Caucasus Chronicles
Nation-Building and Diplomacy in Armenia, 1993-1994

Hardcover
(ISBN: 1-884630-05-7)
$29.95
2002 Princeton
180 pages
Size: 6 1/4" x 9 1/4"
Language(s): English

"Exile in Yerevan” is what the Greek press called the mission of Leonidas Chrysanthopoulos and his staff of three. For Chrysanthopoulos, however, his assignment as the first ambassador of Greece to newly independent Armenia was a golden opportunity to rebuild an alliance as old as history. This book is a lively account of that mission. The new embassy was established on the fifth floor of the Hotel Hrazdan, adjacent to the presidential palace. The hotel was selected because it promised—though it could not always deliver—a steady supply of electricity. Electricity was in short supply, as was food and heating fuel, in part because Armenia was blockaded by its neighbors Turkey and Azerbaijan. As the Soviet Union collapsed, Russia, the European Union, and the United States vied for the upper hand in the Caucasus. A bloody war in Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh became the focal point of that power struggle. Ambassador Chrysanthopoulos, who also represented the Presidency of the European Union, tells the inside story. He reveals for the first time that external forces were poised to invade Armenia during the failed coup d’état of October 1993 in Moscow. Ambassador Chrysanthopoulos’s account conveys the adventurous—indeed perilous—aspects of life as an ambassador as well as the diplomatic and humanitarian relief work in which he was involved. He discusses the development of European Union policy toward the region, and provides insights into the workings of the highest levels of the Armenian government and the thinking of the individuals running it. The author finds time to appreciate the culture and monuments of Armenian civilization and pays particular attention to the history and living conditions of the Greek minority in the former Soviet republic.

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