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Anyone looking at the composition of Slovenia's first government after the country broke loose from Yugoslavia in the summer of 1991 might be forgiven for thinking that little has changed in the tiny Alpine republic. Its first prime minister was Alojz Peterle, currently an MEP and runner-up in the recent presidential election, its second, Janez Drnovšek, is currently the country's maverick president. (Drnovšek will hand over to Danilo Türk, a former UN diplomat, who beat Peterle, on 22 December.) In both governments, Dimitrij Rupel was foreign minister – just as he is today.
Rare is the politician who feels in his element while counting either litres of milk or laundered money, but Viktor Zubkov has an unquenchable passion for both.
Flamboyant, slightly corpulent at the age of 39 and with rapid-fire fluent English, Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili could still pass for the New York lawyer he was before the Rose Revolution and his transformation into the darling of US foreign policy.
The stereotypical Russian diplomat is an older fellow with a brooding mind and a booming voice which he often uses to say “nyet”, and is perhaps not the most socially adept person imaginable. In almost every respect, Vladimir Chizhov is the opposite of that cliché. (Though he is in his mid-fifties and does have a rather imposing voice.)
Alexander Weis, the new head of the European Defence Agency (EDA), always wanted to do international work. That is how he explains his decision to work for the German defence ministry right after finishing law school. The ministry was his first and only employer until the EDA job came along. “I had the wish not to remain ‘national',” he says.