You need to ask yourself the question whether or not the abbreviation is somehow stored in your xml-response. I assume it is not, in this case you would need to create an object in JavaScript like this:
var countryCodes = {
'NL' : 'Netherlands',
'FR' : 'France'
// and all the other countries
}
var inverseCountryCodes = {};
for(i in countryCodes) {
inverseCountryCodes[countryCodes[i]] = i;
}
Note: this in fact means that you will have a huge piece of code creating the countryCodes-array, which is more or less a database. Please consider putting in in a seperate js-file, called countries.js or whatever, and include if as (on of) the first javascript-file.
Now you can simply translate from a countryCode to the real name and the other way around, i.e.
countryCodes['NL']
will result in 'Netherlands' and
inverseCountryCodes['France']
will result in 'FR'.
A better option would be to determine what the most stable representation for a country is, I think that would be a country code, as names have different values in different languages. This way you could consider returning (server side) the countryCode as xml.
Anyroad, good luck!
NOTICE:
I just found this: http://www.geonames.org/export/ws-overview.html
It's a nice list of webrequests you can do, to get geo info of all sorts. the countryInfo one seems to do exactly the opposite of what you want, but still it could help you. For example, this way you can get information on Germany. By letting the server respond with a code instead of the name, this might be just what you need!
http://api.geonames.org/countryInfoJSON?formatted=true&lang=it&country=DE&username=demo&style=full
If you will use this, don't forget to make your own api.geoname.org account, instead of using the demo-username ;)