Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Russia’s sharp-tongued ambassador to the U.N. dies afer sudden illness

- By Edith M. Lederer and Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK — Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations, a veteran diplomat known as a potent and savvy yet personable voice for his country’s interests, died suddenly Monday after falling ill in his office at Russia’s U.N. mission.

Vitaly Churkin was taken to a hospital, where he died a day before his 65th birthday, said Russia’s deputy U.N. ambassador, Vladimir Safronkov. The cause of his death was unknown.

As Russia’s envoy at the United Nations since 2006 and a diplomat for decades, Mr. Churkin was considered Moscow’s great champion at the U.N., where he was the longest-serving ambassador on the powerful Security Council.

Russian President Vladimir Putin esteemed Mr. Churkin’s “profession­alism and diplomatic talents,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, according to the state news agency TASS. Diplomatic colleagues from around the world mourned Mr. Churkin as a master in their field: a passionate and effective advocate for his country; an intellectu­al with a doctorate in history who was also a onetime child actor with an acute wit; a formidable adversary who could remain a friend.

“We did not always see things the same way, but he unquestion­ably advocated his country’s positions with great skill,” U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley said in a statement.

Her predecesso­r, Samantha Power, described him on Twitter as a “diplomatic maestro and deeply caring man” who had tried to bridge difference­s between the U.S. and Russia.

Those difference­s were evident last month when Ms. Power and Mr. Churkin spoke at the Security Council and she lashed out at Russia for annexing Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and for carrying out “a merciless military assault” in Syria. Mr. Churkin accused former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, which Ms. Power served, of “desperatel­y” searching for scapegoats for its failures in Iraq, Syria and Libya.

Mr. Churkin’s death stunned officials at U.N. headquarte­rs. He died weeks into some major adjustment­s for Russia, the U.N. and the internatio­nal community, with a new secretary-general at the world body and a new administra­tion in Washington.

From Moscow’s vantage point, “Churkin was like a rock against which were broken the attempts by our enemies to undermine what constitute­s the glory of Russia,” Tass quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying.

Mr. Churkin’s U.N. counterpar­ts “experience­d and respected the pride that he took in serving his country and the passion and, at times, very stern resolution that he brought to his job,” said General Assembly President Peter Thomson of Fiji.

But colleagues also respected Mr. Churkin’s intellect, diplomatic skills, good humor and considerat­ion for others, Mr. Thomson said. He said he’d been struck and heartened by Mr. Churkin’s openness to meeting with representa­tives from small countries, such as Fiji.

Former French U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud, now French ambassador to the U.S., described Mr. Churkin as “abrasive, funny and technicall­y impeccable.”

Mr. Churkin emerged as the face of a new approach to foreign affairs by what was then the Soviet Union in 1986, when he testified before the U.S. Congress about the Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster. It was rare for any Soviet official to appear before Congress, and Mr. Churkin was in his 30s and a second secretary at his country’s embassy in Washington.

In fluent English, he provided little new informatio­n about Chernobyl but engaged in a friendly, sometimes humorous, exchange with lawmakers who weren’t accustomed to such a tone from the U.S.S.R.

After he returned to the foreign ministry in Moscow, Mr. Churkin ably dodged questions and parried with Western correspond­ents, often with a smile, at briefings in the early 1990s.

Within the government, he proved himself an able and flexible presence who survived numerous course changes after the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union. He held ambassador­ships in Canada and Belgium, among other posts.

In an interview this month, Mr. Churkin told Russia Today that diplomacy had become “much more hectic than it used to be,” with political tensions rising and stability elusive in various hotspots.

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