Georgiy Enverovich Mamedov
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Georgiy Enverovich Mamedov (born 1947 in Moscow, USSR) is one of Russia's foremost authorities on the United States. Since the early 1990s, he has been his country's chief interlocutor with the United States on such subjects as NATO, arms control and Kosovo.
It often fell to Mamedov to smooth over the thorniest Russia-USA disputes. He helped persuade Washington to proceed with NATO expansion slowly, and reassured the Americans when President Boris Yeltsin sent tanks to besiege the Russian parliament during the Soviet coup attempt of 1991. He helped broker a deal under which Ukraine gave up all the nuclear weapons it had inherited after the breakup of the Soviet Union.
Mamedov graduated in 1970 from the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. He then joined the Institute for U.S.A. and Canada Studies in 1970 and became a protégé of Georgi Arbatov, the leading Soviet specialist on the United States at the time.
After entering diplomatic service in 1972, Mamedov was posted at the Soviet Embassy in Washington from 1972 to 1973 and again from 1977 to 1981. He became Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1991. In June 2003, he was named Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Canada.
While in Washington from 1977 to 1981 he impressed the Americans, who called him "George," but he was also suspected of working with the KGB. Recalled to Moscow, Mamedov went on to head the U.S. desk at the Foreign Ministry until 1991, when he became deputy minister.
Alexander Vershbow, the U.S. ambassador to Moscow, first met Mamedov in the 1980s; Vershbow describes Mamedov as "a real problem solver, somebody who's always defended their interests quite aggressively—and volubly—but has been a good partner. Every U.S. ambassador who's dealt with him has found him to be a guy who could get things done."[1]
Mamedov's father, Enver Mamedov, was Deputy Chairman of the State Committee for Radio and Television under the government of Leonid Brezhnev.
Mamedov holds a Ph.D. in history and speaks English and Swedish in addition to Russian. He is married and has two adult children, a son and daughter.
[edit] Views on the Iraq war
Prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Mamedov declared in an interview with ITAR-TASS that the United States was making a "tragic error": "If Washington decides to ignore the UN Security Council, to violate the UN Charter and invade Iraq, this will be a tragic error from the side of the U.S.A.... Russia categorically rejects any ultimatums regarding Iraq.... In Russia we consider that Iraq constitutes neither a threat to the U.S.A, nor to the international community, nor to its neighbors.... Russia will not participate in a campaign of pressure or threats, directed at changing the regime in Iraq." When asked what Russia would do if there were a U.S. military operation, Mamedov replied: "Russia will not launch an anti-American campaign, but will try its utmost to return the situation to a proper legal basis. We will not gloat over a tragic mistake by the United States." [2]
[edit] References
- ^ Washington Post Foreign Service article on Mamedov
- ^ ITAR-TASS Interview of then Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Mamedov, as quoted on the Russian Institute of Strategic Stability Website