Publication

1 Dec 2004

This article offers an assessment of Spain's foreign policy toward Latin America. The author argues that Spain's foreign policy has traditionally put global relations before bilateral ones, giving preference to good, acceptable relations with Ibero-American nations as a group, rather than stable ties with the main Latin American countries. He argues that the better option for Spain would be to put the bilateral agenda before the global one, which does not imply sacrificing one to the other, but increasing the synergy between them.

Download English (PDF, 21 pages, 418 KB)
Author Carlos Malamud
Series Elcano Royal Institute Working Papers
Issue 58
Publisher Elcano Royal Institute of International and Strategic Studies
Copyright © 2004 Elcano Royal Institute of International and Strategic Studies.
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