

Biography
Alexander Arzoumanian (Armenian: Ալեքսանդր Արզումանյան;
Russian: Александр Арзуманян) (born December 24, 1959) was Armenia’s
first ambassador to the United States (from 1992-1993) and to the
United Nations (from 1992-1996). He served as minister of foreign
affairs from 1996 until his resignation, with President Levon Ter-Petrossian,
in 1998. Since then, he has served as the chairman of the Armenian
National Movement (2000-2002), a member of the board of Armat, a political
NGO, and a founding member of the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
Commission, an independent group of prominent Armenians and Turks.
In July 2002, the TARC commissioned a groundbreaking legal analysis
regarding the applicability of the United Nations Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide to the Armenian
Genocide from the New York based International Center for Transitional
Justice.
Arzoumanian is a founder of the the Civil Disobedience Movement, established
in 2006.
Arzoumanian holds a BS from People’s Friendship University in Moscow’s
and an MS in Mathematics from Yerevan State University. He was working
as a theoretical mathematician when he became involved in the independence
movement in the late 1980s. He ran the information center of the Armenian
National Movement, and published the Movement’s newspaper and other
samizdat literature until Armenia became independent in 1991.