Georgia The Foreign Policy Establishment
Eduard Shevardnadze on official visit to the United
States with President William J. Clinton, March 1994
Courtesy White House Photo Office
In his role as head of the State Council, Shevardnadze
exerted a strong and direct influence on Georgia's foreign policy
prior to the 1992 election. The additional post of head of
government, which he acquired after the election, gave him the
right to conduct negotiations with foreign governments and to
sign international treaties and agreements. In the Sigua cabinet,
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was headed by Alexander
Chikhvaidze, who had worked previously in the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the Soviet Union and was serving as Soviet ambassador
to the Netherlands at the time of his appointment in Tbilisi. The
Council for National Security and Defense was formed in late 1992
to formulate strategic and security policy under the chairmanship
of the head of state
(see National
Security
, this ch.).
Data as of March 1994
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