United States Venezuela Panama Colombia Brazil Spain Mexico Peru Chile China Puerto Rico Canada Argentina Germany Italy France Ecuador Dominican Republic Costa Rica Russia United Kingdom Ireland Singapore Sweden South Korea Netherlands Portugal India Uruguay Australia Japan Ukraine Philippines Hong Kong El Salvador Switzerland Czech Republic Israel Belgium Indonesia Guatemala Greece Norway Finland Romania Bolivia Malaysia Thailand Austria Denmark Nicaragua United Arab Emirates Turkey Taiwan Poland Pakistan Saudi Arabia New Zealand Martinique South Africa Guadeloupe Vietnam Serbia Morocco Honduras Algeria Egypt Aruba Hungary Netherlands Antilles Cuba Bermuda Bulgaria Luxembourg Paraguay Croatia Slovenia Angola Albania Qatar Bangladesh Trinidad and Tobago Kenya Slovakia Barbados Bahamas Georgia Kazakhstan Iceland Moldova Jamaica Tunisia Belarus U.S. Virgin Islands Cyprus Kuwait Mauritius Haiti French Polynesia Lithuania Bosnia and Herzegovina Mozambique North Macedonia Cambodia Curacao Estonia Iraq Nepal Guyana Mongolia Sri Lanka Bahrain Andorra Nigeria Zambia Guam Iran Suriname Oman Uganda Zimbabwe Ghana Greenland Kyrgyzstan New Caledonia Azerbaijan Myanmar Brunei Darussalam Cayman Islands Reunion Malta Latvia Tanzania Cote D'Ivoire Liberia French Guiana Burundi Anguilla Dominica Afghanistan Armenia Sint Maarten Antigua and Barbuda Caribbean Netherlands Belize Madagascar Aland Islands Grenada Cabo Verde Mayotte Somalia Libya Gibraltar Democratic Republic of the Congo Lesotho Senegal Rwanda Cameroon Saint Lucia Northern Mariana Islands Montenegro Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Uzbekistan Lebanon British Virgin Islands Palau San Marino American Samoa Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! American Samoa Flag Flag Information blue, with a white triangle edged in red that is based on the fly side and extends to the hoist side a brown and white American bald eagle flying toward the hoist side is carrying 2 traditional Samoan symbols of authority, a war club known as a "fa'alaufa'i" (upper/left talon), and a coconut-fiber fly whisk known as a "fue" (lower/right talon) the combination of symbols broadly mimics that seen on the US Great Seal and reflects the relationship between the US and American Samoa
Source: CIA - The World Factbook