Irakli Dzneladze

Irakli Dzneladze (Georgian: ირაკლი ძნელაძე) (born May 10, 1968) is a Georgian Brigadier General (2019) and the Chief of Joint Staff of the Georgian Armed Forces from December 4, 2012, to November 22, 2013.

Irakli Dzneladze
Col. Dzneladze at JMRC, Hohenfels in February 2013
Born (1968-05-10) May 10, 1968
Allegiance Georgia
Service/branchGeorgian Army
RankBrigadier General
Commands heldGeorgian Armed Forces

Education

Dzneladze graduated from the Georgian Technical University with a degree in Machine Building Industry in 1992 and from the Joint Military Academy of Defense Ministry of Georgia in 1999. He received further military training in Germany in 1998 and 2000 and in the United States in 2009.[1]

Career

Dzneladze has been employed at various departments of the Ministry of Defense of Georgia since 1993. He has also worked at the J-3 Operative Planning Department and Land Forces Command for various periods of time. Dzneladze was appointed Chief of J-2 Intelligence Department of the Joint Staff in November 2011 and moved to the position of military attaché to Ukraine, Moldova, and Belarus in May 2012.[1][2]

Chief of Joint Staff

Dzneladze was appointed as the Chief of Joint Staff of the Georgian Armed Forces on December 4, 2012. His appointment was the result of agreement between President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili and Minister of Defense Irakli Alasania, who then represented opposing political parties since the defeat of Saakashvili's United National Movement in favor of Bidzina Ivanishvili's Georgian Dream coalition, of which Alasania was a member, in the 2012 parliamentary election. The appointment was preceded by a controversy over Dzneladze's predecessor Brigadier General Giorgi Kalandadze, who was briefly arrested and subsequently stripped of his office by the court in November 2012.[3][4] He was succeeded as Chief of General Staff by General Vakhtang Kapanadze on November 22, 2013.[5]

Later postings

Dzneladze served as Georgia's military representative to the NATO headquarters in Brussels from 2014 to 2017.[6] In 2017, he was appointed chief of the J-3 Operational Department, the General Staff.[7]

Awards

  • State Medal for Military Service (2000)
  • Special Medal of Ministry of Defense, 2nd rank (2008)
  • Special Medal of Ministry of Defense, 1st rank (2009)
  • General Kvinitadze Medal, Ministry of Defense (2011)
  • Kakusta Cholokashvili Medal, Ministry of Defense (2012)
  • Vakhtang Gorgasali Order, 2nd rank (2013).[7]
gollark: Is there some way you can, I don't know, split traffic between ports automatically?
gollark: I don't know about Windows, but I had LVM/LUKS set up for a while for Linux.
gollark: You can use SATA HDDs, those are probably cheapest.
gollark: Is SAS actually better than SATA?
gollark: Just use RAID0 on 10-year-old hard drives purchased from ebay in a heated case in a washing machine.

References

  1. Irakli Dzneladze Archived 2012-12-15 at the Wayback Machine. Ministry of Defense of Georgia. Accessed December 8, 2012.
  2. Georgia gets a new Chair of the Joint Staff. Democracy & Freedom Watch. December 4, 2012. Accessed December 8, 2012.
  3. Saakashvili Presents New Chief of Army Staff. Civil Georgia. December 5, 2012. Accessed December 8, 2012.
  4. Georgia: Can Tbilisi Keep Politics Out of Military?. EurasiaNet. December 4, 2012. Accessed December 8, 2012.
  5. New Army Chief of Staff Appointed. Civil Georgia. November 22, 2013.
  6. "Georgian Mission to NATO: Mission Staff". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia. Archived from the original on 14 December 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  7. "პოლკოვნიკი ირაკლი ძნელაძე" (in Georgian). Ministry of Defense of Georgia. Archived from the original on 13 January 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
Military offices
Preceded by
Giorgi Kalandadze
Chief of Joint Staff of the Georgian Armed Forces
2012 – 2013
Succeeded by
Vakhtang Kapanadze
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