Germany never annexed the Balkans, which incidentally are nowhere near Lithuania.
That little factoid at the end made this the funniest thing I’ve read in a hell of a long time…
-Joe
Maybe the “Baltics” (Baltic States)?
I think he meant the Baltics. BTW the USSR annexed them, not Germany.
Germany did indeed annex them, or at least occupy them.
But the USSR annexed them first, which is what matters in the context of the caretaker deciding to look after the Lithuanian embassy.
I guess this answer is a bit stale, but my internet has been down for two weeks.
I don’t know if you could expect this same courtesy today. The old Vietnamese Embassy on R Street in DC was in pretty rough shape when diplomatic relations were restored. The roof and interior were all in serious need of repair. When Vietnam started up, the Embassy worked out of an office building downtown. Not sure if its open again.
Iran’s Embassy (still visible from Mass. Ave.) is still closed and I imagine sits unattended. Someone told me that we have possession of the property and its used for storage.
When we went back to Kabul, the US Marines retook the old US Embassy there. The outside was trashed, cars long-stolen and all that. When they got beyond the security doors, they found a note from the last Marines to the next Marines welcoming them back, and leaving them a case of beer.
A smiling Ronald Reagan looked down from the wall.
Before the first war with Iraq (in 1991 or thereabouts) I remember hearing on the news that the US had ordered all Iraqi diplomatic people to leave our country. I don’t remember how long it was 'till the shooting started – I want to say weeks or months.
What about Iraq’s UN Mission? Did we expell them? Or do we have to allow UN members to send diplomats to NYC as a condition of hosting the UN? We’ve allowed folks like Castro and Ahmadinejad into the country to speak at the UN.