From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hungarian – American relations
Map indicating locations of Hungary and USA

Hungary

United States
Diplomatic mission
Hungarian Embassy, Washington, D.C. United States Embassy, Budapest
Envoy
Ambassador LĂĄszlĂł SzabĂł David Pressman

According to the 2012 U.S. Global Leadership Report, 38% of Hungarians approve of U.S. leadership, with 20% disapproving and 42% uncertain, a decrease from 53% approval in 2011. [1] According to a 2018 poll, 68% of Hungarians view the United States favorably. [2]

History

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Hungarian Foreign Minister PĂ©ter SzijjĂĄrtĂł in Budapest in February 2019
Donald Trump and Viktor OrbĂĄn on a 2018 NATO international meeting.

Until 1867 the Kingdom of Hungary was a part of the Austrian Empire and from 1867 to 1918 of the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary. United States diplomatic relations with Hungary were conducted through the United States Ambassador to Austria in Vienna. After the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire following World War I, Hungary and the United States established bilateral relations through a legation in Budapest established in 1921. The first American ambassador to Hungary ( Theodore Brentano) was appointed on February 10, 1922.

Diplomatic relations were interrupted during World War II. Hungary severed relations with the U.S. on December 11, 1941, when the United States declared war on Germany. Two days later, on December 13, Hungary declared war on the United States. On June 5, 1942, the United States declared war on Hungary. [3] The US declared war on Romania and Bulgaria the same day. The declaration of war passed both houses of Congress unanimously, by votes of 361–0 in the House of Representatives and 73–0 in the Senate. [4] [5] Normal bilateral relations between Hungary and the U.S. were resumed in December 1945 when a U.S. ambassador was appointed and the embassy was reopened.[ citation needed]

Relations between the United States and Hungary following World War II were affected by the Soviet armed forces' occupation of Hungary. Full diplomatic relations were established at the legation level on October 12, 1945, before the signing of the Hungarian peace treaty on February 10, 1947. After the communist takeover in 1947–48, relations with the People's Republic of Hungary became increasingly strained by the nationalization of U.S.-owned property and what the United States considered unacceptable treatment of U.S. citizens and personnel, as well as restrictions on the operations of the American legation. Though relations deteriorated further after the suppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, an exchange of ambassadors in 1966 inaugurated an era of improving relations. In 1972, a consular convention was concluded to provide consular protection to U.S. citizens in Hungary.

In 1973, a bilateral agreement was reached under which Hungary settled the nationalization claims of American citizens. On 6 January 1978, the United States returned the Holy Crown of Hungary, which had been safeguarded by the United States since the end of World War II. Symbolically and actually, this event marked the beginning of excellent relations between the two countries. A 1978 bilateral trade agreement included extension of most-favored-nation status to Hungary. Cultural and scientific exchanges were expanded. As Hungary began to pull away from the Soviet orbit, the United States offered assistance and expertise to help establish a constitution, a democratic political system, and a plan for a free market economy.

Between 1989 and 1993, the Support for East European Democracy (SEED) Act provided more than $136 million for economic restructuring and private-sector development. The Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund has offered loans, equity capital, and technical assistance to promote private-sector development. The U.S. Government has provided expert and financial assistance for the development of modern and Western institutions in many policy areas, including national security, law enforcement, free media, environmental regulations, education, and health care. American direct investment has had a direct, positive impact on the Hungarian economy and on continued good bilateral relations. When Hungary acceded to NATO in April 1999, it became a formal ally of the United States. This move has been consistently supported by the 1.5 million-strong Hungarian-American community. The U.S. government supported Hungarian accession to the European Union in 2004, and continues to work with Hungary as a valued partner in the Transatlantic relationship. Hungary joined the Visa Waiver Program in 2008.

High-level mutual visits

Guest Host Place of visit Date of visit
Hungarian Republic (1946–49) Prime Minister Ferenc Nagy United States President Harry S. Truman Washington, D.C., New York City June 11–17, 1946 (1946-06-11 â€“ 1946-06-17)
Hungarian People's Republic Prime Minister KĂĄroly GrĂłsz United States President Ronald Reagan Washington, D.C. July 26–28, 1988 (1988-07-26 â€“ 1988-07-28)
United States President George H. W. Bush Hungarian People's Republic Prime Minister MiklĂłs NĂ©meth Budapest July 11–13, 1989 (1989-07-11 â€“ 1989-07-13)
Hungary Acting President Árpåd Göncz United States President George H. W. Bush Washington, D.C. May 18, 1990
Hungary Prime Minister JĂłzsef Antall October 18, 1990
Hungary President Árpåd Göncz May 23, 1991
Hungary Prime Minister JĂłzsef Antall October 4, 1991
Hungary President ÁrpĂĄd Göncz United States President Bill Clinton April 20–22, 1993 (1993-04-20 â€“ 1993-04-22)
June 20–21, 1994 (1994-06-20 â€“ 1994-06-21)
United States President Bill Clinton Hungary President Árpåd Göncz
Hungary Prime Minister Gyula Horn
Budapest December 5, 1994
Hungary Prime Minister Gyula Horn United States President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. June 6, 1995
United States President Bill Clinton Hungary President Árpåd Göncz
Hungary Prime Minister Gyula Horn
Taszar December 13, 1996
Hungary President ÁrpĂĄd Göncz United States President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. March 17–18, 1998 (1998-03-17 â€“ 1998-03-18)
Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄn October 5–8, 1998 (1998-10-05 â€“ 1998-10-08)
April 23–25, 1999 (1999-04-23 â€“ 1999-04-25)
Hungary President ÁrpĂĄd Göncz Washington, D.C., Chicago June 6–9, 1999 (1999-06-06 â€“ 1999-06-09)
Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄn United States President George W. Bush Washington, D.C. May 29, 2001
Hungary Prime Minister PĂ©ter Medgyessy November 7–9, 2002 (2002-11-07 â€“ 2002-11-09)
June 21–23, 2004 (2004-06-21 â€“ 2004-06-23)
Hungary Prime Minister Ferenc GyurcsĂĄny October 3–7, 2005 (2005-10-03 â€“ 2005-10-07)
United States President George W. Bush Hungary President LĂĄszlĂł SĂłlyom
Hungary Prime Minister Ferenc GyurcsĂĄny
Budapest June 21–22, 2006 (2006-06-21 â€“ 2006-06-22)
Hungary Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai United States President Barack Obama Washington, D.C. December 4, 2009
Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄn Chicago May 20–21, 2012 (2012-05-20 â€“ 2012-05-21)
Washington, D.C. March 31 â€“ April 1, 2016 (2016-03-31 â€“ 2016-04-01)
United States President Donald Trump May 13, 2019

Resident diplomatic missions

of Hungary in the United States
of the United States in Hungary

Sister-Twinning cities

See also

References

  1. ^ U.S. Global Leadership Project Report - 2012 Gallup
  2. ^ "Special Eurobarometer 479: Future of Europe". 10 December 2018. Archived from the original on 3 February 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  3. ^ "History of the U.S. And Romania".
  4. ^ "Message to Congress on a State of War Between the United States and Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria". The Presidency Project: University of California Santa Barbara.
  5. ^ "About this Collection | United States Statutes at Large | Digital Collections | Library of Congress" (PDF). Library of Congress.
  6. ^ Embassy of Hungary in Washington, D.C.
  7. ^ "Embassy of United States in Budapest". Archived from the original on 2017-01-01. Retrieved 2017-01-01.

Further reading

  • BĂĄrtfai, Imre, "Hungary & the U.S.: Will there be a New Direction for American Diplomacy?", IndraStra Global (2017) 3, ISSN 2381-3652 online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "The United States and Hungary, 1956–1990." in Human Rights and Political Dissent in Central Europe (Routledge, 2021) pp. 187-201.
  • Frank, Tibor. Ethnicity, Propaganda, Myth-Making: Studies in Hungarian Connections to Britain and America, 1848–1945 (Budapest, AkadĂ©miai KiadĂł, 1999).
    • Frank, Tibor. "Friend or foe? The changing image of Hungary in the United-States." Hungarian Quarterly 38.148 (1997): 116-124.
  • Frank, Tibor. Double Exile: Migration of Jewish-Hungarian Professionals Through Germany to the United States, 1919-1945 (2009)
  • Frank, Tibor. Genius in Exile: Professional Immigration from Interwar Hungary to the United States (2006).
  • Glant, Tibor, "Ninety Years of United States-Hungarian Relations," Eger Journal of American Studies, 13 (2012), 163–83.
  • Glant, Tibor, "The Myth and History of Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points in Hungary," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 12 (2010), 301–22.
  • Glant, Tibor, "Herbert Hoover and Hungary, 1918-1923" Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS) 8#2 (2002), pp. 95–109 online
  • Horcicka, VĂĄclav, "Austria-Hungary, Unrestricted Submarine Warfare, and the United States' Entrance into the First World War," International History Review (Burnaby), 34 (June 2012), 245–69.
  • Kurucz, Milan. "Hungary-United States Relations under Obama and Trump Administration." PolitickĂ© vedy 23.2 (2020): 98-113.
  • LĂ©vai, Csaba, "Henry Clay and Lajos Kossuth's Visit in the United States, 1851–1852," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 13 (2012), pp 219–41.
  • Pastor, Peter. Hungary between Wilson and Lenin: The Hungarian Revolution of 1918-1919 and the Big Three (1976)
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn. "Royall Tyler in Hungary: An American of the League of Nations and Hungarian Reconstruction Efforts, 1924–1938." Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies 27.1 (2021) online.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "'A Certain Amount of Tactful Undermining': Herbert C. Pell and Hungary in 1941," The Hungarian Quarterly (Budapest), 52 (Spring–Summer 2011), pp 124–37.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "American Foreign Policy and American Financial Controllers in Europe in the 1920s," Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (Debrecen), 18 (2012), pp 457–85.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "Money Has No Smell: Anti-Semitism in Hungary and the Anglo-Saxon World, and the Launching of the International Reconstruction Loan for Hungary in 1924," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 13 (2012), pp 273–90.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "The Fight for a Yankee over Here: Attempts to Secure an American for an Official League of Nations Post in the Postwar Central European Financial Reconstruction Era of the 1920s," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 12 (2010), pp 465–88.
  • Puskas, Julianna. Ties That Bind, Ties That Divide. One Hundred Years of Hungarian Experience in the United States (Holmes and Meier, 2000), 465 pp.
  • Romsics, IgnĂĄc, ed. Twentieth Century Hungary and the Great Powers (Boulder: East European Monographs, 1996).
  • Sakmyster, Thomas L. (1994). Hungary's Admiral on Horseback: MiklĂłs Horthy, 1918–1944. Boulder: East European Monographs.
  • VĂĄrdy, Steven BĂ©la, and Thomas Szendrey. "Hungarian Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 373–386. Online
  • VĂĄrdy, Steven BĂ©la and Agnes Huszar Vardy, eds. Hungarian Americans in the Current of History (2010), essays by scholars; online review
  • Vida, IstvĂĄn KornĂ©l. Hungarian ÉmigrĂ©s in the American Civil War: A History and Biographical Dictionary (McFarland, 2012) 256 pp.
  • Zsolt, PĂ©ter, TamĂĄs TĂłth, and MĂĄrton Demeter. "We are the ones who matter! Pro and anti-Trumpists’ attitudes in Hungary." Journal of Contemporary European Studies (2021): 1-19 online.

Cold War 1945-1989

  • Bischof, GĂŒnter. "United States Responses to the Soviet Suppression of Rebellions in the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia." Diplomacy & Statecraft 22.1 (2011): 61-80.
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "Rollback, Liberation, Containment, or Inaction? U.S. Policy and Eastern Europe in the 1950s." Journal of Cold War Studies 1.3 (1999): 67-110. online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "From the Prehistory of the Cold War (Hungary and the United States 1944–49)." Acta Historica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 35.1/4 (1989): 217-249. online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "‘We Hungarian communists are realists’: JĂĄnos KĂĄdĂĄr's foreign policy in the light of Hungarian–US relations, 1957–67." Cold War History 4.2 (2004): 1-32.
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "In the Power Arena: U.S.-Hungarian Relations, 1942–1989," The Hungarian Quarterly (Budapest), 51 (Summer 2010), pp 67–81.
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "Dealing with dictatorship: The US and Hungary during the early kĂĄdĂĄr years." Hungarian Studies 27.1 (2013): 15-66. online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. Hungary in the Cold War, 1945-1956: Between the United States and the Soviet Union (2004) online
  • Gati, Charles. Hungary and the Soviet Bloc (Duke University Press, 1986).
  • Glant, Tibor. Remember Hungary 1956: Essays on the Hungarian Revolution and Wars of Independence in American Memory (2007) online review
  • Granville, Johanna. "Radio Free Europe’s Impact on the Kremlin in the Hungarian Crisis of 1956: Three Hypotheses." Canadian Journal of History 39.3 (2004): 515-546.
  • Holloway, David, and Victor McFarland. "The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in the Context of the Cold War Military Confrontation." Hungarian Studies 20.1 (2006): 31-49. online
  • Jarvis, Eric. "The Creation of a Controversial Anti‐Communist Martyr in Early Cold War America: Reactions to the Arrest and Show Trial of Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty of Hungary, 1948–1949." Historian 78.2 (2016): 277-308.
  • Max, Stanley. The Anglo-American Response to the Sovietization of Hungary, 1945– 1948 (Michigan: University of Michigan Press, 1990).
  • Radvanyi, Janos. Hungary and the Superpowers, The 1956 Revolution and Realpolitik (Stanford University Press, 1972).
  • Webb, Alban. "Cold War Radio and the Hungarian Uprising, 1956." Cold War History 13.2 (2013): 221-238.

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hungarian – American relations
Map indicating locations of Hungary and USA

Hungary

United States
Diplomatic mission
Hungarian Embassy, Washington, D.C. United States Embassy, Budapest
Envoy
Ambassador LĂĄszlĂł SzabĂł David Pressman

According to the 2012 U.S. Global Leadership Report, 38% of Hungarians approve of U.S. leadership, with 20% disapproving and 42% uncertain, a decrease from 53% approval in 2011. [1] According to a 2018 poll, 68% of Hungarians view the United States favorably. [2]

History

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Hungarian Foreign Minister PĂ©ter SzijjĂĄrtĂł in Budapest in February 2019
Donald Trump and Viktor OrbĂĄn on a 2018 NATO international meeting.

Until 1867 the Kingdom of Hungary was a part of the Austrian Empire and from 1867 to 1918 of the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary. United States diplomatic relations with Hungary were conducted through the United States Ambassador to Austria in Vienna. After the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire following World War I, Hungary and the United States established bilateral relations through a legation in Budapest established in 1921. The first American ambassador to Hungary ( Theodore Brentano) was appointed on February 10, 1922.

Diplomatic relations were interrupted during World War II. Hungary severed relations with the U.S. on December 11, 1941, when the United States declared war on Germany. Two days later, on December 13, Hungary declared war on the United States. On June 5, 1942, the United States declared war on Hungary. [3] The US declared war on Romania and Bulgaria the same day. The declaration of war passed both houses of Congress unanimously, by votes of 361–0 in the House of Representatives and 73–0 in the Senate. [4] [5] Normal bilateral relations between Hungary and the U.S. were resumed in December 1945 when a U.S. ambassador was appointed and the embassy was reopened.[ citation needed]

Relations between the United States and Hungary following World War II were affected by the Soviet armed forces' occupation of Hungary. Full diplomatic relations were established at the legation level on October 12, 1945, before the signing of the Hungarian peace treaty on February 10, 1947. After the communist takeover in 1947–48, relations with the People's Republic of Hungary became increasingly strained by the nationalization of U.S.-owned property and what the United States considered unacceptable treatment of U.S. citizens and personnel, as well as restrictions on the operations of the American legation. Though relations deteriorated further after the suppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, an exchange of ambassadors in 1966 inaugurated an era of improving relations. In 1972, a consular convention was concluded to provide consular protection to U.S. citizens in Hungary.

In 1973, a bilateral agreement was reached under which Hungary settled the nationalization claims of American citizens. On 6 January 1978, the United States returned the Holy Crown of Hungary, which had been safeguarded by the United States since the end of World War II. Symbolically and actually, this event marked the beginning of excellent relations between the two countries. A 1978 bilateral trade agreement included extension of most-favored-nation status to Hungary. Cultural and scientific exchanges were expanded. As Hungary began to pull away from the Soviet orbit, the United States offered assistance and expertise to help establish a constitution, a democratic political system, and a plan for a free market economy.

Between 1989 and 1993, the Support for East European Democracy (SEED) Act provided more than $136 million for economic restructuring and private-sector development. The Hungarian-American Enterprise Fund has offered loans, equity capital, and technical assistance to promote private-sector development. The U.S. Government has provided expert and financial assistance for the development of modern and Western institutions in many policy areas, including national security, law enforcement, free media, environmental regulations, education, and health care. American direct investment has had a direct, positive impact on the Hungarian economy and on continued good bilateral relations. When Hungary acceded to NATO in April 1999, it became a formal ally of the United States. This move has been consistently supported by the 1.5 million-strong Hungarian-American community. The U.S. government supported Hungarian accession to the European Union in 2004, and continues to work with Hungary as a valued partner in the Transatlantic relationship. Hungary joined the Visa Waiver Program in 2008.

High-level mutual visits

Guest Host Place of visit Date of visit
Hungarian Republic (1946–49) Prime Minister Ferenc Nagy United States President Harry S. Truman Washington, D.C., New York City June 11–17, 1946 (1946-06-11 â€“ 1946-06-17)
Hungarian People's Republic Prime Minister KĂĄroly GrĂłsz United States President Ronald Reagan Washington, D.C. July 26–28, 1988 (1988-07-26 â€“ 1988-07-28)
United States President George H. W. Bush Hungarian People's Republic Prime Minister MiklĂłs NĂ©meth Budapest July 11–13, 1989 (1989-07-11 â€“ 1989-07-13)
Hungary Acting President Árpåd Göncz United States President George H. W. Bush Washington, D.C. May 18, 1990
Hungary Prime Minister JĂłzsef Antall October 18, 1990
Hungary President Árpåd Göncz May 23, 1991
Hungary Prime Minister JĂłzsef Antall October 4, 1991
Hungary President ÁrpĂĄd Göncz United States President Bill Clinton April 20–22, 1993 (1993-04-20 â€“ 1993-04-22)
June 20–21, 1994 (1994-06-20 â€“ 1994-06-21)
United States President Bill Clinton Hungary President Árpåd Göncz
Hungary Prime Minister Gyula Horn
Budapest December 5, 1994
Hungary Prime Minister Gyula Horn United States President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. June 6, 1995
United States President Bill Clinton Hungary President Árpåd Göncz
Hungary Prime Minister Gyula Horn
Taszar December 13, 1996
Hungary President ÁrpĂĄd Göncz United States President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. March 17–18, 1998 (1998-03-17 â€“ 1998-03-18)
Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄn October 5–8, 1998 (1998-10-05 â€“ 1998-10-08)
April 23–25, 1999 (1999-04-23 â€“ 1999-04-25)
Hungary President ÁrpĂĄd Göncz Washington, D.C., Chicago June 6–9, 1999 (1999-06-06 â€“ 1999-06-09)
Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄn United States President George W. Bush Washington, D.C. May 29, 2001
Hungary Prime Minister PĂ©ter Medgyessy November 7–9, 2002 (2002-11-07 â€“ 2002-11-09)
June 21–23, 2004 (2004-06-21 â€“ 2004-06-23)
Hungary Prime Minister Ferenc GyurcsĂĄny October 3–7, 2005 (2005-10-03 â€“ 2005-10-07)
United States President George W. Bush Hungary President LĂĄszlĂł SĂłlyom
Hungary Prime Minister Ferenc GyurcsĂĄny
Budapest June 21–22, 2006 (2006-06-21 â€“ 2006-06-22)
Hungary Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai United States President Barack Obama Washington, D.C. December 4, 2009
Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄn Chicago May 20–21, 2012 (2012-05-20 â€“ 2012-05-21)
Washington, D.C. March 31 â€“ April 1, 2016 (2016-03-31 â€“ 2016-04-01)
United States President Donald Trump May 13, 2019

Resident diplomatic missions

of Hungary in the United States
of the United States in Hungary

Sister-Twinning cities

See also

References

  1. ^ U.S. Global Leadership Project Report - 2012 Gallup
  2. ^ "Special Eurobarometer 479: Future of Europe". 10 December 2018. Archived from the original on 3 February 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  3. ^ "History of the U.S. And Romania".
  4. ^ "Message to Congress on a State of War Between the United States and Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria". The Presidency Project: University of California Santa Barbara.
  5. ^ "About this Collection | United States Statutes at Large | Digital Collections | Library of Congress" (PDF). Library of Congress.
  6. ^ Embassy of Hungary in Washington, D.C.
  7. ^ "Embassy of United States in Budapest". Archived from the original on 2017-01-01. Retrieved 2017-01-01.

Further reading

  • BĂĄrtfai, Imre, "Hungary & the U.S.: Will there be a New Direction for American Diplomacy?", IndraStra Global (2017) 3, ISSN 2381-3652 online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "The United States and Hungary, 1956–1990." in Human Rights and Political Dissent in Central Europe (Routledge, 2021) pp. 187-201.
  • Frank, Tibor. Ethnicity, Propaganda, Myth-Making: Studies in Hungarian Connections to Britain and America, 1848–1945 (Budapest, AkadĂ©miai KiadĂł, 1999).
    • Frank, Tibor. "Friend or foe? The changing image of Hungary in the United-States." Hungarian Quarterly 38.148 (1997): 116-124.
  • Frank, Tibor. Double Exile: Migration of Jewish-Hungarian Professionals Through Germany to the United States, 1919-1945 (2009)
  • Frank, Tibor. Genius in Exile: Professional Immigration from Interwar Hungary to the United States (2006).
  • Glant, Tibor, "Ninety Years of United States-Hungarian Relations," Eger Journal of American Studies, 13 (2012), 163–83.
  • Glant, Tibor, "The Myth and History of Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points in Hungary," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 12 (2010), 301–22.
  • Glant, Tibor, "Herbert Hoover and Hungary, 1918-1923" Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS) 8#2 (2002), pp. 95–109 online
  • Horcicka, VĂĄclav, "Austria-Hungary, Unrestricted Submarine Warfare, and the United States' Entrance into the First World War," International History Review (Burnaby), 34 (June 2012), 245–69.
  • Kurucz, Milan. "Hungary-United States Relations under Obama and Trump Administration." PolitickĂ© vedy 23.2 (2020): 98-113.
  • LĂ©vai, Csaba, "Henry Clay and Lajos Kossuth's Visit in the United States, 1851–1852," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 13 (2012), pp 219–41.
  • Pastor, Peter. Hungary between Wilson and Lenin: The Hungarian Revolution of 1918-1919 and the Big Three (1976)
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn. "Royall Tyler in Hungary: An American of the League of Nations and Hungarian Reconstruction Efforts, 1924–1938." Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies 27.1 (2021) online.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "'A Certain Amount of Tactful Undermining': Herbert C. Pell and Hungary in 1941," The Hungarian Quarterly (Budapest), 52 (Spring–Summer 2011), pp 124–37.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "American Foreign Policy and American Financial Controllers in Europe in the 1920s," Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (Debrecen), 18 (2012), pp 457–85.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "Money Has No Smell: Anti-Semitism in Hungary and the Anglo-Saxon World, and the Launching of the International Reconstruction Loan for Hungary in 1924," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 13 (2012), pp 273–90.
  • Peterecz, ZoltĂĄn, "The Fight for a Yankee over Here: Attempts to Secure an American for an Official League of Nations Post in the Postwar Central European Financial Reconstruction Era of the 1920s," Eger Journal of American Studies (Eger), 12 (2010), pp 465–88.
  • Puskas, Julianna. Ties That Bind, Ties That Divide. One Hundred Years of Hungarian Experience in the United States (Holmes and Meier, 2000), 465 pp.
  • Romsics, IgnĂĄc, ed. Twentieth Century Hungary and the Great Powers (Boulder: East European Monographs, 1996).
  • Sakmyster, Thomas L. (1994). Hungary's Admiral on Horseback: MiklĂłs Horthy, 1918–1944. Boulder: East European Monographs.
  • VĂĄrdy, Steven BĂ©la, and Thomas Szendrey. "Hungarian Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 373–386. Online
  • VĂĄrdy, Steven BĂ©la and Agnes Huszar Vardy, eds. Hungarian Americans in the Current of History (2010), essays by scholars; online review
  • Vida, IstvĂĄn KornĂ©l. Hungarian ÉmigrĂ©s in the American Civil War: A History and Biographical Dictionary (McFarland, 2012) 256 pp.
  • Zsolt, PĂ©ter, TamĂĄs TĂłth, and MĂĄrton Demeter. "We are the ones who matter! Pro and anti-Trumpists’ attitudes in Hungary." Journal of Contemporary European Studies (2021): 1-19 online.

Cold War 1945-1989

  • Bischof, GĂŒnter. "United States Responses to the Soviet Suppression of Rebellions in the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia." Diplomacy & Statecraft 22.1 (2011): 61-80.
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "Rollback, Liberation, Containment, or Inaction? U.S. Policy and Eastern Europe in the 1950s." Journal of Cold War Studies 1.3 (1999): 67-110. online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "From the Prehistory of the Cold War (Hungary and the United States 1944–49)." Acta Historica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 35.1/4 (1989): 217-249. online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "‘We Hungarian communists are realists’: JĂĄnos KĂĄdĂĄr's foreign policy in the light of Hungarian–US relations, 1957–67." Cold War History 4.2 (2004): 1-32.
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "In the Power Arena: U.S.-Hungarian Relations, 1942–1989," The Hungarian Quarterly (Budapest), 51 (Summer 2010), pp 67–81.
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. "Dealing with dictatorship: The US and Hungary during the early kĂĄdĂĄr years." Hungarian Studies 27.1 (2013): 15-66. online
  • Borhi, LĂĄszlĂł. Hungary in the Cold War, 1945-1956: Between the United States and the Soviet Union (2004) online
  • Gati, Charles. Hungary and the Soviet Bloc (Duke University Press, 1986).
  • Glant, Tibor. Remember Hungary 1956: Essays on the Hungarian Revolution and Wars of Independence in American Memory (2007) online review
  • Granville, Johanna. "Radio Free Europe’s Impact on the Kremlin in the Hungarian Crisis of 1956: Three Hypotheses." Canadian Journal of History 39.3 (2004): 515-546.
  • Holloway, David, and Victor McFarland. "The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in the Context of the Cold War Military Confrontation." Hungarian Studies 20.1 (2006): 31-49. online
  • Jarvis, Eric. "The Creation of a Controversial Anti‐Communist Martyr in Early Cold War America: Reactions to the Arrest and Show Trial of Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty of Hungary, 1948–1949." Historian 78.2 (2016): 277-308.
  • Max, Stanley. The Anglo-American Response to the Sovietization of Hungary, 1945– 1948 (Michigan: University of Michigan Press, 1990).
  • Radvanyi, Janos. Hungary and the Superpowers, The 1956 Revolution and Realpolitik (Stanford University Press, 1972).
  • Webb, Alban. "Cold War Radio and the Hungarian Uprising, 1956." Cold War History 13.2 (2013): 221-238.

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.

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