List of ambassadors of Russia to Iraq

The Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Russian Federation to the Republic of Iraq is the official representative of the President and the Government of the Russian Federation to the Prime Minister and the Government of Iraq.

Ambassador of the Russian Federation to the Republic of Iraq
سفير الاتحاد الروسي لدى جمهورية العراق
Emblem of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Incumbent
Maxim K. Maximov

since October 3, 2016
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Embassy of Russia in Baghdad
StyleHis Excellency
The Honorable
Reports toMinister of Foreign Affairs
ResidenceThe Embassy
SeatBaghdad, Iraq
AppointerThe President
Term lengthAt the pleasure of the President
FormationNovember 29, 1944
First holderGrigory T. Zaitsev
WebsiteEmbassy of Russia- Baghdad

The ambassador and his staff work at large in the Embassy of Russia in Baghdad.[1] There is a Russian consulate-general in Erbil.[2] The current ambassador is Maxim K. Maximov, serving since October 3, 2016.[3]

Background

The historic relations between Russia and Iraq, when latter was part of the Ottoman Empire. The Russian imperial government still shows wide interest in the region. Since the 19th century, a Russian consulate was functioning in Baghdad, due to the Shia Muslims' pilgrimage to the holy cities of Baghdad, Karbala and Najaf. After the Russian Empire annexed the North Caucasus and Central Asia this further increased due to the large Shia populations native to those regions. According to the Russian consul in Baghdad on November 19, 1890, 19.5 thousand pilgrims from the North Caucasus and Central Asia visited the holy shrines in Iraq.[4] However, after the end of the Ottoman rule in the region, the diplomatic mission was ended.

Soviet Union re-established diplomatic ties with newly independent Iraq on September 9, 1944. In 1955, relations were disrupted by the Iraqi side. In July 1958, both countries resumed diplomatic relations.

Timeline of the diplomatic relations

  • August 25 - September 9, 1944 - diplomatic relations were established at the mission level.
  • January 3 - 8, 1955 - diplomatic relations were interrupted by the Iraqi government.
  • July 18, 1958 - an agreement was reached on the resumption of diplomatic relations at the embassy level.

List of ambassadors

Ambassadors to the Kingdom of Iraq (1944 - 1958)

Ambassador Appointed Mission terminated
Grigory T. Zaitsev November 29, 1944 January 29, 1949
Ivan N. Yakushin 1952 January 8, 1955
Diplomatic relations interrupted (1955 - 1958)

Ambassadors to the First Iraqi Republic (1958 - 1968)

Ambassador Appointed Mission terminated
Grigory T. Zaitsev July 31, 1958 October 15, 1961
Mikhail D. Yakovlev October 15, 1961 August 7, 1965
Vasily F. Nikovlev[5] August 7, 1965 December 17, 1969

Ambassadors to the Second Iraqi Republic (1968 - 2003)

Ambassador Appointed Mission terminated
Veniamen A. Likachev February 20, 1970 December 29, 1973
Anatoly A. Barkovsky December 29, 1973 March 17, 1982
Victor I. Minin March 17, 1982 December 19, 1989
Victor I. Posuvalyok March 13, 1990 April 22, 1992
Nikolai V. Kartuzov August 22, 1994 August 6, 1999
Alexander P. Shein August 9, 1999 March 29, 2002
Vladimir E. Titorenko[6] March 29, 2002 December 8, 2003

Ambassador to the U.S. occupied Iraq (2003 - 2004)

  • Ilya A. Morgunov (December 8, 2003 - March 3, 2005)[7]

Ambassadors to the Republic of Iraq (since 2004)

Ambassador Appointed Mission terminated
Vladimir V. Chamov March 3, 2005 October 16, 2008
Vlarian V. Shuvaev October 16, 2008 March 2, 2012
Ilya A. Morgunov March 2, 2012 October 3, 2016
Maxim K. Maximov October 3, 2016 Incumbent

See also

References

  1. "Embassy of Russia in the Republic of Iraq".
  2. "Consulate of Russia in Erbil, Iraq".
  3. "The Ambassador, Russian embassy in Iraq".
  4. Litvinov VP State regulation of pilgrimage of Shiite Muslims of Turkestan (late XIX - early XX centuries) // Bulletin of the Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University. - 2014. - T. 14. - No. 3. - S. 38 - 39.
  5. Also ambassador to the Ba'athist Iraq (Second Iraqi Republic)
  6. Also ambassador to occupied Iraq
  7. Also the first ambassador to the new Republic of Iraq
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