Rogozin Dmitry Olegovich. Biography


Biography

Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin is a Russian statesman, diplomat, Doctor of Philosophy, Doctor of Technical Sciences. Since December 2011 - Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation, Chairman of the Board of the Military-Industrial Commission of the Russian Federation, the Supervisory Board of the State Corporation Roscosmos, the Supervisory Board of the Advanced Research Foundation, the Maritime Board under the Government of the Russian Federation, the State Commission for Arctic Development, the State Border Commission , Commission for Export Control of the Russian Federation, Board of Trustees of the Russian Military Historical Society.

Until March 2006, he was the chairman of the Rodina party; in 2003-2004 - Deputy Chairman of the State Duma. From January 2008 to December 2011 - Representative of the Russian Federation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Brussels, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Russia.

Education

He studied at specialized school No. 59 with in-depth study of the French language (now GBOU secondary school No. 1286) then, due to the move of his parents, he moved to No. 73 (now GBOU secondary school No. 1244) with in-depth study of the French language. He played basketball and handball (master of sports). In 1978 he joined the Komsomol. In the ninth grade, he entered the School of Young Journalists at the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University named after M.V. Lomonosov. In 1981 he entered the international department of the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. In his second year, he married his peer, a student of the Faculty of Philology of Moscow State University, Tatyana Serebryakova. In 1983, the couple had a son, Alexey. He was a trainee correspondent in the main editorial office of the Central Television of the USSR State Television and Radio and in the main editorial office of Latin America of the Novosti Press Agency. Has a philological and economic education. In 1986, he graduated with honors from the international department of the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University, having defended two theses at once for the first time in the history of the faculty. In 1988 he graduated with honors from the Faculty of Economics of the University of Marxism-Leninism at the Moscow City Committee of the CPSU.

Work and career

After graduating from Moscow State University in 1986, he joined the Committee of Youth Organizations of the USSR (KMO USSR). He dreamed of working in foreign intelligence, but despite successfully completing a six-month internship in Cuba (September 1985 - February 1986), he fell under restrictions for further service introduced by the KGB of the USSR for the closest relatives of current employees (Rogozin’s father-in-law, Gennady Nikolaevich Serebryakov, served at that time time in the First Main Directorate (foreign intelligence) of the KGB of the USSR).

At the USSR KMO he worked in the Sector of Southern Europe, the USA and Canada, and in 1988 he took the position of head of the sector of international organizations. In the early 1990s, he became close to the Constitutional Democratic Party of Russia - the People's Freedom Party (KDPR-PNS), headed by People's Deputy of the RSFSR Mikhail Georgievich Astafiev. He was elected deputy chairman of the party. In January 1990, he became a founder, and in May 1990, he was elected president of the Association of Young Political Leaders of the USSR, also known as Forum 1990. In August 1990, he left the KMO, and soon refused the offer of Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev to become his deputy.

Later, at the invitation of Alexey Podberezkin, he became the first vice-president of the research and educational organization RAU-Corporation.

On August 20, 1991, he participated in the events of the August putsch on the side of the White House, and led a group of volunteer defenders of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR.

In April 1992, together with Andrei Savelyev, he created the “Union for the Revival of Russia” - an inter-party structure that was supposed to unite Christian Democrats, Cadets and right-wing Social Democrats. In January 1993, the founding congress of the Union for the Revival of Russia was held.

In May-June 1992, he took part in the armed conflict in Transnistria as a member of a volunteer detachment. There he met General Alexander Lebed.

In March 1993, on the basis of the Russian communities of the CIS and Baltic countries, as well as national-state autonomies within Russia, he created and led the people's patriotic movement, the Congress of Russian Communities (CRO). It included almost all Russian fraternities, communities, socio-political organizations and centers of national autonomies within the Russian Federation, former union republics and some foreign countries. In subsequent years, he was actively involved in protecting the rights of compatriots in the Baltic states, Yugoslavia, CIS countries, especially in Crimea.

At the end of 1993, he took part in the elections to the State Duma, but lost to human rights activist Alla Efremovna Gerber.

In 1995, in the elections to the State Duma, he ran on the list of the Congress of Russian Communities (Skokov, Lebed, Glazyev), but this list did not receive the 5% of votes needed to enter the Duma.

MP

In March 1997, he received 37.91 percent of the vote and became a deputy of the State Duma in the by-elections in the Anninsky constituency in the Voronezh region. In the Federal Assembly he joined the deputy group “Russian Regions” and was elected deputy chairman of the Committee on Nationalities, where he dealt with the problems of the Russian population in the North Caucasus and other regions. In 1998-1999 - Member of the State Duma Commission on the Impeachment of Russian President B.N. Yeltsin.

In the 1999 elections, he was re-elected as a deputy of the State Duma in the same electoral district. He was a member of the People's Deputy parliamentary group, and was also elected chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs. Then he headed the delegation of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE).

On September 29, 2001, at the founding congress of the People's Party of the Russian Federation (PPRF), he was elected deputy chairman.

Special Representative of the President of Russia

From July 2002 to August 2003, he was responsible for negotiations with the European Union (EU) and the Republic of Lithuania as a special representative of the President of the Russian Federation on issues of ensuring the livelihoods of the Kaliningrad region in connection with EU enlargement. He achieved concessions from the European Union and the introduction of a simplified visa-free transit procedure for Russian citizens through Lithuania. On January 22, 2004, Rogozin’s position was removed with the wording “in connection with the solution of the main set of tasks”; further powers on the issue were transferred to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Russian Representative to NATO

On January 9, 2008, by decree of the President of the Russian Federation V.V. Putin, he was appointed permanent representative of Russia to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Brussels, which became a widely discussed personnel decision among the Russian political elite. In April 2009, the President of the Russian Federation prematurely awarded Rogozin the highest diplomatic rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary for his skillful actions in August 2008.

On February 18, 2011, he was appointed special representative of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in the field of missile defense and head of the interdepartmental working group under the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in the field of missile defense.

Deputy Chairman of the Government of Russia

On December 23, 2011, President of Russia D. A. Medvedev appointed Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation. Supervises the military-industrial complex, defense procurement, national defense, mobilization preparation, maritime policy, nuclear and rocket-space, shipbuilding, aviation, radio-electronic industries, export control, military-technical cooperation, civil defense, border policy, the Arctic, as well as the construction of the Vostochny cosmodrome. .

On January 18, 2012, Rogozin announced the creation and on February 26, 2012 held the founding congress of the Volunteer Movement of the All-Russian Popular Front in support of the army, navy and military-industrial complex. The movement was created on the basis of regional structures of the KRO, working collectives of defense enterprises, Cossacks and military-patriotic associations.

On April 25, 2012, he was relieved of his post as Special Representative of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with NATO in the field of missile defense.

In 2013, Rogozin criticized the deal between Russia and France for the supply of Mistral-class helicopter carriers, calling it “strange” since these ships cannot operate at temperatures less than seven degrees.

In February 2014, the attention of the press was attracted by the fact that it was Rogozin’s assistant who was one of the first, even before publication in the media, to disclose the contents of the intercepted scandalous conversation between Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and the US Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt.

Crimean crisis

The American magazine Forbes called Rogozin “the main hawk of Russian foreign policy,” and the administration of US President Obama considers him one of the main senior officials of the Russian government responsible for violating the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.

Subject of international sanctions and persona non grata

On March 17, 2014, sanctions were imposed on Rogozin, among other Russian and Ukrainian politicians, which included a ban on entry into the USA, Canada, EU countries, Switzerland and Australia, as well as the seizure of assets located in the territories of these countries. Rogozin stated that he has neither accounts nor real estate outside Russia.

On December 29, 2015, the Security Service of Ukraine announced that Member of the European Parliament Janusz Korwin-Mikke and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin were declared persona non grata in Ukraine. “Based on Art. 13 of the Law of Ukraine “On the Legal Status of Foreigners and Stateless Persons”, Member of the European Parliament Janusz Korwin-Mikke and citizen of the Russian Federation D. Rogozin are prohibited from entering the territory of Ukraine,” the SBU said in a statement.

Chairman of the Military-Industrial Commission

In January 2012, President of the Russian Federation Medvedev appointed Chairman of the Military-Industrial Commission under the Government of the Russian Federation. In September 2014, the commission received the status “under the President of the Russian Federation,” and President Putin took the post of chairman of the military-industrial complex. Rogozin became his deputy for the military-industrial complex and headed its Collegium.

Opposition activities

Participation in unregistered opposition parties

In April 2007, he announced his intention to support the initiative to create an ultra-right nationalist party called “Great Russia”. He did not rule out the possibility of his appearance at the head of the election list or in “Great Russia” itself, if it successfully registers to participate in the parliamentary elections. The founding congress of the new party took place in May 2007, but the party was subsequently denied registration.

Cooperation with DPNI and criticism of the authorities

Before his appointment as Russia's permanent representative to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Brussels, he actively collaborated with the far-right nationalist movement DPNI (Deemed extremist by the court and banned in April 2011), which at that time was headed by Alexander Belov.

On April 10, 2007, a video appeared on the Internet with an appeal from Dmitry Rogozin, in which he criticizes the economic and migration policies of the city of Moscow, declares the high level of ethnic crime and the incompetence of the then “party in power” (as of April 10, 2007, by a majority vote in the State Duma of the Russian Federation, as well as an established synonym for the “party in power” is the political party United Russia). In addition, he calls on spectators to come on April 14, 2007 to a joint nationalist rally with DPNI on Bolotnaya Square in Moscow:

Moscow is the most expensive city in the world, while people live ten times worse than residents of similar cities in the capitals of world powers. It is not right. And all this happens because we are not the masters of our city. We gave the right to be the masters of our city to someone unknown: all kinds of thieves who settled in bureaucratic offices, we gave this right to various mafiosi who came in large numbers from various republics, and today have already filled the entire criminal establishment of the capital, we gave this right to scoundrels, and all sorts of a kind of careerist punk from the party in power. Therefore, it is our business to defend our right to be masters in our own home. If we are not masters of it, our city, then we simply will not have our own land.

Participation in parliamentary parties

Failed entry into the leadership of United Russia

In February 2003, the media reported that Rogozin was leaving the NPRF and joining United Russia: information appeared that he could head the General Council of the party. Rogozin himself expressed the opinion that “people who support the president should be in one political organization” and that “we want the consolidation of all pro-presidential forces.” However, Rogozin’s political rival, one of the founders of the party, Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, prevented his entry into the leadership of United Russia.

In the party "Motherland"

On September 14, 2003, at the founding conference of the Rodina electoral bloc, he was elected co-chairman of the bloc's Supreme Council and head of the election headquarters. On December 7, 2003, Rogozin, with a record result of 79%, was re-elected to a deputy position when the Rodina bloc gained 9.1% of the votes and entered the State Duma. Elected deputy chairman of the State Duma, and in March 2004 - head of the Rodina faction. Member of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs. During the 2004 presidential elections, a split occurred between Rogozin and Rodina co-chairman Sergei Glazyev: Rogozin called on the party to moderately support Vladimir Putin, and Glazyev, without consultation with his bloc partners and faction, put up his own candidacy for the elections. In the internal party struggle, Rogozin defeated Glazyev, becoming the sole chairman of the party in July 2004.

In November 2005, before the elections to the Moscow City Duma, a notorious television commercial was released with the participation of Rogozin, “Let's clear Moscow of garbage,” which was shown on the Moscow TV channel TVC. Taking advantage of the opportunity, Yuri Luzhkov accused the Rodina party of xenophobia and extremism, and an information boycott was declared against Rogozin. The party lost registration in all elections to regional parliaments of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation and was subjected to severe pressure from the authorities. In order to preserve the party, in March 2006, Rogozin left the post of chairman of the Rodina party, and in April 2006, the post of head of the Rodina faction. On December 9, 2006, a restoration congress of the Congress of Russian Communities was held under the new name “Motherland. Congress of Russian Communities”, at which Rogozin was elected chairman of this social movement. At the same time, the authorities prevented the official registration of the restored KRO. In the same year, Rogozin joined the public council of the “Russian March” - an event held by a number of public patriotic and nationalist organizations.

According to the chairman of the A Just Russia party, Nikolai Levichev, Rogozin was a member of the A Just Russia party, which is the successor to the Rodina party. However, Rogozin himself did not confirm his membership in A Just Russia and made attacks against the Just Russia members, accusing them of a raider takeover of the Rodina party in 2006.

On September 21, 2011, the founding congress of the Rodina-Congress of Russian Communities movement took place, at which an organizing committee was created to restore the party.

On December 21, 2012, the Rodina political party, with the active support of Deputy Prime Minister Rogozin, was re-registered.

Personal life

Family

Father - Oleg Konstantinovich Rogozin, lieutenant general, professor, doctor of technical sciences. Before his resignation and retirement, he held the position of head of the department of advanced weapons systems and first deputy head of armaments of the USSR Ministry of Defense. Born in Moscow in the family of engineer Rogozin Konstantin Pavlovich and Natalya Borisovna Mitkevich-Zholtok.

Mother - Tamara Vasilievna Rogozina (Prokofieva). Born in Orenburg in the family of Vasily Ilyich Prokofiev and Evgenia Yakovlevna Popodina. Before retiring, she worked in the dental complex of the Moscow Medical Dental Institute.

Dmitry Rogozin's great-great-grandfather is Major General Nikolai Mitkevich-Zholtok (born 1866), in 1908-1915 - Chief of Police of Moscow, in 1918-1920 - Chief of Staff of the State Guard of the Russian Empire, one of the leaders of the Armed Forces of the South of Russia.

In one of the WikiLeaks leaks, information appeared that Rogozin was allegedly married for a second time. In fact, Rogozin has been married since 1983 to Tatyana Gennadievna Serebryakova, the daughter of Colonel Gennady Nikolaevich Serebryakov, an employee of the First Main Directorate of the KGB of the USSR (foreign intelligence), who served in the American direction. Now Tatyana Rogozina is the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of INVA Academy.

Son - Alexey Rogozin (b. 1983) since 2016 - deputy head of the department of property relations of the Russian Ministry of Defense; previously - chairman of the public organization "Self-Defense", deputy of the Moscow Regional Duma, chairman of the Moscow regional organization of the Federation of Practical Shooting of the Russian Federation. In 2012, at the age of 28, Alexey became executive director and then general director of the federal government-owned enterprise Aleksinsky Chemical Plant, whose main products are polymer coatings, rubber products, composites and gunpowder. Before that, since 2010, he was Deputy General Director of the Promtekhnologii arms plant (ORSIS rifled weapons). In 2005, Dmitry Rogozin became a grandfather - his grandson Fedor was born, in 2008 his granddaughter Maria, and in 2013 his third grandson Artyom.

Hobbies

A small arms expert, collector, has a technical inventor's patent for small arms N 2570851. He is a master of sports in handball. He is actively involved in football, tennis, basketball, and practical shooting. Hobbies include spearfishing and motorcycle riding. He heads the boards of trustees of the Russian Handball Federation, the Russian Sambo Federation and the Russian Practical Shooting Federation.

He is a private helicopter pilot; the corresponding certificate was issued to Rogozin by Rosaviatsia on February 6, 2015.

Scientific activity and language proficiency

Rogozin speaks fluent English, Spanish, Italian and French, and also speaks Czech and Ukrainian.

In 1996, at the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University, he defended his dissertation “The Russian Question and Its Impact on National and International Security” for the degree of Candidate of Philosophy. In 1999, he defended his doctoral dissertation in philosophical sciences “Problems of Russian national security at the turn of the 21st century.” (specialty “Philosophy of Politics and Law”). The direction of scientific activity is military strategies of the twentieth century and planning of scientific and technological policy in accordance with the evolution of threats to national security. In 1998-1999, he taught a special course on national security at the Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. He holds a Doctor of Technical Sciences degree in the specialty “weapons theory, military-technical policy, weapons systems.”

Since 2014 he has been Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Samara Aerospace University

Incidents

In response to Romania’s ban on May 10, 2014 from using its airspace for Rogozin’s flight to Moscow (at the end of his private visit to Transnistria), the Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation promised to return to the region on board the Tu-160 strategic bomber. Romania demanded an explanation from Russia.

In March 2016, the non-governmental organization Transparency International - Russia published an investigation in which it suggested that the Rogozin family owns an apartment with an estimated value of more than 500 million rubles, which does not correspond to officially published income. Rogozin, responding to the accusations, said that he acquired it by exchanging a service apartment he had privatized in the center of Moscow, and not from “undeclared income,” the existence of which he denied. He also called the price of the apartment announced by the media significantly inflated.

Awards

Gratitude of the President of the Russian Federation (January 20, 2004) - for active work to solve problems of the Kaliningrad region related to the expansion of the European Union

Gratitude of the President of the Russian Federation (February 6, 2009) - for services in implementing the foreign policy of the Russian Federation and many years of impeccable diplomatic service

in 2004, by orders of the Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation and the Director of the FSB of Russia, he was awarded personalized PSM and Mauser pistols for the release of hostages from captivity of terrorist groups on the territory of the Chechen Republic in 1996-1999

In 2013 he was awarded a Walther PPX pistol from the President of Serbia

Laureate of the State Competition of the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic “Person of the Year 2012” in the category “Honor and Valor”

Honorary Professor of Voronezh State University and Pridnestrovian State University named after T. G. Shevchenko

Order of the Holy Blessed Grand Duke Dimitri Donskoy, 2nd degree

Parents
Father - Oleg Konstantinovich Rogozin, former deputy head of the Armament Service of the USSR Ministry of Defense, retired lieutenant general, professor. Among the ancestors were Poles from the noble family of Mitkevich-Zholtok and Armenians. Mother - Rogozina (Prokofieva) Tamara Vasilievna, a pensioner, a former doctor.

Education and academic degrees
In March 1981, before graduating from school, he applied to the acting department of VGIK. Despite successfully passing the creative competition, he changed his mind about becoming an actor and entered the Faculty of Journalism at Moscow State University.

In 1986 he graduated with honors from the international department of the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. Doctor of Philosophy (1999). In 1996, he defended his PhD thesis at the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University on the topic “The Russian Question and its Impact on National and International Security.” In 1999, he defended his doctoral dissertation on the topic “Problems of Russian national security at the turn of the 21st century.”

Career
While studying at the university, he collaborated as a correspondent with the Central Television of the USSR and the AP Novosti. In 1985, he spent 5 months on pre-graduation practice in Cuba, where he studied American and Cuban propaganda methods used in the media and cinema.

After graduating from the university, from June 1986 to August 1990, he was a junior assistant, assistant, senior assistant, head of the sector of the Committee of Youth Organizations (KMO) of the USSR, which existed under the auspices of the Komsomol. In 1989, he headed the delegation of the USSR KMO at the World Youth Meeting for Freedom and Democracy “Paris-89” (the delegation included future people’s deputies of the RSFSR/RF Oleg Rumyantsev, Andrei Makarov (lawyer), Evgeniy Kozhokin, the future mayor of Riga Andris Teikmanis, etc.) .

Was not a member of the CPSU.

In the summer of 1990, he left the USSR KMO (he claimed that he was forced to do so because of his refusal to join the CPSU).

Since August 1990 - President of the Humanitarian and Educational Society "Apriori". From 1990 to August 1993, he was vice president of the RAU Corporation (president - Alexey Podberezkin). A number of RAU-Corporation employees were experts of the Vice President of Russia Alexander Rutsky.

In May 1990, Rogozin organized the Association of Young Political Figures of the USSR (since 1991 - Russia) “Forum-90” and became its president. In the fall of 1992, he was again re-elected as its president.

In February 1991, he joined the dwarf Constitutional Democratic Party - the People's Freedom Party (KDP-PNS) of Mikhail Astafiev (which was then part of the Democratic Russia Movement as a collective member). In June 1990, at the “XI Restoration Congress” of the party (the last, X congress of the pre-revolutionary PNS, better known as the “cadets”, took place in 1920) he was elected deputy chairman of the KDP-PNS.

During the GKChP coup attempt in August 1991, Astafiev's PNS was on the side of RSFSR President Boris Yeltsin; D. Rogozin himself was involved in disseminating Yeltsin’s statements and participated in the “defense of the White House” ( “On the night of August 20-21, I stood in a cordon near the White House, leading a detachment that defended the 14th entrance.”).

In February 1992, he was elected a member of the presidium of the Central Council and deputy chairman of the board of the anti-Yeltsin Russian People's Assembly (RNS), established on February 9, 1992 at the Congress of Civil and Patriotic Forces of Russia, in which the main moderate national-patriotic organizations took part.

At the XII Congress of the CDP-NS in September 1992, he was again elected deputy chairman of the party, but from the end of 1992 he did not take real part in the activities of the CDP-PNS, having parted ways with the party chairman M. Astafiev (he did not approve of his entry into the radical opposition National Front Salvation, uniting national patriots and communists).

In April 1992, he founded the moderate opposition Union for the Revival of Russia (SVR), becoming a member of its political council. In the fall of 1992, the political council was transformed into the Organizing Committee of the Union for the Revival of Russia, and on January 30, 1993, at the Founding Conference, Rogozin was elected one of the co-chairs of the Union. The SVR united relatively young activists from parties that were members of the Russian People's Assembly and the Civil Union, as well as from the Smena - New Politics faction of the Supreme Council.

In March 1993, he created the Congress of Russian Communities (CRC), which was conceived as a structure representing the interests of Russians and Russian-speaking residents of the “near abroad” countries. At the Founding Congress of the KRO on March 29-30, 1993, he was elected chairman of the executive committee. The Congress included Russian communities, communities and socio-political organizations in the national republics of the Russian Federation and some former Soviet republics.

In October 1993, the SVR was re-registered as the socio-political Movement “Renaissance Union” (the president of the SVR is D. Rogozin). Together with the Socialist Workers' Party (SPT), the Women's Union, the Cossacks' Union, the Union of Oil Industrialists and the Russian Union of Labor Collectives, the Renaissance Union entered the Fatherland electoral association. On the list of candidates for State Duma deputies from the Fatherland electoral association, Rogozin was fourth.

In 1994, he recruited Yuri Skokov to participate in the KRO, and in 1995, General Alexander Lebed. At the founding congress of the Russian structure of the KRO in April 1995, he was elected a member of the National Council and chairman of the executive committee of the All-Russian KRO.

After the outbreak of the first Chechen war, on December 14, 1994 he called for E. Gaidar, G. Yavlinsky and other political figures of democratic orientation who staged protests to be brought to trial for actions of an anti-state nature.

At the KRO congress on May 25-26, 1996, he was elected instead of Yu. Skokov as chairman of the National Committee of the KRO and became chairman of the Russian People's Party (RPP), established on May 26, 1996. The RNP project was soon frozen, and the RNP was not seen in any activities.

In February 1997, he registered as a candidate for the State Duma of the Russian Federation in the by-elections in the Anninsky electoral district No. 74 of the Voronezh region (in place of Ivan Rybkin, who became Secretary of the Security Council). On March 23, 1997, he was elected to the State Duma (37.91%; closest rival Yuri Dunaev - 25.59%). In the Duma of the second convocation, he was a member of the deputy group “Russian Regions” and was deputy chairman of the Committee on Nationalities Affairs. On June 19, 1998, he was elected to a special commission of the State Duma to assess compliance with procedural rules and the factual validity of the charges brought against the President of the Russian Federation (impeachment commission).

In November 1998, he became a member of the organizing committee for the creation of the all-Russian political public association (OPOO) "Fatherland" (leader - Yuri Luzhkov), in December 1998 he was elected a member of the Central Council of the OPOO "Fatherland".

In June 1999, he announced his disagreements with the leadership of Fatherland. First of all, there was a discrepancy in positions on the issue of the Fatherland alliance with the All Russia movement. Rogozin stated that Mintimer Shaimiev and Ruslan Aushev are “dubious figures” for the KRO. He opposed the postponement of the Moscow mayoral elections. He stated that KRO was suspending its membership in Fatherland.

In September 1999, he entered the federal list of the electoral bloc “Congress of Russian Communities and the Yuri Boldyrev Movement.” D. Rogozin himself was elected deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the third convocation in the Anninsky district.

In the State Duma in January 2000, he joined the deputy group “People's Deputy” (leader - Gennady Raikov). On January 19, 2000, as a result of a “package agreement,” he headed the State Duma Committee on International Affairs.

In the 2000 presidential elections, he supported (like most of the People's Deputy group) the candidacy of Vladimir Putin.

On September 29, 2001, at the founding congress of the People's Party of the Russian Federation (NPRF), he was elected one of the deputy chairmen of the party (chairman - G. Raikov).

On April 23, 2002, in Strasbourg, he harshly criticized the Council of Europe and called Russia’s accession to the Council of Europe “a great stupidity.”

In July 2002, he was appointed special representative of the President of the Russian Federation on the problems of the Kaliningrad region.

In February 2003, he left the NPRF and announced his intention to join the ranks of United Russia. Said that “people supporting the president must be in the same political organization”. According to the chairman of the NPRF Raikov, G. Rogozin’s transition is allegedly an initiative of the NPRF itself (“We ourselves delegated him there. The cadres of United Russia need to be strengthened. This is a party friendly to us”).

In September 2003, together with Sergei Glazyev, he created the electoral bloc "People's Patriotic Union "Rodina", which included: the Party of Russian Regions (Skokov-Glazyev-Rogozin), the "People's Will" party of Sergei Baburin and the Socialist United Party of Russia (SEPR) Vasily Shestakov.

In September 2003, he was nominated by the Rodina electoral bloc as a candidate for deputy of the State Duma of the 4th convocation in the Anninsky single-mandate electoral district No. 76 (Voronezh region).

On December 4, 2003, SPS leader Anatoly Chubais gave an interview to the Italian Corriere della Sera, in which he warned of the impending invasion of “National Socialists, bureaucrats and fascists.” The bearer of this threat, according to Chubais, was the Rodina party, led by Glazyev and Rogozin ( “This is an aggressive party that unites bureaucrats and fascists, preaches class struggle and does not disdain racial hatred. The real danger is that the Russians do not yet realize how real this danger is. They prefer to see slogans. But behind them is something more serious. These are National Socialist strongholds of power and society that support authoritarianism, that do not need independent media, that have powerful support in administrative structures and rely on incompetent judicial authorities who are only ready to arrest.”).

In the elections of December 7, 2003, the Rodina bloc gained 9.02% (4th place out of 23). In the constituency, D. Rogozin received 192,401 votes or 78.88% (the closest rival, Vladimir Sinitsyn from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation - 6.91% of the votes). Registered in the Rodina faction (leader - Sergei Glazyev).

December 11, 2003 stated: “We agreed that the Rodina bloc will decide on the issue of participation in the presidential elections on January 17, 2003. We are not going to nominate anyone from our ranks, but we will determine our support for one of the candidates. If it were up to me, we would support Putin. We represent those voters who like the Russian president on issues of foreign policy and national security, but we absolutely do not accept the decisions that his government makes. After the presidential elections in March next year, we will propose our composition to form a new government.”.

On December 19, 2003, at a meeting of the Rodina bloc faction, he was unanimously nominated for the post of vice speaker of the State Duma. On December 29, 2003 he was elected to this position.

On January 22, 2004, President V. Putin signed a decree releasing Rogozin from his duties as the special representative of the Russian President on the problems of the Kaliningrad region in connection with the implementation of the main set of tasks to resolve life support issues for the region in the context of EU enlargement.

On January 21, 2004, together with Yu. Skokov, S. Baburin and member of the Supreme Council of the Rodina bloc Alexander Vatagin, D. Rogozin signed a special statement in which he officially refused to support the presidential candidate of the Russian Federation S. Glazyev. “The Supreme Council of the bloc did not make a decision in support of the self-nomination of Sergei Glazyev; the Supreme Council did not give consent to his use of the symbols of the Rodina bloc and to the participation of regional branches of the bloc of parties in collecting signatures during the presidential election campaign.”.

After the Central Election Commission refused to register Viktor Gerashchenko as a candidate for the presidency of the Russian Federation, Rogozin said: “If Viktor Gerashchenko is never registered as a candidate for the post of President of the Russian Federation, I will support Vladimir Putin in the presidential elections”.

On January 30, 2004, at a congress of some supporters of the Rodina electoral bloc, the political organization People's Patriotic Union (NPS) Rodina, headed by S. Glazyev, was established, and Rogozin was elected only to its National Council. Rogozin did not participate in the preparation of the congress; he was in Strasbourg during it, and after the congress he stated that the establishment of the NPS Rodina had no consequences, legal or political.

At the III Congress of the Party of Russian Regions (PRR), he initiated the expulsion from the party of one of its co-chairs S. Glazyev, the party received a new name - “Motherland”.

On March 3, 2004, he was elected head of the Rodina faction in the Duma instead of S. Glazyev. He left the post of Deputy Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation, which was taken by S. Baburin.

In March 2004, he abstained from confirming Mikhail Fradkov as chairman of the government.

On April 6, 2004, while in Volgograd, he offered to return it to the city "the glorious and heroic name of Stalingrad".

On July 6, 2004, at the IV Congress of the Rodina party, he was elected chairman of the party (instead of the seven previous co-chairs). 257 of 258 delegates voted for Rogozin in a secret ballot. State Duma deputy Alexander Babakov became the chairman of the party's presidium, and Yu. Skokov became the secretary of the political council.

An eyewitness to the events in Beslan on September 1-4, 2004, where he happened to be passing through from South Ossetia. On September 9, 2004, Rogozin announced that the Rodina faction had initiated a collection of signatures in the State Duma to raise the issue of no confidence in the government. According to him, during the seizure of a school in Beslan by bandits on September 1-3, 2004, the government “withdrawn, failed to cope with the situation”.

On December 12, 2004, at the opening of the All-Russian Congress in defense of the rights of the nation and citizen, Rogozin called for a fight against the “oligarchs” who “today they are the main enemies of Russia”.

In January 2005, after the law on the monetization of benefits came into force, he promised, at the first request from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, to support the Communist Party on the issue of no confidence in the government.

On January 13, 2005, two dozen deputies of the State Duma, including 13 members of the Rodina party, sent an “urgent request” to the Prosecutor General’s Office to officially initiate a case to ban all religious and national Jewish associations in our country as extremist. The State Duma and the Federation Council adopted resolutions (on February 4 and 9, respectively) condemning the appeal as anti-Semitic.

On January 21, 2005, a group of 5 deputies of the Rodina faction (Rogozin, Oleg Denisov, Mikhail Markelov, Andrei Savelyev, Ivan Kharchenko) announced their intention to hold a hunger strike in the faction’s office in the State Duma demanding the resignation of the ministers of the socio-economic bloc of the government - Mikhail Zurabov, Alexey Kudrin, German Gref; introducing a moratorium on Law No. 122-FZ on the monetization of benefits; the creation of an Emergency Commission to find ways out of the social crisis; respect for the opinion of the Duma opposition - the Communist Party of the Russian Federation and independent deputies. On February 1, 2005, the hunger strike was ended.

On February 19, 2005, Rogozin announced his transition to harsh opposition to the authorities and stated that Rodina would no longer be “the president’s special forces” and that the Communist Party of the Russian Federation is a competitor for Rodina, but not an enemy, like United Russia.

On April 25, 2005, commenting on the annual address of the President to the Federal Assembly, he said that he “I realized that there are two Vladimir Vladimirovich Putins in the country. One is the one who proclaims certain values ​​with which, of course, everyone agrees, and calls for their implementation. This applies to both economics, finance, in particular, and morality, and so on. And another - who heads the government and who over all these years has done nothing to fulfill his own calls.”.

In June 2005, the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia appealed to the leadership of the Socialist International with a request not to accept into its ranks the Russian Rodina party, which, in the opinion of the FEOR, was creating “the strongest threat of the spread of fascism in society”. In response, Rogozin stated that “The current government has organized a campaign to neutralize Rodina; the surge in anti-Jewish sentiment is a gross provocation organized by the authorities”.

June 28, 2005 expelled S. Baburin from the Rodina faction “in connection with actions aimed at splitting the faction and undermining its authority.” On July 5, 2005, the State Duma Council registered a Duma faction led by Baburin, which was named “People’s Patriotic Union “Motherland” (People’s Will - SEPR).”

In July 2005, a decision was made to introduce the institution of co-chairs into the Rodina faction; The co-chairs of the faction were D. Rogozin, S. Glazyev and V. Varennikov.

In October 2005, together with Alexander Babakov and Andrei Savelyev, he introduced amendments to the Duma to the law on the status of foreigners in Russia: it was proposed to prohibit foreign citizens from engaging in entrepreneurial activities in the field of retail trade in consumer and clothing markets. The law did not pass then, but later this requirement was reflected in the government law “On the Fundamentals of Trading Activities.”

On November 8, 2005, the media reported that specialists from the capital’s prosecutor’s office would examine the Rodina party’s propaganda video for the Moscow City Duma elections. In early November, this video was broadcast by the TVC channel. The plot of the video contained the following scenes: Caucasians eat watermelon on the street, throwing the rinds, including under the wheels of a baby stroller being pulled by a Russian girl. Following her, one of the characters says with an accent: “We came in large numbers here.” Rogozin approaches the Caucasian and asks him to remove the crust. He does not react and then candidate for Moscow City Duma Yuri Popov asks him if he understands Russian. After this, Rogozin says: “We will cleanse our city.” At the same time, the credits appear: “Let’s cleanse our city of dirt.”

On November 15, 2005, Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov called Rodina a party "Black Hundred plan". He expressed bewilderment that “The state turns a blind eye to their performances”, and also assured the audience of the TVC channel, in whose broadcast he spoke, that the capital authorities “there are forces to prevent their performances in the bud”.

On November 21, 2005, at the Moscow Jewish Community Center, as part of a series of meetings between the Chief Rabbi of Russia Berl Lazar and the leaders of parliamentary factions, he met with Rogozin, at which the latter explained his position on the problem of anti-Semitism and xenophobia. “Neither I nor my party circle are anti-Semitic. We believe that it is high time to close the Jewish issue in this vein. The problem is that the Duma faction consists not only of members of the Rodina party and therefore internal party discipline, unfortunately, does not apply to them.”

On November 26, 2005, the Moscow City Court considered the LDPR's application demanding that the Rodina list be removed from the Moscow City Duma elections. The LDPR accused Rodina of taking advantage of its official position (one of the leaflets lists the telephone number of the faction in the State Duma as the telephone number of the election headquarters). In addition, the statement alleged that the party was inciting ethnic hatred. The court decided to remove Rodina's list from the elections.

On December 2, 2005 he called on supporters to come to their polling stations on December 4 and vote) for the Rodina party, despite the fact that it would be deleted from the ballot. Following the election results, a record number of invalid ballots was recorded - 5.44% (the “Against all” column had been canceled by that time).

On December 4, 2005, elections to the regional Legislative Assembly were held in the Ivanovo region. The Rodina list was headed by Rogozin’s father Oleg Konstantinovich (he was elected).

On December 5, 2005, S. Baburin and V. Shestakov held a meeting of the Supreme Council of the Rodina electoral bloc, in which the parties NV, SEPR and Rodina were represented by the same number of members. It was decided to expel D. Rogozin from the Supreme Council, expel all members of Rogozin’s party from it, and contact the Ministry of Justice with a demand to cancel the registration of the Rodina party. This brand, according to Baburin and Shestakov, should belong only to the bloc. Rogozin did not recognize this decision (in which he was supported by S. Glazyev) and, in turn, expelled S. Baburin and V. Shestakov from the Supreme Court. The “Rogozin” part of the bloc’s Supreme Council voted for the bloc’s transition to the opposition.

On December 22, 2005, at the last moment, Rogozin was removed from participating in the filming of the “Judge for Yourself” program on Channel One, dedicated to Russian-Chinese relations. A press release from the Rodina party said that the editor of the program invited Rogozin to take part in the filming of the night’s episode, but five minutes before the start of the broadcast, Rogozin was told at the entrance to the studio that his participation in the program was “undesirable.” Rogozin intended to condemn Putin's giving away river islands in the Far East to China.

On February 17, 2006, he stated that he expected provocations at the party congress on March 25. “The governors received instructions from the Kremlin administration and invite the leaders of regional branches to conversations, promising to solve any personal problems in exchange for the “correct” selection of delegates to the congress.”. He said that at the congress an attempt would be made to remove him from the leadership of the party.

At the beginning of 2006, a massive campaign followed to remove the Rodina party from elections to regional bodies of representative power. Election commissions and courts removed lists of the party and its candidates under any pretext: premature campaigning, provision of false signatures, various procedural violations during pre-election regional party conferences. Of the eight regions where elections were held on March 12, Rodin residents were only able to take part in the campaign in the Altai Republic.

On March 15, 2006, the State Duma rejected Rogozin’s proposal to consider at a plenary meeting an appeal to the head of government M. Fradkov about the professional unsuitability of the ministers responsible for the economic bloc - Alexei Kudrin and German Gref.

On March 15, 2006, in a letter sent to the secretary of the political council of the Rodina party, Yu. Skokov, S. Glazyev proposed to implement the December decision of the Supreme Council of the Rodina bloc: to abandon flirting with the authorities and move on to mass protest actions, as well as to increase "organizational stability of the party" by returning to collegial leadership and shared responsibility among leaders. “It is necessary to replace the institution of the party chairman with a presidium bureau consisting of three to five people”. Commenting on this proposal, Rogozin said that the institution of co-chairs is unacceptable to him. At the same time, he assured that, based on the results of the congress, scheduled for March 25, 2006, he was determined to preserve Rodina as a parliamentary party, making it clear that in order to accomplish this task he did not exclude his resignation from the post of party leader.

On March 23, 2006, Rogozin announced his resignation from all party posts so as not to cause significant damage to the party.

On April 4, 2006, the Rodina Duma faction accepted Rogozin’s resignation from the post of co-chairman of the faction (Babakov took his place.

On October 19, 2006, he stated that he had a negative attitude towards the merger of Rodina, the Russian Party of Life and the Russian Party of Pensioners into one party (A Just Russia).

On December 9, 2006, he held a restoration congress of the Congress of Russian Communities (which has been inactive since 2003 under the formal chairmanship of S. Glazyev). The name of the organization was changed to “Motherland. KRO". He was elected chairman of the socio-political organization “Motherland. KRO".

On April 12, 2007, he announced that he and his supporters were creating a new political party to participate in parliamentary and presidential elections - “Great Russia”. The organizing committee of the party, which included a number of members of the leadership of the Rodina. KRO" and the Movement against Illegal Immigration (DPNI), in March 2007, was headed by State Duma deputy Andrei Savelyev.

On November 8, 2007, the State Duma Committee on International Affairs unanimously approved Rogozin’s candidacy for the post of Russia’s representative in NATO. On November 13, 2007, Rogozin’s candidacy was also unanimously approved by the Federation Council Committee on International Affairs. On January 9, 2008, by decree of the President of the Russian Federation V. Putin, he was appointed permanent representative of Russia to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Brussels.

On January 10, 2008, immediately after Putin signed the decree on Rogozin’s appointment, his appeal to supporters appeared on the KRO website “to boldly integrate into power structures, including, first of all, the executive branch of government, and influence its evolution from within”.

Before leaving for Brussels, Rogozin, who had earned a reputation as an oppositionist and radical nationalist, admitted that “happy to be freed from this in the status of a civil servant”: “In general, I have always been burdened by the status of an oppositionist, since it is always at a distance from making real decisions. This is a forced state for any patriot for the simple reason that a patriot must always be in action, in the fight. That is why Rodina’s opposition mainly boiled down to criticism of internal political events in our country.”. At the same time, he said that in foreign policy his views completely coincide with those of Putin.

On January 24, 2008, he stated that recognition of Kosovo’s independence without taking into account the opinion of Serbia would open a Pandora’s box and lead to dramatic consequences in the world: “I am sure that there will be a lot of hotheads in the same Spanish kingdom who will say: there is Kosovo, why can’t we. In Northern Ireland, there will be a wave again. Not only in South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Karabakh - everywhere, all over the world".

On May 23, 2008 he stated: “NATO’s advance to the East at the expense of Ukraine and Georgia is a red line in our relations, which this organization should not cross... If NATO crosses this red line, then our relations will not only worsen, they will change radically”.

On April 6, 2009, President Medvedev awarded Rogozin the diplomatic rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.

From February 18, 2011 to December 2011, Rogozin was the special representative of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with NATO in the field of missile defense.

On December 23, 2011, he was appointed Deputy Prime Minister for the Military-Industrial Complex in Putin’s government. He remained in this position during the formation of Medvedev's government in May 2012.

On February 15, 2012, he became Deputy Chairman of the Presidential Council for Cossack Affairs (Chairman of the Council - Alexander Beglov), retained this post in the new composition of the Council, approved on July 31, 2012.

At the end of December 2011, the Coordination Council “Rodina. KRO" decided to re-establish the Rodina party, headed by State Duma deputy from United Russia Alexei Zhuravlev, who headed Rodina. KRO" after Rogozin left for government service.

On September 29, 2012, on the initiative of D. Rogozin, the founding congress of the Special Purpose Volunteer Movement in support of the army, navy and military-industrial complex (DON) was held, headed by Chairman Sergei Zhigarev (State Duma deputy from the LDPR, former head of the Moscow region “A Just Russia”) and Secretary Alexey Zhuravlev.

Member of the Presidium of the Government of the Russian Federation.
Heads the following commissions and boards under the Government:
- State Border Commission;
- Military-Industrial Commission under the Government of the Russian Federation;
- Maritime Board under the Government of the Russian Federation;
- Export Control Commission of the Russian Federation;
- Government Commission to ensure the implementation of measures to prevent bankruptcy of strategic enterprises and organizations, as well as organizations of the military-industrial complex.

Family
Married. Wife - Tatyana Gennadievna, daughter of KGB General Gennady Serebryakov, works at the Fund for the Support of Folk Crafts.
Son Alexey (born 1984) is a deputy of the Moscow Regional Duma, executive director of the Aleksinsky chemical plant (powder plant).
Grandson (2005), granddaughter (2008).

Income and property
According to the declaration for 2012, he earned 4,181,183 rubles. 86 kopecks (about 350 thousand rubles per month). Has an apartment of 225.5 sq.m. for unlimited paid use and a dacha of 360 sq.m. for fixed-term paid use. in Russia. He also owns two cars - Land Rover Range Rover and Audi Q 7, BMW K 1200LT and BMW R 1200GS motorcycles.

The wife earned 2,513,902 rubles in 2012. 95 kopecks (about 209.5 thousand rubles per month). Has the same rights as her husband, the same apartment and dacha, and also owns 2 agricultural land plots - 5 thousand and 10 thousand sq.m. in Russia.

In 2011, D.O. Rogozin earned 4,212,078 rubles. 78 kop. (about 350 thousand rubles per month). I had an apartment of 136 sq.m. for indefinite free use, a dacha of 160.5 sq.m. for fixed-term paid use, and owned the same two cars and a BMW K 200LT motorcycle.

The wife earned 108,000 rubles in 2011. (9 thousand rubles per month). She had the same apartment and dacha as her husband under the same conditions.

Data found:
V. Pribylovsky
G. Belonuchkin
P. Safronova,

Moscow, Panorama Center, 2013

Previous materials Headings "Government of Dmitry Medvedev":
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Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin is a famous Russian politician and diplomat, twice elected to the State Duma, former leader of the Rodina faction.

Family of Dmitry Rogozin

Dmitry Rogozin was born on December 21, 1963 in the family of military scientist Oleg Konstantinovich Rogozin. Mom, Tamara Vasilievna Rogozina, worked as a doctor all her life.

One of Rogozin’s ancestors, General Nikolai Mitkevich-Zholtok, was a Moscow police chief at the beginning of the 20th century, and later a “white” military leader.

Childhood and student life of Dmitry Rogozin

Rogozin studied at the capital's school No. 59, specializing in the study of the French language. In high school, the family moved to another district of Moscow and Dmitry transferred to school No. 73. He continued to study a foreign language and also paid a lot of attention to basketball and handball. His last hobby earned him the title of Master of Sports.


In high school, the future politician was enrolled in the Young Journalist School at Moscow State University. After graduating in 1981, he became a student at the international department of the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. During my studies, I mastered two more foreign languages ​​– Spanish and English.

Rogozin completed his pre-graduation internship on the island of Cuba, where he spent almost six months researching the specific features of American and Cuban propaganda techniques.

In 1986, he completed his course of study with honors, and also entered the history of Moscow State University as the first student to present two graduation projects for defense at the same time.


Two years later, Rogozin received another higher education, this time with an economic focus.

The beginning of Dmitry Rogozin's career

The young journalist’s first place of work was the Committee of Youth Organizations of the USSR. Over four years of work (from 1986 to 1990), he went through a career path from a junior assistant to the head of one of the departments. In 1989, Dmitry became the head of the Soviet delegation at an international meeting of youth organizations in France. Oleg Rumyantsev and Andris Teikmanis also took part in it.

In the summer of 1990, Rogozin resigned from the Committee. According to the politician, he was forced to make such a decision after he again refused to join the ranks of the CPSU.


Almost immediately after his dismissal, the journalist received an offer from Kozyrev, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, to become his deputy. Dmitry Olegovich gave a negative answer to the promising proposal.

During the GKChP coup attempt, Rogozin openly supported Boris Yeltsin and took an active part in the cordon of the White House.

Political career of Dmitry Rogozin

In 1991, Rogozin became a member of the People's Freedom Party (PNS). A year later, Dmitry Olegovich received a seat as a member of the board of the Central Council and deputy head of the Russian People's Assembly (RNS).


A few months later, it became obvious to everyone: Rogozin had ceased to take a real part in the affairs of the PNS. He founded the Union of Revival of Russia (SVR) and directed all his efforts to strengthening the influence of this organization in political circles.

In 1993, the politician and his associates organized the Congress of Russian Communities, a structure that was going to defend the interests of the Russian-speaking population in the post-Soviet space.

At the end of the same year, the statesman re-registered the SVR into the “Renaissance Union”, which became part of the political association “Fatherland”. As one of the leaders of this bloc, Dmitry Olegovich ran for election to the State Duma for the first time, but the Central Election Commission declared some of the organization’s signatures invalid.

In the spring of 1994, an attempt was made on Rogozin in his office, but the criminal did not achieve his goal.

Almost three years after this event, the politician became a deputy of the State Duma of the second convocation. In parliament, he became part of the Russian Regions association.

Dmitry Rogozin. Exclusive interview

In the elections that took place two years later, Rogozin was re-elected as a deputy. In this convocation, the politician took the post of chairman of the Committee on International Affairs.

From 2002 to 2003, all negotiations between Russia and the European Union took place under the leadership of Dmitry Olegovich. The politician coped with the responsibilities assigned to him successfully.

In February 2003, Rogozin voiced his hopes of becoming a member of the United Russia party. The implementation of his plans was prevented by his long-time political opponent, Yuri Luzhkov.

A year passed, and the journalist again received a deputy mandate, and became one of the ideological inspirers of the Rodina faction.


In November 2005, members of the Rodina association were accused of extremism, and a real information boycott was declared against Rogozin. In the spring of 2006, Dmitry Olegovich left the faction.

Personal life of Dmitry Rogozin

In 1982, Rogozin married his fellow student Tatyana Gennadievna Serebryakova. The couple has a son, Alexey.


Currently, Dmitry Olegovich’s son is engaged in business, married, he has three children - the eldest son Fedor, daughter Maria, who was born in 2008, and the youngest son Artem, who was born in 2013. At the moment, Alexey has followed in his father’s footsteps and is serving as a deputy of the Moscow Regional Duma.

Dmitry Rogozin today

On January 8, 2008, Rogozin was appointed Russia's representative to NATO in Brussels. A year later, for the excellent performance of his duties for the previous year, he was awarded the highest diplomatic rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.

In the spring of 2012, the politician became the special representative of the President of the Russian Federation for Transnistria, and a month later he was relieved of his post as the special representative of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with NATO.

Dmitry Rogozin criticizes Roscosmos

During the crisis in Ukraine, many Western publications considered Dmitry Rogozin to be the main violator of the integrity of the borders and responsible for violating the sovereignty of Ukraine. In the spring of 2014, the politician was included in the sanctions list of the USA, Canada, EU countries, Switzerland and Australia. He is prohibited not only from entering these countries, but also from owning real estate and accounts in their territories.

Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin. Born on December 21, 1963 in Moscow. Russian statesman, diplomat, Doctor of Philosophy.

Since December 2011 - Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation, Chairman of the Board of the Military-Industrial Commission of the Russian Federation, the Maritime Board under the Government of the Russian Federation, the State Commission for the Development of the Arctic, the State Border Commission, the Commission for Export Control of the Russian Federation, the Board of Trustees of the Russian Military Historical Society.

Until March 2006, he was the chairman of the Rodina party.

In 2003-2004 - Deputy Chairman of the State Duma.

From January 2008 to December 2011 - Representative of the Russian Federation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Brussels, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Russia.

Born on December 21, 1963 in Moscow in a military family.

Father - Oleg Konstantinovich Rogozin, lieutenant general, professor, doctor of technical sciences. Before his resignation and retirement, he held the position of head of the department of advanced weapons systems and first deputy head of armaments of the USSR Ministry of Defense.

Born in Moscow in the family of engineer Rogozin Konstantin Pavlovich and Natalya Borisovna Mitkevich-Zholtok.

Mother - Tamara Vasilievna Rogozina (Prokofieva). Born in Orenburg in the family of Vasily Ilyich Prokofiev and Evgenia Yakovlevna Popodina. Before retiring, she worked in the dental complex of the Moscow Medical Dental Institute.

Dmitry Rogozin's great-great-grandfather is Major General Nikolai Mitkevich-Zholtok (born 1866), in 1908-1915 he was the chief of police of Moscow, in 1918-1920 he was the chief of staff of the State Guard of the Russian Empire, one of the leaders of the Russian Army of the South of Russia.

He studied at specialized school No. 59 with in-depth study of the French language (now GBOU secondary school No. 1286) then, due to the move of his parents, he moved to No. 73 (now GBOU secondary school No. 1244) with in-depth study of the French language.

He played basketball and handball (master of sports).

In 1978 he joined the Komsomol.

In the ninth grade, he entered the School of Young Journalists at the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University named after M.V. Lomonosov.

In 1981 he entered the international department of the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University.

At the university I learned four more foreign languages ​​- English, Italian, Czech and Spanish. He was a trainee correspondent in the main editorial office of the Central Television of the USSR State Television and Radio and in the main editorial office of Latin America of the Novosti Press Agency. Has a philological and economic education. In 1986, he graduated with honors from the international department of the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University, having defended two theses at once for the first time in the history of the faculty. In 1988 he graduated with honors from the Faculty of Economics of the University of Marxism-Leninism at the Moscow City Committee of the CPSU.

After graduating from Moscow State University in 1986, he joined the Committee of Youth Organizations of the USSR (KMO USSR). He dreamed of working in foreign intelligence, but despite successfully completing a six-month internship in Cuba (September 1985 - February 1986), he fell under restrictions for further service introduced by the KGB of the USSR for the closest relatives of current employees (Rogozin’s father-in-law, Gennady Nikolaevich Serebryakov, served at that time time in the First Main Directorate (foreign intelligence) of the KGB of the USSR).

At the USSR KMO he worked in the Sector of Southern Europe, the USA and Canada, and in 1988 he took the position of head of the sector of international organizations.

In the early 1990s, he became close to the Constitutional Democratic Party of Russia - the People's Freedom Party (KDPR-PNS), headed by People's Deputy of the RSFSR Mikhail Georgievich Astafiev. He was elected deputy chairman of the party.

In January 1990, he became a founder, and in May 1990, he was elected president of the Association of Young Political Leaders of the USSR, also known as Forum 1990.

In August 1990, he left the KMO, and soon refused the offer of Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev to become his deputy.

Later, at the invitation of Alexey Podberezkin, he became the first vice-president of the research and educational organization RAU-Corporation.

On August 20, 1991, he participated in the events of the August putsch on the side of the White House, led a group of volunteer defenders of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR.

In April 1992, together with Andrei Savelyev, he created "Union for the Revival of Russia"- an inter-party structure that was supposed to unite Christian Democrats, Cadets and right-wing Social Democrats.

In January 1993, the founding congress of the Union for the Revival of Russia was held.

In May-June 1992, he took part in the armed conflict in Transnistria as a member of a volunteer detachment. There I met the general.

In March 1993, on the basis of the Russian communities of the CIS and Baltic countries, as well as national-state autonomies within Russia, he created and led the people's patriotic movement, the Congress of Russian Communities (CRO). It included almost all Russian fraternities, communities, socio-political organizations and centers of national autonomies within the Russian Federation, former union republics and some foreign countries. In subsequent years, he was actively involved in protecting the rights of compatriots in the Baltic states, Yugoslavia, CIS countries, especially in Crimea.

At the end of 1993, he took part in the elections to the State Duma, but lost to human rights activist Alla Gerber.

In 1995, in the elections to the State Duma, he ran on the list of the Congress of Russian Communities (Skokov, Lebed, Glazyev), but this list did not receive the 5% of votes needed to enter the Duma.

In March 1997, he received 37.91 percent of the vote and became a deputy of the State Duma in the by-elections in the Anninsky constituency in the Voronezh region. In the Federal Assembly he joined the deputy group “Russian Regions” and was elected deputy chairman of the Committee on Nationalities, where he dealt with the problems of the Russian population in the North Caucasus and other regions.

In 1998-1999 - Member of the State Duma Commission on the Impeachment of the President of the Russian Federation.

In the 1999 elections, he was re-elected as a deputy of the State Duma in the same electoral district. He was a member of the People's Deputy parliamentary group, and was also elected chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs. Then he headed the delegation of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE).

On September 29, 2001, at the founding congress of the People's Party of the Russian Federation (PPRF), he was elected deputy chairman.

From July 2002 to August 2003, he was responsible for negotiations with the European Union (EU) and the Republic of Lithuania as a special representative of the President of the Russian Federation on issues of ensuring the livelihoods of the Kaliningrad region in connection with EU enlargement. He achieved concessions from the European Union and the introduction of a simplified visa-free transit procedure for Russian citizens through Lithuania.

Rogozin about Putin (2003)

On January 22, 2004, Rogozin’s position was removed with the wording “in connection with the solution of the main set of tasks”; further powers on the issue were transferred to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

On January 9, 2008, by decree of the President of the Russian Federation V.V. Putin, he was appointed permanent representative of Russia to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Brussels, which became a widely discussed personnel decision among the Russian political elite. In April 2009, the President of the Russian Federation prematurely awarded Rogozin the highest diplomatic rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary for his skillful actions in August 2008.

On February 18, 2011, he was appointed special representative of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in the field of missile defense and head of the interdepartmental working group under the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in the field of missile defense.

On December 23, 2011, President of Russia D. A. Medvedev appointed Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation. Supervises the military-industrial complex, defense procurement, national defense, mobilization preparation, maritime policy, nuclear and rocket-space, shipbuilding, aviation, radio-electronic industries, export control, military-technical cooperation, civil defense, border policy, the Arctic, as well as the construction of the Vostochny cosmodrome. .

On January 18, 2012, Rogozin announced the creation and on February 26, 2012 held the founding congress of the Volunteer Movement of the All-Russian Popular Front in support of the army, navy and military-industrial complex. The movement was created on the basis of regional structures of the KRO, working collectives of defense enterprises, Cossacks and military-patriotic associations.

On April 25, 2012, he was relieved of his post as Special Representative of the President of the Russian Federation for interaction with NATO in the field of missile defense.

In 2013, Rogozin criticized the deal between Russia and France for the supply of Mistral-class helicopter carriers, calling it “strange” since these ships cannot operate at temperatures less than seven degrees.

In February 2014, the attention of the press was attracted by the fact that it was Rogozin’s assistant who was one of the first, even before publication in the media, to disclose the contents of the intercepted scandalous conversation between Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and the US Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt.

The American magazine Forbes called Rogozin “the main hawk of Russian foreign policy,” and the administration of US President Obama considers him one of the main senior officials of the Russian government responsible for violating the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.

On March 17, 2014, sanctions were imposed on Rogozin, among other Russian and Ukrainian politicians, which included a ban on entry into the USA, Canada, EU countries, Switzerland and Australia, as well as the seizure of assets located in the territories of these countries. Rogozin stated that he has neither accounts nor real estate outside Russia.

On December 29, 2015, the Security Service of Ukraine announced that Member of the European Parliament Janusz Korwin-Mikke and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin were declared persona non grata in Ukraine. “Based on Article 13 of the Law of Ukraine “On the Legal Status of Foreigners and Stateless Persons,” Member of the European Parliament Janusz Korwin-Mikka and citizen of the Russian Federation D. Rogozin are prohibited from entering the territory of Ukraine,” the SBU said in a statement.

In January 2012, the President of the Russian Federation was appointed Chairman of the Military-Industrial Commission under the Government of the Russian Federation. In September 2014, the commission received the status “under the President of the Russian Federation”, and the post of chairman of the military-industrial complex was taken by the President. Rogozin became his deputy for the military-industrial complex.

Rogozin vs Chubais

Rogozin in politics

In February 2003, the media reported that Rogozin was leaving the NPRF and joining United Russia: information appeared that he could head the General Council of the party. Rogozin himself expressed the opinion that “people who support the president should be in one political organization” and that “we want the consolidation of all pro-presidential forces.” However, Rogozin’s political rival, one of the founders of the party, Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, prevented his entry into the leadership of United Russia.

On September 14, 2003, at the founding conference of the Rodina electoral bloc, he was elected co-chairman of the bloc's Supreme Council and head of the election headquarters. On December 7, 2003, Rogozin, with a record result of 79%, was re-elected to a deputy position when the Rodina bloc gained 9.1% of the votes and entered the State Duma. Elected deputy chairman of the State Duma, and in March 2004 - head of the Rodina faction.

Member of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs.

During the 2004 presidential elections, a split occurred between Rogozin and Rodina co-chairman Sergei Glazyev: Rogozin called on the party to moderately support Vladimir Putin, and Glazyev, without consultation with his bloc partners and faction, put up his own candidacy for the elections. In the internal party struggle, Rogozin defeated Glazyev, becoming the sole chairman of the party in July 2004.

In November 2005, before the elections to the Moscow City Duma, a notorious television commercial was released with the participation of Rogozin, “Let's clear Moscow of garbage,” which was shown on the Moscow TV channel TVC.

“Let’s clear Moscow of garbage”

Taking advantage of the opportunity, Yuri Luzhkov accused the Rodina party of xenophobia and extremism, and an information boycott was declared against Rogozin. The party lost registration in all elections to regional parliaments of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation and was subjected to severe pressure from the authorities. In order to preserve the party, in March 2006, Rogozin left the post of chairman of the Rodina party, and in April 2006, the post of head of the Rodina faction.

On December 9, 2006, a restoration congress of the Congress of Russian Communities was held under the new name “Motherland. Congress of Russian Communities”, at which Rogozin was elected chairman of this social movement. At the same time, the authorities prevented the official registration of the restored KRO. In the same year, Rogozin joined the public council of the “Russian March” - an event held by a number of public patriotic and nationalist organizations.

According to the chairman of the A Just Russia party, Nikolai Levichev, Rogozin was a member of the A Just Russia party, which is the successor to the Rodina party. However, Rogozin himself did not confirm his membership in A Just Russia and made attacks against the Just Russia members, accusing it of a raider takeover of the Rodina party in 2006.


In April 2007, he announced his intention to support the initiative to create a party called “Great Russia”. He did not rule out the possibility of his appearance at the head of the election list or in “Great Russia” itself, if it successfully registers to participate in the parliamentary elections. In May 2007, the founding congress of the new party took place, however, the party was subsequently denied registration.

On September 21, 2011, the founding congress of the Rodina-Congress of Russian Communities movement took place, at which an organizing committee was created to restore the party.

On December 21, 2012, the Rodina political party, with the active support of Deputy Prime Minister Rogozin, was re-registered.

Rogozin speaks fluent English, Spanish, Italian and French, and also speaks Czech and Ukrainian. He is a Doctor of Philosophy. In 1996, at the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University, he defended his dissertation on the topic “The Russian Question and its Impact on National and International Security” for the degree of Candidate of Philosophy. In 1999, he defended his doctoral dissertation on the topic “Problems of Russian national security at the turn of the 21st century.” The direction of scientific activity is military strategies of the twentieth century and planning of scientific and technological policy in accordance with the evolution of threats to national security. In 1998-1999, he taught a special course on national security at the Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. Since 2014, he has been the Chairman of the Supervisory Board of SSAU.

Personal life of Dmitry Rogozin:

Married since 1983 Tatyana Gennadievna Serebryakova, daughter of Colonel Gennady Nikolaevich Serebryakov, an employee of the First Main Directorate of the KGB of the USSR (foreign intelligence), who served in the American direction. Now Tatyana Rogozina is the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of INVA Academy.

Dmitry Rogozin with his wife

We met while studying at Moscow State University. Rogozin got married when he was in his second year. His chosen one was a student at the Faculty of Philology of Moscow State University. In 1983, the couple had a son, Alexey.

Son - Alexey Rogozin (born 1983), chairman of the public organization "Self-Defense", deputy of the Moscow Regional Duma, chairman of the Moscow regional organization of the Federation of Practical Shooting of the Russian Federation.

In 2012, at the age of 28, Alexey became executive director and then general director of the federal government-owned enterprise Aleksinsky Chemical Plant, whose main products are polymer coatings, rubber products, composites and gunpowder. Before that, since 2010, he was Deputy General Director of the Promtekhnologii arms plant (ORSIS rifled weapons).

In 2005, Dmitry Rogozin became a grandfather - his grandson Fedor was born, in 2008 his granddaughter Maria, and in 2013 his third grandson Artyom.

Dmitry Rogozin is a small arms expert, collector, and has an inventor's technical patent for small arms N 2570851.

Dmitry Rogozin shoots a pistol

He is a master of sports in handball.

He is actively involved in football, tennis, basketball, and practical shooting.

Hobbies include spearfishing and motorcycle riding. He heads the boards of trustees of the Russian Handball Federation, the Russian Sambo Federation and the Russian Practical Shooting Federation.

He is a private helicopter pilot; the corresponding certificate was issued to Rogozin by Rosaviatsia on February 6, 2015.

Bibliography of Dmitry Rogozin:

1995 - Manifesto of the Revival of Russia
1996 - Decay Formula
1996 - Time to be Russian
1998 - Russia between peace and war
2002 - Strategies of Deterrence - Foundations of International Security
2003 - We will take back Russia
2004 - War and peace in terms and definitions
2005 - Economic war
2008 - Enemy of the People
2009 - NATO dot Ru
2010 - Hawks of the world. Diary of the Russian Ambassador
2011 - War and peace in terms and definitions. Military-Political Dictionary
2011 - Baron Zholtok. The history of one Russia
2012 - Enemy of the people.


Rogozin D. O. - Russian statesman, diplomat, Ph.D. Forbes magazine called him "the main hawk" in the politics of the Russian Federation.

Origin

Rogozin Dmitry Olegovich, whose biography originates in Moscow, was born on December 21, 1963. He is the successor of a dynasty of military men and politicians. My father had the rank of lieutenant general and held a high position in the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union.

My great-great-grandfather on my father’s side was the head of the police under the last tsar, and then the chief of staff of the State Guard. During the Civil War, he was listed as one of the leaders of the White Army. Nikolai Mitkevich-Zholtok had the rank of major general.

The politician’s mother was from Orenburg and practiced dentistry until she retired.

In his book "Baron Zholtok" Rogozin claims that their family has been known since the 13th century. And comes from three Prussian princes named Mitkevich. In addition, the author notes that his ancestors participated in the formation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. And then they moved to the territory of the Smolensk province, where they settled.

However, this information is questioned. Even the author himself called his writing a fiction story.

Education

Rogozin Dmitry Olegovich, whose biography was practically predetermined, studied at a prestigious school, where he studied French in depth. In the ninth grade, he began to combine classes with studying at the school for young journalists at Moscow State University. At the age of fifteen he joined the Komsomol.

After graduating from high school, he continued his studies at the Faculty of Journalism in an international direction. He graduated from Moscow State University in 1986 with honors. At the qualifying defense, I amazed the commission by presenting to their attention two theses at once.

Two years later he received an economic education at the University of Marxism-Leninism. Over the years of study, he mastered six foreign languages, four of which he speaks perfectly (English, Italian, French, Spanish).

Carier start

The family of Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin fully supported his desire to engage in government activities. After university, he began working in the Youth Policy Committee. After some time, he became the head of the international organizations sector.

Already in the 90s, he was the right hand of the chairman of the People's Freedom Party and received an offer to become Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Kozyrev. He refused the latter.

In 1991 he supported B. Yeltsin. Since 1992, he has been involved in the formation of the structure of the Union for the Revival of Russia. He actively worked to protect the rights of compatriots in the territories of the former USSR.

In 1993 and 1995 he ran for the State Duma, but did not receive the required percentage of votes.

He became a deputy in 1997 in the Voronezh region. He worked as deputy chairman of the Committee on Nationalities Affairs, resolving issues related to the life of Russians in the North Caucasus.

In 1999, he was re-elected in the same constituency and supervised international affairs in the State Duma Committee.

Diplomatic activities

Dmitry Alekseevich Rogozin, whose biography is closely connected with international relations, has been a special representative of the president since 2002. He negotiated with the EU to simplify the visa regime for residents of the Kaliningrad region. He managed to reach an agreement with Lithuania on the transit of Russian citizens through their territory without visas.

At the beginning of 2008, V.V. Putin appointed Rogozin as permanent representative to NATO in Brussels. A year later, for his effective activities, he was awarded the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.

Since 2011, he has been involved in missile defense issues and interaction with NATO on these issues.

Internal political activity

In December 2011, D. A. Medvedev appointed Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin to a high position. The Russian government has found a new chairman. He is the curator of many areas, such as defense procurement, defense industry, border and maritime policy, Arctic issues and others.

Since 2012 he has been the representative of the President in Pridnestrovie. In the same year, Rogozin was relieved of his duties with NATO, and he focused on domestic political problems.

Rogozin's position as Dmitry Olegovich allowed him to create a Volunteer Movement on the basis of the All-Russian Popular Front. Its goal is to support the navy, army and defense industry.

Rogozin was among those who did not approve of the government's deal with France, which resulted in the purchase of the Mistrals. It turns out that these helicopter carriers lose their functional capabilities at temperatures below seven degrees Celsius.

Rogozin was nicknamed “the main hawk” for his activities in Crimea. According to the Americans, it was he who was the key figure in the annexation of the peninsula to Russia. In this regard, sanctions were applied to him, prohibiting entry into the United States and a number of other countries.

Party activities

Since 2001, he has been deputy chairman of the People's Party of the Russian Federation. In 2003, information appeared that Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin, whose photo was often featured in the press, could join the leadership of United Russia. However, this did not happen.

In September of the same year, he was elected co-chairman of the Rodina party. Having received more than 9% of the vote, he entered the State Duma. In 2004 he became the leader of the faction.

In 2005, an open conflict between Rogozin and Yuri Luzhkov took place. The latter accused the party of supporting extremist views. The faction was excluded from all electoral lists. And Rogozin was boycotted by many political structures. In order to maintain the viability of the party, Dmitry Olegovich leaves all posts and is relieved of his duties.

In 2006, he became chairman of the public organization "KRO. Rodina".

According to some information, Rogozin had a A Just Russia party card. However, he himself denied this information and announced a raider takeover of “Motherland” by the Right Russia.

In 2007, he supported the initiative to create the Great Russia party, but it was never registered.

At the congress of the Rodina. KRO movement, it was decided to restore the rights of Rodina, which had been excluded from the political game. Thanks to his influence, Rogozin achieved the re-registration of this party in 2012.

Scientific activity

Having received two higher educations, Rogozin did not stop. He continued to improve his knowledge of languages, and also returned to Moscow State University. There, in 1996, he was able to defend his PhD thesis at the Faculty of Philosophy. Three years later he became a Doctor of Science. He defended another qualifying thesis at the same faculty. The topics of his dissertations were closely related to the national security of the Russian Federation and the influence of Russian politics on international relations.

Dmitry Olegovich's scientific activity was aimed at studying the military strategies of the past century and the evolution of the threat to national security.

For some time he carried out teaching activities along with performing his main duties. The special course was attended by students of the Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia.

Rogozin Dmitry Olegovich, whose biography is inextricably linked with family origins, followed in his father’s footsteps in terms of science. Oleg Konstantinovich Rogozin was a professor, Doctor of Technical Sciences. At the Russian Academy of Sciences he was a researcher working on problems of weapons and military security.

Personal life

Rogozin met his future wife at the university in his second year. Tatyana Serebryakova studied at the Faculty of Philology. Her father worked for the KGB in foreign intelligence. Rogozin Dmitry Olegovich, biography, whose family met the high criteria of Colonel Serebryakov, was favorably received in their home.

The couple soon got married, and in 1983 their son Alexei was born. He is also involved in politics. A couple of years ago he took the position of general director of the Aleksinsky chemical plant.

Recently information appeared that Rogozin married for the second time. However, the information was not confirmed. At the moment, Tatyana Serebryakova is his first and only wife. Rogozin Dmitry Olegovich is already a grandfather three times.

  1. Master of Sports in handball.
  2. Small arms collector.
  3. He loves sports and plays football, basketball, and tennis in his free time.
  4. Loves speed and riding a motorcycle.
  5. He is engaged in underwater hunting.
  6. In 2015, he received a certificate allowing private helicopter piloting.
  7. Active on social networks (Twitter, Facebook).
  8. In 2014, after the Romanian government banned Rogozin’s transit to Moscow through their airspace, he spoke out quite harshly. He stated that he would fly to them next time on a TU-160 bomber. He published this joke on his Twitter, and Romania was offended and asked for an official explanation from the Russian government.
Continuing the topic:
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