Monday, August 16, 2010
Embassies of Washington, Part 6
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Embassies of Washington, Part 5 (Embassy Row)
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Embassies of Washington, Part 4
40 countries in, we've now covered 16 of the 27 members of the European Union, 9 of the 23 other countries of Europe (who's in Europe is a matter of some debate, this number includes Russia, Turkey and the South Caucasus), 3 of the 34 non-American countries of the Americas, 4 of 42 in Asia, 7 of 53 in Africa, and 1 out of 14 in Oceania, plus 10 of the 26 foreign countries I've visited, 6 of the 8 embassies I've visited (Russia, Estonia, Portugal, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Hungary... Greece and Austria are coming), and 1 of the 3 countries whose ambassadors I've met (Portugal, as I'm trying to get a better picture of the British Embassy and have never seen the German embassy.... and by "met" I mean have been in small groups that these ambassadors have spoken to and perhaps asked these honorable gentlemen questions like "Is it possible that the 29th member state of the European Union might indeed be Scotland?"). Hope you're enjoying the tour.
Oh, and by the way, today's countries are Angola, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Chad, Denmark, Finland, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Norway and Turkmenistan. So Scandinavia and the Caucasus are complete. The ultra-green Finnish embassy is another of my favorites, while I also love the statue of the "Golden Man of Kazakhstan" standing on his winged panther. And yes that is a hammer and sickle on the flag of Angola, to my knowledge it's the only country in the world that still has one on its flag.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Embassies of Washington, Part 3 (CEE)
Monday, August 9, 2010
Embassies of Washington, Part 2
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Embassies of Washington, Part 1
Walking every day to a university building nestled in
between the Uzbek and Chilean embassies, not far from the Aussies and the Filipinos
and the Trinidadians and the Kazakhs, I have enjoyed the international flavor
of my city while studying international relations. But now I have moved to a
new neighborhood and feel even more surrounded by embassies. Whereas the Poles
and Lithuanians used to be 12 blocks from my house, the Belgians are two blocks
away now, and the quickest way on foot to Dupont Circles takes me past the
showpieces on Embassy Row. So I thought I would snap DC's embassies and post
them here, 10 at a time.
To start with, here is Belgium, Central African Republic,
Chile, Malta, Moldova, Montenegro, the Philippines, Portugal, Trinidad &
Tobago, and Uzbekistan. The Belgians and Uzbeks have been my neighbors, but my
favorite of the bunch might be Moldova, since it’s in the same building as
Russia House.
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