Today President Medvedev made Anatoliy Ivanovich Antonov Deputy Defense Minister for International Military Cooperation. He’ll bear responsibility for organizing and conducting the Ministry’s contacts with foreign military departments. Kremlin.ru notes Antonov was one of the negotiators for the new Treaty on Strategic Offensive Arms. Medvedev said Antonov’s experience in this successful negotiating process will enable him to fulfill his new duties effectively.
PIR-Tsentr’s short biography of Ambassador Antonov says he’s been serving as Director of the Foreign Ministry’s Security and Disarmament Issues Department. He was born in 1955. In 1978, he graduated the USSR Foreign Ministry’s Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO or МГИМО). In 1983, he completed graduate study at the same institution. Antonov’s worked in the Foreign Ministry since 1978. He’s headed government delegations in G8, NPT, Inhumane Weapons Convention, and multilateral export control negotiations. He’s a member of the U.N. Secretary General’s Consultative Council on Disarmament.
In mid-2007, Antonov helped then-President Putin unveil his offer to use Russia’s Gabala and Armavir radars in NATO missile defense, according to Novosti KM.RU.
Antonov makes nine deputies to Serdyukov; a tenth deputy slot for finance-economic work has been vacant since Vera Chistova’s departure in the fall.
Antonov’s quite different from his predecessors in this job.
International military cooperation seemed to fall off the Defense Ministry’s radar for a while after Anatoliy Serdyukov took over. You may recall, former Main Directorate for International Military Cooperation (GU MVS) Chief, General-Colonel Anatoliy Mazurkevich fled the Defense Ministry when Serdyukov arrived. GU MVS essentially disappeared from the military department’s organizational chart.
GU MVS’ roots stretch back to the General Staff’s old 10th Main Directorate, which had a long history of involvement in arranging arms sales and providing military advisors and training to Soviet client states in the bad old days.