Madagascar–United States relations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Madagascar-United States relations
Flag of Madagascar   Flag of the United States
     Madagascar      United States

Relations with the United States date to the middle 1800s. The two countries concluded a commercial convention in 1867 and a treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce in 1881. Traditionally warm relations suffered considerably during the 1970s, when Madagascar expelled the U.S. ambassador, closed a NASA tracking station, and nationalized two U.S. oil companies. In 1980, relations at the ambassadorial level were restored.

Throughout the troubled period, commercial and cultural relations remained active. In 1990, Madagascar was designated as a priority aid recipient, and assistance increased from $15 million in 1989 to $40 million in 1993. Recent U.S. assistance has contributed to a population census and family planning programs; conservation of Madagascar's remarkable biodiversity, private sector development, agriculture, democracy and governance initiatives; and media training. Madagascar became the first country with a Millennium Challenge Account compact when it signed an agreement worth $110 million in April 2006. The Ravalomanana government is especially positive about ties with the United States.

U.S. Officials include:

  • Ambassador--R. Niels Marquardt
  • Deputy Chief of Mission--George Sibley
  • USAID Director--vacant
  • Defense Attache--Cecil Bridges
  • Public Affairs Officer--Rodney Ford
  • Consular Officer--Jay Epping
  • Economic/Commercial Section Chief--Brian Neubert
  • Political--Silvana Rodriguez
  • Management Officer--Keith Heffern
  • Peace Corps Director--vacant

The U.S. Embassy in Madagascar is in Antananarivo.

[edit] References

This article contains material from the US Department of State's Background Notes which, as a US government publication, is in the public domain.[1]