Andrei Gromyko
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Andrei Andreyevich Gromyko (Russian: Андре́й Андре́евич Громы́ко; Belarusian: Андрэй Андрэевіч Грамыка; July 18 [O.S. July 5] 1909 – July 2, 1989) was a Soviet politician and diplomat. He served as Minister for Foreign Affairs for the Soviet Union (1957-1985) and Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (1985-1988).
[edit] Biography
Andrei Gromyko was born into a peasant family in the Belarusian village of Starie Gromiki, near Gomel. He studied agriculture at the Minsk School of Agricultural Technology and graduated in 1936. Later he worked as an economist at the Institute of Economics in Moscow.
Gromyko entered the department of the foreign affairs in 1939 after Joseph Stalin's purges in the section responsible for the Americas. He was soon sent to the United States and worked in the Soviet embassy there until 1943, when he was appointed the Soviet ambassador to the United States. He played an important role in coordinating the wartime alliance between the two nations and was prominent at events such as the Yalta Conference. He became known as an expert negotiator. In the West, Mr. Gromyko received a nickname "Mr. Nyet" (Mr. No) or "Comrade Nyet" or "Grim Grom" for his obstinate negotiating style. He was removed from his Washington post on April 10, 1946 in order to be able to devote his full attention to UN matters.
In 1946 he became the Soviet Union's representative on the United Nations Security Council. He served briefly as the ambassador to the United Kingdom in 1952-1953 and then returned to the Soviet Union, where he served as foreign minister for 28 years. As Soviet foreign minister, Gromyko played a direct role in the Cuban Missile Crisis and met with U.S. President Kennedy during the crisis. Gromyko also helped negotiate arms limitations treaties, specifically the ABM Treaty, the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, SALT I and II, and the INF and START agreements. During the Brezhnev years, he helped construct the policy of détente between the superpowers and was active in drawing up the non-aggression pact with West Germany.
Gromyko always believed in the superpower status of the Soviet Union and always promoted an idea that no important international agreement could be reached without its involvement.
Gromyko was minister of foreign affairs from 1957 until 1985, when he was replaced as foreign minister by Eduard Shevardnadze. Gromyko entered the Politburo in 1973, eventually becoming chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet in 1985. However, the position was largely ceremonial, and he was forced out three years later because of his conservative views during the Gorbachev era. Gromyko died in Moscow a year later.
He had a wife named Lyudmila (died 2004) and a son named Anatoli (born 1932)
[edit] External links
- Interview about the Cold War for the WGBH series, War and Peace in the Nuclear Age
- Annotated bibliography for Andrei Gromyko from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues
Preceded by Dmitri Shepilov |
Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union 1957–1985 |
Succeeded by Eduard Shevardnadze |
Imperial Russia
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Foreign Ministers of the Russian Provisional Government
Pavel Milyukov · Mikhail Tereshchenko
Soviet Russia
Leon Trotsky · Georgy Chicherin
Soviet Union
Maxim Litvinov · Vyacheslav Molotov · Andrey Vyshinsky · Dmitri Shepilov · Andrei Gromyko · Eduard Shevardnadze · Aleksandr Bessmertnykh · Boris Pankin
Russian Federation
Andrey Kozyrev · Yevgeny Primakov · Igor Ivanov · Sergey Lavrov