List of ambassadors of Russia to Canada explained

Post:Ambassador
Body:the Russian Federation to Canada
Insignia:MID emblem.png
Incumbentsince:9 March 2021
Department:Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Embassy of Russia in Ottawa
Style:His Excellency
The Honourable
Reports To:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Seat:Ottawa
Appointer:President of Russia
Termlength:At the pleasure of the President
First:Fedor Tarasovich Gusev
Formation:1942
Website:Embassy of Russia in Ottawa
Insigniacaption:Emblem of the Russian Foreign Ministry

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

The ambassador and his staff work at large in the Embassy of Russia in Ottawa. There are Consulate Generals in Montreal and Vancouver, and honorary consuls in Edmonton, St. John's, Windsor and Vancouver.[1] Russian interests in Canada are also represented by a trade mission based in Ottawa, and a representative of the in Halifax.[2] [3]

The post of Russian Ambassador to Canada is currently held by, incumbent since 9 March 2021.[4]

History of diplomatic relations

See main article: Canada–Russia relations. Prior to 1917, the Russian Empire maintained consular services in the Dominion of Canada, then part of the British Empire. By the time of the fall of the Tsarist government in 1917, there were consulates in Montreal, Halifax, and Vancouver.[5] These did not recognise, and were not accredited by, the Soviet state, but continued to function until the late 1920s, funded by the Canadian government to deal with the large number of White émigrés who began to settle in the country.[5]

Diplomatic relations at the mission level between the Soviet Union and Canada were first established on 12 June 1942.[6] This was during the Second World War, when Canada and the Soviet Union were part of the allies. The first envoy, Fedor Tarasovich Gusev, was appointed on 30 July 1942, and presented his credentials on 21 October that year.[7] Gusev left the post on 12 August 1943, and in November that year the missions were upgraded to embassies.[7] Relations cooled significantly after the war, with the Gouzenko Affair and subsequent Kellock–Taschereau Commission in 1946 resulting in increasingly hostile communications.[8] Both sides withdrew their ambassadors that year, and representation was thereafter by charge d'affaires following until 1953.[7] [8] With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Soviet ambassador,, continued as representative of the Russian Federation until 1992.[7]

List of representatives (1942 – present)

Representatives of the Soviet Union to Canada (1942 – 1991)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Fedor GusevEnvoy30 July 194212 August 1943
Georgy ZarubinAmbassador23 March 194428 September 1946
Charge d'affaires19461949
Charge d'affaires19491953
Ambassador25 August 195326 October 1958
Ambassador26 October 195820 February 1963
Ambassador20 February 196318 October 1968
Ambassador18 October 19681 June 1973
Alexander YakovlevAmbassador1 June 197329 October 1983
Aleksei RodionovAmbassador31 October 198330 October 1990
Ambassador30 October 199025 December 1991

Representatives of the Russian Federation to Canada (1991 – present)

NameTitleAppointmentTerminationNotes
Ambassador25 December 199110 February 1992
Alexander BelonogovAmbassador10 February 19926 January 1998
Vitaly ChurkinAmbassador26 August 19985 June 2003
Georgiy MamedovAmbassador5 June 200324 October 2014
Ambassador24 October 2014[9] [10] 11 January 2021
Ambassador9 March 2021

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Consular Divisions. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 24 September 2019.
  2. Web site: Trade Representative Office. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 24 September 2019.
  3. Web site: Representative for the Russian federal Agency for Fisheries (Halifax). Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 24 September 2019.
  4. Web site: Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 09.03.2021 № 138 "О Чрезвычайном и Полномочном После Российской Федерации в Канаде". Kremlin.ru. 9 March 2021. 2 April 2021. Russian.
  5. Web site: Records of Imperial Russian Consulates in Canada, 1898-1922 . National Archives and Records Administration. 1992. 24 September 2019.
  6. Web site: Bilateral relations. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 24 September 2019.
  7. Web site: Миссия - Посольство СССР в Канаде. knowbysight.info. Russian. 24 September 2019.
  8. Book: Black, J. L.. Naomi. Black. McGill–Queen's University Press. Canada in the Soviet Mirror: Ideology and Perception in Soviet Foreign Affairs, 1917-1991. 1998. 9780886293390. 175–176.
  9. Web site: AMBASSADOR EXTRAORDINARY AND PLENIPOTENTIARY OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION TO CANADA: Alexander N. DARCHIEV. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Russia). 24 September 2019.
  10. Web site: Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 24.10.2014 г. № 679. Kremlin.ru. 24 October 2014. 24 September 2019. Russian.