Georgi Vasilyevich Chicherin, a Soviet statesman, guided Soviet foreign policy in the years following the foundation of the U. S. S. R.
Background
Georgi Vasilyevich Chicherin was born on November 24, 1872 at Kirsanovsky District, Tambov Governorate, Russian Empire (now Tambov Oblast, Russia); a member of the Russian aristocracy - an unlikely background for a future Bolshevik. His father, Vasily N. Chicherin, was a diplomat in the service of the Russian Empire.
Education
After graduating from the University of St. Petersburg, he trained for and later joined the foreign service.
Career
During the Revolution of 1905, however, he became involved in the socialist movement, and in 1907 he left Russia. He spent the next decade abroad, mainly in England, where he agitated against World War I. Converting to bolshevism in 1917, he was jailed by the British as a "hostile alien" but was allowed to return to Russia early in 1918.
As the only Bolshevik with formal diplomatic training and experience, Chicherin was assigned the post of people's commissar of foreign affairs, succeeding Leon Trotsky.
After the failure of the Soviet march on Warsaw in 1920 and the initiation of Lenin's New Economic Policy in 1921, Chicherin was able to pursue his policy of strong ties with Germany and advantageous ties elsewhere. He was not able, nor did he seek, to establish comprehensive ties, such as those with Germany, with other foreign powers; in fact, Soviet relations with many nations, notably England, remained very shaky. Chicherin avoided involvement in the intraparty dispute of the 1920's, but this conflict made his work at the Foreign Office difficult. Moreover, his failing health caused him to give greater power to his deputy Maxim Litvinov, and by the late 1920's Litvinov was in effect the director of Soviet foreign policy. Chicherin formally retired as commissar of foreign affairs in 1930 and spent the next years in semiseclusion. He died on July 7, 1936.
Politics
The Russian Revolution of 1917 converted him to bolshevism. He was strongly in favor of establishing friendly relations with other countries, most importantly Germany, in order to enhance the stability of the Soviet regime.