patent rights and trade regulations. Consular officers work to ensure the safety of Americans traveling or working abroad and determine whether foreigners should receive immigrant or tourist visas to enter the United States. Administrative officers manage the day-to-day operations of the embassy. Foreign service officers normally spend two to three years serving in one embassy. They are then transferred to another foreign post or brought back to the State Department in Washington, D.C. Most embassies include employees of other foreign affairs agencies, such as the Agency for International Development, the U.S. Information Agency, the Commerce Department, the Defense Department, and the Central Intelligence Agency. U.S. marines and other military personnel provide security for embassies. In most embassies, foreign nationals make up some of the administrative staff. An embassy's staff can be as small as the U.S. embassy in Dublin, which in 1995 had 36 employees, or as big as the Moscow embassy, which had a staff of 288. [B]Embassies are considered an extension of the home country's territory, so no one is permitted to enter an embassy without the ambassador's permission. [/B] [/QUOTE]
Insertar citas…
Verificación
Libertador de Argentina
Responder
Inicio
Foros
Area Militar General
Temas de Defensa General
Militares Chilenos Que Espiaron A Argentina No Iran A La Carcel.
Este sitio usa cookies. Para continuar usando este sitio, se debe aceptar nuestro uso de cookies.
Aceptar
Más información.…
Arriba