List of ambassadors of Russia to Egypt explained

Post:Ambassador
Body:the Russian Federation to Egypt
Incumbent:Georgy Borisenko
Insignia:MID emblem.png
Incumbentsince:27 April 2020
Department:Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Style:His Excellency
The Honourable
Reports To:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Seat:Cairo
Appointer:President of Russia
Termlength:At the pleasure of the President
Formation:1783
Website:Embassy of Russia in Cairo
Insigniacaption:Emblem of the Russian Foreign Ministry

The Ambassador of Russia to Egypt is the official representative of the President and the Government of the Russian Federation to the President and the Government of Egypt.

The ambassador and his staff work at large in the in Cairo. There are consulates-general in Alexandria and Hurghada, as well as a trade mission and cultural centre based in Cairo, and a second cultural centre in Alexandria.[1] The ambassador to Egypt is concurrently appointed as the Russian representative to the Arab League.[2]

The current incumbent Russian Ambassador to Egypt is Georgy Borisenko, incumbent since 27 April 2020.[3]

History of diplomatic relations

See main article: Egypt–Russia relations. Formal diplomatic relations between the Russian Empire and the Egypt Eyalet began with the appointment of as Consul-general, based in Alexandria.[4] Relations were maintained after the establishment of the Khedivate of Egypt 1867, though they were temporarily broken off on 12 April 1877 during the Russo-Turkish War. They were resumed on 1 August 1878, under the previous representative, .[4] Relations were raised to the level of envoy on 5 August 1911, during period as representative.[4] Smirnov continued to represent Russia after the fall of the Russian monarchy in the February Revolution in 1917, representing the new Russian Provisional Government. When this was overthrown by the Bolsheviks in the October Revolution later that year, Smirnov refused to recognise the new regime, and was dismissed from his post by the People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs on 9 December 1917.[5] This marked a break in official relations between Egypt, which had been established as a British protectorate in 1914 as the Sultanate of Egypt, and the new Soviet state. Smirnov nevertheless continued to operate as envoy on behalf of Russian interests until 6 October 1923 when the newly nominally independent Kingdom of Egypt ceased to recognise the former imperial representatives.[5]

Sporadic efforts by the Soviet Union to re-establish relations with Egypt continued over the next two decades, at first led by People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs Georgy Chicherin and Vatslav Vorovsky, the Soviet representative to Italy, and Vorovsky's successor .[5] The Egyptian government remained suspicious of the Egyptian communist movement and its connections to Comintern, and little was achieved. In 1926 a fall in the world price of cotton led to economic crisis in Egypt, and in 1927 talks between Soviet and Egyptian representatives took place in Ankara concerning the reestablishment of trade links.[5] This led to the opening of an office of Textilimport in Alexandria in 1928, the first Soviet official mission in Egypt, and one concerned with the purchase of Egyptian cotton. Evidence soon mounted that the mission's employees were also involved in propaganda activities, and the mission was expelled in 1929.[5] However trade links grew during the 1930s, and overtures from figures in the Egyptian government to Soviet diplomatic representatives took place during the Second World War. The Egyptian ambassador in London,, met with his Soviet counterpart, Ivan Maisky, and suggested a resumption of diplomatic relations.[5] After negotiations between the diplomats, an official approach from Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa El-Nahas was accepted by the Soviet government, and Maisky and El-Nahas met in Alexandria to formalise relations on 26 August 1943.[5] The announcements of the establishment of relations took place in Egypt on 7 September, and in Russia on 9 September.[5]

The first ambassador, appointed on 14 October was Nikolai Novikov. In addition to his duties as representative to Egypt, he was also accredited to the governments-in-exile of Yugoslavia and Greece, who were based in Cairo during the occupation of their countries.[5] Soviet representation continued during the post-war years, and after the Egyptian revolution of 1952, which formed the Arab Republic of Egypt. The status of the official representative was raised from envoy to ambassador in 1954, and continued after the formation of the United Arab Republic between Egypt and Syria on 22 February 1958.[6] The new state had its capital in Cairo, and the former Soviet representative to Egypt,, continued as ambassador. A consulate-general was opened in Damascus in 1958, though with the secession of Syria from the Union in 1961, this was upgraded to an embassy with its own representation.[6] Egypt continued to be known as the United Arab Republic until 1971 when it become known once more as the Arab Republic of Egypt. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Soviet ambassador Vladimir Polyakov instead became the representative of the Russian Federation, and continued in post until 1995.[6]

List of representatives (1784 - present)

Representatives of the Russian Empire to the Egypt Eyalet (1784-1867)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Consul-generalNovember 17841789
Carlo RosettiConsul-general179218..
Giorgio ChiviniConsul-general18181824
Antonio PezzoniConsul-general18261831
Consul-general8 August 183312 November 1837
Aleksandr MedemConsul-general18381841
Yegor KremerConsul-general18411845
Aleksandr von FokConsul-general18451853
Nikolay GirsConsul-general18561858
Aleksandr LagovskyConsul-general18581866

Representatives of the Russian Empire to the Khedivate of Egypt (1867-1914)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Diplomatic agent13 July 186826 January 1883Relations suspended between 12 April 1877 and 1 August 1878 during the Russo-Turkish War
Diplomatic agent2 March 18833 June 1886
Diplomatic agent3 June 18861902
Pyotr MaksimovDiplomatic agent19021905
Diplomatic agent19051914Status raised to envoy on 5 August 1911

Representatives of the Soviet Union to the Kingdom of Egypt (1943-1953)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Nikolai NovikovEnvoy14 October 194316 November 1944
Envoy16 November 19447 February 1950
Envoy7 February 195018 June 1953

Representatives of the Soviet Union to the Arab Republic of Egypt (1953-1958)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Envoy18 June 195312 October 1953
Daniel SolodEnvoy12 October 19531 January 1956Status raised to ambassador in 1954
Ambassador1 January 195622 February 1958

Representatives of the Soviet Union to the United Arab Republic (1958-1971)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Ambassador22 February 19586 August 1959
Vladimir YerofeyevAmbassador6 August 195916 June 1965
Dmitri PozhidaevAmbassador16 June 196529 August 1967
Ambassador29 August 196727 August 1970
Vladimir VinogradovAmbassador9 October 197011 September 1971

Representatives of the Soviet Union to the Arab Republic of Egypt (1971-1991)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Vladimir VinogradovAmbassador11 September 19714 April 1974
Vladimir PolyakovAmbassador4 April 197427 September 1983
Alexander BelonogovAmbassador7 July 198414 August 1986
Ambassador14 August 19867 August 1990
Vladimir PolyakovAmbassador7 August 199025 December 1991

Representatives of the Russian Federation to the Arab Republic of Egypt (1991-present)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Vladimir PolyakovAmbassador25 December 19914 July 1995
Vladimir GudevAmbassador4 July 199521 April 2000
Andrey DenisovAmbassador21 April 200028 December 2001
Ambassador2 July 20029 June 2004
Mikhail BogdanovAmbassador21 January 200512 June 2011
Sergei KirpichenkoAmbassador7 September 2011[7] 2 September 2019[8]
Ambassador27 April 2020

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Embassy of the Russian Federation to the Arab Republic of Egypt. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 13 September 2019.
  2. Web site: Ambassador. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 7 November 2019.
  3. Web site: Ambassador. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 2 May 2020.
  4. Web site: Египет (резиденция в Каире) . 13 September 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101027201433/http://www.rusdiplomats.narod.ru/ambassades/egypt.html . 27 October 2010 . dead .
  5. Web site: Vladimir. Belyakov. Путь длиною в четверть века. К 70-летию установления дипотношений между СССР и Египтом. The International Affairs. Russian. 22 August 2013 . 13 September 2019.
  6. Web site: Посольство СССР в Объединённой Арабской Республике, с 11.9.1971 - Египте. knowbysight.info. Russian. 13 September 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20171123204515/http://www.knowbysight.info/6_MID/00094.asp. 23 November 2017. dead.
  7. Web site: Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 07.09.2011 г. № 1170. Kremlin.ru. 7 September 2011. 4 September 2019. Russian.
  8. Web site: Умер посол России в Египте Сергей Кирпиченко. RIA Novosti. ria.ru. 2 September 2019. 4 September 2019. Russian.