Ambassador to the US Antonio de Aguiar Patriota of Brazil
Ambassador Patriota was born in Rio de Janeiro on April 27, 1954.
Ambassador Patriota is married to Tania Cooper Patriota and they have two sons, Miguel and Thomas.
Ambassador Antonio de Aguiar Patriota has been the Ambassador of Brazil to the United States since February 2007, representing the government of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
Ambassador Antonio de Aguiar Patriota was appointed Brazilian Ambassador to the United States in February 2007.
His Excellency Antonio de Aguiar Patriota was appointed Brazilian Ambassador to the United States in February 2007.
Ambassador Patriota has received several honors from the governments of Brazil, France, Norway and Morocco.
Economic Partnership''Details: Ambassador Patriota is the Brazilian Ambassodor to the US.
Patriota says Tupi boosts Brazils 12.
Its one of half a dozen cities bidding to host the 2016 Summer Olympics, and also happens to be the metropolis where Patriota was born and raised.
In a recent interview with The Washington Diplomat, Patriota says US.
Patriota said Monday in his first published interview as ambassador.
November and is expected to head to Washington in the coming weeks.
in Congress will have on Brazil-US.
As the Doha round of free trade talks progresses, 'we can only be in favor of eliminating duties and to the extent possible reducing subsidies to create a freer environment for trade,' Patriota said after a speech hosted by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.
Patriota said bringing democracy to the region is about more than holding free and fair elections; governments must act decisively to improve their citizens' standard of living.
The United States has announced it cannot join the consensus," Brazilian representative Antonio de Aguiar Patriota said after the impasse was declared shortly before the WTO self-imposed deadline of midnight on Friday.
In an interview published Monday, Antonio de Aguiar Patriota said he believed the United States could benefit from Brazil's analysis of the situation within the communist country.
I consider Brazil could possibly play a role in the search for a transition to democracy that could be more calm and without possible turbulence," Patriota said Monday in his first published interview as ambassador.
Patriota was appointed by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as ambassador last November and is expected to head to Washington in the coming weeks.
Patriota said Brazil also would continue to push for a permanent seat on the United Nation's Security Council, a goal that has long been a cornerstone of Silva's foreign policy.
Patriota said it was too soon to say what effect the Democratic Party's majority in Congress will have on Brazil-US.