Nikolai Kozyrev (diplomat)
Nikolai Ivanovich Kozyrev was a Soviet and Russian diplomat. He served as a member of diplomatic staff from the 1950s and into the 1990s, and as the Soviet and later Russian ambassador to Ireland from 1991 until 1998.
Early life and postings
Kozyrev was born in Moscow. He studied at Moscow State Institute of International Relations, graduating in 1958 and joining the USSR's Ministry of Foreign Affairs that year. He was assigned to the Soviet embassy in Tehran in 1959, working as a translator and attaché until 1963. He was then recalled to work in the ministry's central apparatus, before being appointed third, then second secretary at the embassy in Iran, remaining there until 1968. Returning to the Soviet Union for another period of work and study in the ministry, he graduated from the [Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Soviet Union)|Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation|Higher Diplomatic School of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs] in 1970 as a specialist in the international relations of Eastern countries.Kozyrev returned to Tehran in 1972, this time as the embassy's first secretary, a post he held until 1976. Once more recalled to the ministry's offices, he served as counselor and head of sector in the ministry's Department of the Middle East until 1979. He was then counselor at the Tehran embassy from 1979 until 1983, and the following year became minister-counselor at the until 1987. He was a member of the Soviet delegation to the Geneva talks on Afghanistan during the late 1980s, and contributed to the signing of the settlement agreements on 14 April 1988. He authored a number of articles and monographs on Afghan and Iranian topics. From 1987 until 1991 he served as ambassador-at-large at the Foreign Ministry.