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Map of USA
The USA is the world's foremost economic and military power, with global interests and an unmatched global reach.
America's gross domestic product accounts for close to a quarter of the world total, and its military budget is reckoned to be almost as much as the rest of the world's defence spending put together.
The country is also a major source of entertainment: American TV, Hollywood films, jazz, blues, rock and rap music are primary ingredients in global popular culture.
The United States originated in a revolution which separated it from the British Crown. The constitution, drafted in 1787, established a federal system with a division of powers which has remained unchanged in form since its inception.
Statue of Liberty, New York
Statue of Liberty: First glimpse of the US for many past migrants
11% of population is foreign-born 52% of immigrants come from Latin AmericaThe US contains a highly diverse population, the product of numerous and sustained waves of immigration. Ethnic and racial diversity - the "melting pot" - is celebrated as a core element of the American ideology.
The 1964 Civil Rights Act outlawed racial and other discrimination, but race continues to be a live issue.
The election of Barack Obama as the country's first African-American president in November 2008 marked a defining moment in the country's chequered history of race relations.
Freedom and prosperity
The original people of north America, who made up several distinct groups of native Americans, went into decline with the arrival of settlers and now constitute a minority of the population.
The early settlers came predominantly from the British Isles. Large numbers of black Africans were taken as slaves to work the plantations of the Americas, while millions of Europeans in search of political freedom and economic opportunity constituted a third stage of immigration.
Today, Asians from the Pacific rim and Hispanics from the southern Americas are among those seeking what their predecessors wanted - the promise of prosperity and freedom which remains one of the defining hallmarks of "the American dream".
Despite relative prosperity in recent years, the gap between rich and poor remains a major challenge. More than 30 million Americans live below the official poverty line, with a disproportionate percentage of these being African-Americans and Hispanics.
Furthermore, the global financial crisis of 2008 has left the US facing its most challenging set of economic circumstances since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
9/11 aftermath
The terrorist attacks of September 11 2001 had a momentous impact as the country continued to re-define its role as the world's only superpower.
Raising of steel column marks start of construction of Freedom Tower, New York, Dec 06
The Freedom Tower will replace the World Trade Center
2006: Freedom Tower's first column laid
In October 2001 the US led a military campaign in Afghanistan which unseated the Taleban regime.
In March 2003 Washington initiated military action in Iraq which led to the toppling of the Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
US foreign policy has often mixed the idealism of its "mission" to spread democracy with the pursuit of national self-interest.
Given America's leading role on the international stage, its foreign policy aims and actions are likely to remain the subject of heated debate and criticism, as well as praise.
President: Barack Obama
Barack Obama President Obama faces formidable challenges
Democratic Senator Barack Obama was elected the first black president of the United States in an historic election win in November 2008.
His victory over his opponent John McCain ended eight years of Republican rule in the White House.
Mr Obama re-drew the US political map as he defeated Mr McCain, who struggled in vain to distance himself from the unpopular presidency of George W. Bush. As well as holding all the traditionally Democratic states, the Obama campaign captured a number of states once seen as Republican strongholds.
Mr Obama clinched the Democratic Party's nomination in June 2008, following a long and bruising primary race with former first lady and fellow Democratic senator, Hillary Clinton.
He ran for president on a ticket promising change, and came to office riding a wave of high expectations from his supporters, both at home and abroad.
President Obama inherited a formidable in-tray of problems from Mr Bush. The US is facing its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s, and his administration must also determine the next steps in the lingering conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
US Capitol, Washington DC
Congress, government's law-making branch, consists of:
The Senate - 100 members, two from each state, serving six-year terms
House of Representatives - 435 members, serving two-year terms
Glossary: US politics
He made reform of the healthcare system to extend coverage and reduce ballooning costs one of his top domestic priorities, but a fierce debate over the form it should take slowed the progress of the legislation through Congress.
However, hopes of success were boosted when the House of Representatives approved its version of the bill in November 2009.
Barack Obama is widely acknowledged as a charismatic figure and is noted for his stirring oratory. He was born in 1961 in Hawaii, the son of a black Kenyan father and a white American mother.
After attending an elite Hawaii academy and Columbia University in New York, he went on to Harvard Law School, where he graduated in 1991.
After graduating, Mr Obama practiced law and did community work in Chicago, where he also became active in the Democratic Party. He won a seat in the Illinois state senate in 1996, and followed this up by winning a US Senate seat in 2004.
Mr Obama is America's 44th president and was inaugurated on 20 January 2009.
The US has the most highly-developed mass media in the world. Its dramas, comedies, soap operas, animations, music videos and films have a global audience and are part of the staple fare of broadcasters worldwide.
TV is America's most popular medium. ABC, CBS and NBC ruled the roost for decades until the mass take-up of cable and satellite and the arrival of the Fox network. Mainstream TV is slick, fast-moving and awash with advertising. Ratings and advertising revenues spell life or death for individual shows. The switch to digital is under way; analogue TV broadcasts are set to end in mid-2009.
There are around 10,000 commercial radio stations. In cities, there are services to satisfy almost every taste. News, sports and talk stations predominate on mediumwave (AM), with music on FM. Subscription satellite radio offers hundreds of channels and has attracted millions of customers.
Freedom of expression is guaranteed by the constitution, and some stations give airtime to extreme hues of political - often right-wing - and religious thinking. Elsewhere, outspoken radio "shock jocks" push at the boundaries of taste.
Public broadcasting is partly government-funded, but also supported by private grants. Universities and colleges operate outlets. National Public Radio - with more than 600 member stations - offers a more highbrow mix of news, debate and music without advertising. Public TV services operated by PBS have a mission to provide "quality" and educational programming.
The government sponsors TV and radio stations aimed at audiences outside the US. Lately, services for audiences in the former Soviet bloc have been cut, while stations targeting audiences in the Middle East and Asia have been launched.
There are more than 1,500 daily newspapers in the US, most of them with a local or regional readership. Hard-copy circulations are in decline as readers turn to the web.
The US is the home of the internet. By mid-2008, 72.5% of Americans were online (Nielsen, via InternetWorldStats.com).
The press
Television
Radio
External broadcasting
News agencies
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Flag of USA
Timeline: United States of America
A chronology of key events
Barack Obama delivers his inaugural address on the steps of the Capitol building, Washington DC, 20 January 2009
Shaping historyBarack Obama signs executive order
Obama orders Guantanamo closureBarack Obama takes the oath of office
Obama takes the oath of officeBarack Obama
Obama's inauguration speech in fullCivil rights veteran Terrence Roberts
Civil rights veteran at inaugurationBarack Obama, 21 July, 2007, Des Moines, Iowa
Dream come trueBarack Obama makes video address
Obama makes YouTube addressJohn McCain and Barack Obama
Obama and McCain vow to 'fix US'Barack Obama
Obama's victory speech in fullvideo 'Coma' man conscious for years
video Design fixed for 1,000mph car
video One-minute World News
video Bloodhound's race with Eurofighter
video Birthday card joy for 110-year-old
video Steam car's record attempt
video Cigars in space for astronaut father
video Gingerbread display vandalised
video Speedboat's 'splash' landing
video Ronald Arculli : 'We are independent'
Protest in Pakistan
Paralysed stateCopepod (Bunzow/Corgosinho)
In picturesmen drinking sorghum beer bought from women sellers at Kauda market
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