Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chargé d'affaires. On December 12, 1949, Voutov was informed that the United States took a serious view of the persecution of Bulgarian employees of the Legation. [6] Georgi Dimitrov Harry S. Truman February 20, 1950: Severed relations Valko Chervenkov: Harry S. Truman December 2, 1959: January 15, 1960: Peter G. Voutov Anton Yugov: Dwight D ...
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Bulgaria, excluding honorary consulates. Current missions. Africa. Algeria. Algiers (Embassy) [1] Egypt ...
Toggle Non-resident embassies accredited to Bulgaria subsection. 3.1 Resident in Ankara, Turkey. 3.2 Resident in Athens, Greece. ... Embassy 1993 [25]
Embassy Row [21] Brunei: 3520 International Court NW North Cleveland Park [22] Bulgaria: 1621 22nd Street NW Embassy Row [23] Burkina Faso: 2340 Massachusetts Avenue NW Embassy Row [24] Burundi: 2233 Wisconsin Avenue NW Glover Park [25] Cambodia: 4530 16th Street NW Crestwood [26] Cameroon: 2349 Massachusetts Ave NW Embassy Row [27] Canada: 501 ...
The following year, he returned to the Washington Embassy as Deputy Chief of Mission. From 2009 to 2010, he served as Chargé d'affaires and remained until 2011. From 2012, Stoytchev served as foreign policy secretary to President of Bulgaria Rosen Plevneliev .
From 2002, Panayotov was the deputy chief of mission at the Bulgarian embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, until 2007, and in 2010 he was appointed as political officer and deputy chief of mission at the Bulgarian embassy in Washington, DC. From 2014 until 2016 Panayotov worked as the head of NATO's foreign affairs department.
As of 8 January 2025, Bulgarian citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 178 countries and territories, ranking the Bulgarian passport 15th overall in terms of travel freedom (tied with the passports of Monaco and Romania), according to the Henley & Partners Passport Index.
Former U.S. President Richard Nixon and Elena Poptodorova during his visit to Varna, Bulgaria, July 1982 President Bill Clinton, the first acting U.S. President to visit Bulgaria, in front of Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Sofia, November 1999 U.S. president George W. Bush and Bulgarian president Georgi Parvanov, National Archaeological Museum, Sofia, June 2007 Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko ...