Adamantios Vassilakis

Adamantios Vassilakis

Adamantios Vassilakis (Greek: Αδαμάντιος Βασιλάκης, born in Chios, Greece, June 13, 1942), is a distinguished Greek diplomat and negotiator.

Adamantios Vassilakis is a graduate of the Commercial High School of Chios, Greece, and holds a Licence in Political and Diplomatic Sciences from the Free University of Brussels.

Vassilakis joined the Diplomatic Service of the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs[1] in 1972 as Embassy Attaché. He was appointed Third Secretary of Embassy at the Greek Embassy in Tirana, Albania in 1975. In 1977, he moved to the Foreign Ministry's First Department of Political Affairs, serving as Head of Section for the U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe, as a member of various Greek delegations visiting Eastern European countries, and as a participant in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Common Market political experts meetings.

In 1985, Vassilakis was appointed Consul General of Greece in San Francisco, California, where he was promoted to First Counselor of Embassy, and, in 1989, Head of Section for bilateral relations with the United States, Iranian, Turkish and Arab Countries, in the Foreign Ministry's Department of Bilateral Economic Relations. In 1990, Mr. Vassilakis entered the Department of European Community Affairs. In 1991, he was named Deputy Permanent Representative in the Permanent Mission of Greece to the United Nations, and in 1994, he became Chargé d'Affaires, a.i.

From 1999 to 2002 Vassilakis served as Director General for European Affairs and Director of the Center for Analysis and Planning in Greece's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Those assignments followed his promotion, in 1998, to Minister Plenipotentiary (1st class).

From 2002 to 2007 he served as Permanent Representative of Greece to the United Nations[2] and represented Greece on the United Nations Security Council.[3]

Since 2007 he has been Greece's chief negotiator and representative in the UN-led talks between Greece and the Republic of Macedonia over the Macedonia naming dispute.

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