Armen Sarkissian

Politician

Birthday June 23, 1953

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Yerevan, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union

Age 70 years old

Nationality Armenian

#61107 Most Popular

1953

Armen Vardani Sarkissian (Արմեն Վարդանի Սարգսյան;) (born 23 June 1953) is an Armenian politician, physicist, investor, businessman, and computer scientist who served as the 4th president of Armenia from 2018 to 2022.

1976

From 1976 to 1984, he was assistant and later associate professor of Physics at Yerevan State University.

1984

In 1984, he became a visiting research fellow and visiting professor at the University of Cambridge.

where he worked alongside Stephen Hawking and Lord Martin Rees.

1988

In 1988, he established and subsequently became the Head of the Department of Computer Modeling of Complex Systems at Yerevan State University.

1991

Sarkissian was one of the co-creators of the 1991 Tetris spinoff game Wordtris.

Later packaged with Tetris as Tetris Gold, it was for a period the most popular videogame in the world by sales.

In an article in the Hollywood Reporter in March 2023, Sarkissian detailed the tense and dramatic events surrounding the creation of Wordtris and its sale to Spectrum Holobyte.

In April, he appeared on a podcast alongside Henk Rogers, the co-founder of Tetris, and Alexey Pajitnov, the creator of the game whom he had last seen in the Soviet Union.

In November 1991, Sarkissian established the Armenian Embassy in London, the first Armenian diplomatic mission in the West.

In addition to his diplomatic mission in the UK, he went on to become Senior Ambassador to Europe, and ambassador to NATO, to Belgium and the Netherlands, Luxembourg and the Vatican.

1992

Sarkissian has been one of the longest serving ambassadors of any country to the United Kingdom, a role to which he was first appointed in 1992-1996, before returning in 1998 and 2013.

He was also Armenia’s maiden ambassador to the Vatican, the European Union, NATO, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Belgium, and served as “Senior Ambassador” to Europe.

Sarkissian served as the first chairman of the Global Council on Energy Security at the World Economic Forum, with which he has had a long association.

He has authored numerous scientific articles and is a speaker and commentator on international affairs.

His op-eds and essays have appeared in publications such as the Times, the Financial Times, the Daily Telegraph, Time magazine, Newsweek, Hollywood Reporter and the Wall Street Journal.

In October 2022, Sarkissian announced that he was working on a new book titled The Small States Club: How Small Smart States can Save the World, to be published by Hurst Publishers.

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In January 2023, The Small States Club was listed alongside forthcoming books by Martin Wolf and Peter Frankopan as one of the “15 books to look forward to in 2023” by the Diplomatic Courier.

Sarkissian graduated from the Yerevan State University Department of Theoretical Physics and Mathematics.

He is an Honorary Doctor of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia and member of the National Competitiveness Council of Armenia.

In his short tenure, he initiated significant economic and political changes, including the abolition of the Ministry of Information, which paved the way for press freedom for the first time since Armenia’s independence in 1992.

He also presided over a restructuring of Armenia’s energy sector, which had suffered serious setbacks during the war with Azerbaijan, and oversaw reforms in the government and civil service.

1995

In 1995–96, he was the Head of Mission of Armenia to the European Union.

1996

He also served as Prime Minister of Armenia from 1996 to 1997.

He was the first president of post-Soviet Armenia born in former Armenian SSR.

In 1996, Sarkissian was elected Prime Minister of Armenia.

1997

Sarkissian resigned in 1997 after being diagnosed with cancer and was succeeded by Robert Kocharyan.

1998

Following his recovery, Sarkissian was appointed as Special Advisor to the President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and as a Governor of EBRD from 1998 to 2000.

Sarkissian also built a lucrative private career as a consultant and business adviser to some of the world’s biggest multinationals.

2001

Sarkissian was also one of the directors of Eurasia House International, a Vice Chairman of the EastWest Institute in New York, and the Founding Director of the Eurasia Centre at Cambridge University’s Judge Business School (2001-2011).

Sarkissian has held various honorary and executive positions, including as a Member of Dean's Advisory Board at Harvard Kennedy School, Dean's Advisory Board at Harris School of Public Policy Studies at the University of Chicago, Member of the Board of Trustees of the International School in Dilijan, Member of the Euro-Atlantic Security Initiative, Member of International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX), Member of the Global Leadership Foundation and Member of the International Economic Alliance and Global Leadership Foundation.

Sarkissian’s focus in these roles has often involved supporting democratic leadership, preventing and resolving conflict through mediation, and prompting good governance in the form of democratic institutions, open markets, human rights and the rule of law.

Sarkissian is a trustee of the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the largest Armenian charity worldwide.

He was an Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the School of Mathematical Sciences at Queen Mary University of London.

2018

President Serzh Sargsyan offered the Presidency to Sarkissian on an official television broadcast on 19 January 2018 with a public request to shoulder responsibility in enhancing Armenia’s foreign relations, diaspora affairs, foreign investment, science, education and culture.

Sarkissian’s candidacy was supported by the ruling Republican Party.

He also enjoyed additional support from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation bloc, as well as from the Tsarukian Parliamentary bloc.