United States United Kingdom Canada Italy Germany Spain Australia France Japan Belgium Poland Netherlands Brazil Russia Greece Switzerland Portugal Austria Puerto Rico South Africa New Zealand Ireland Sweden Ukraine Czech Republic Mexico Slovenia Argentina Finland Norway Croatia Romania Turkey Denmark Bulgaria Hungary Venezuela Indonesia Chile Serbia Israel Jamaica Slovakia Colombia Barbados South Korea Dominican Republic Costa Rica Luxembourg Panama Uruguay Taiwan Martinique Trinidad and Tobago New Caledonia Malta Iceland China Kuwait Cyprus Saudi Arabia Bermuda Guadeloupe Morocco Estonia Thailand Belarus Bosnia and Herzegovina Lithuania Malaysia Antigua and Barbuda Ecuador India U.S. Virgin Islands Namibia Isle of Man Anguilla Reunion Latvia Philippines Guernsey Saint Lucia Hong Kong Cuba Belize Curacao Caribbean Netherlands Paraguay Cayman Islands Albania Kazakhstan Gibraltar Bahamas United Arab Emirates Singapore Montserrat Honduras Georgia Uganda Qatar Algeria Peru Eswatini North Macedonia French Polynesia Cook Islands Kenya Seychelles Andorra Lebanon Saint Kitts and Nevis Iraq Guam Zambia San Marino Sint Maarten Maldives Aruba Nepal American Samoa Guatemala Tunisia Senegal Mauritius Haiti Northern Mariana Islands Jersey Armenia Moldova Pakistan Brunei Darussalam Vietnam Sri Lanka Mongolia French Guiana El Salvador Fiji British Virgin Islands Suriname Mauritania Ghana Dominica Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Bangladesh Cameroon Greenland Mozambique Botswana Gabon Azerbaijan Grenada Bahrain Zimbabwe Netherlands Antilles Egypt Uzbekistan Nicaragua Monaco Palau Libya Guyana Lesotho Cambodia Togo Falkland Islands Nigeria Niger American Samoa Flag Meaning & Details 3 VISITORS FROM HERE! 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
Learn more about American Samoa »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook