Sergei Lavrov: Russia's longest-serving diplomat

Moscow's foreign minister has earned a reputation for being uncompromising and brusque but has also begrudgingly won the respect of many, even foes, for his professionalism

Russia's President Vladimir Putin decorates Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov with the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle the First-Called during a state awards ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow on May 22, 2025.
Alexander KAZAKOV / POOL / AFP
Russia's President Vladimir Putin decorates Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov with the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle the First-Called during a state awards ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow on May 22, 2025.

Sergei Lavrov: Russia's longest-serving diplomat

When Russian President Vladimir Putin bestowed the country’s highest honour on Sergei Lavrov, Moscow’s long-serving foreign minister, earlier this year, it was in recognition of the years he has spent as the Kremlin’s faithful upholder of Russian foreign policy.

Putin’s decree announcing Lavrov’s appointment to the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle the First-Called—Russia’s highest state award—said it had been made in recognition of his "outstanding services to the Fatherland, significant contribution to developing and implementing Russia’s foreign policy course, and years of dedicated activity as a statesman."

The appointment was made just as Lavrov celebrated his 75th birthday in March, having held the position as Russia’s top diplomat for almost 22 years, during which period he has presided over some of Moscow’s most challenging diplomatic crises in his distinctive style.

Direct and—at times—intimidating, Lavrov has been Putin’s loyal enforcer on issues ranging from Syria’s civil war, which resulted in Russia launching a military intervention in support of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, to the more recent conflict in Ukraine, where he has rigorously defended Russia’s 2022 military invasion.

Lavrov’s assertive and sometimes intransigent conduct has earned him the nickname "Mr Nyet" ("Mr No")—a term first coined during the Cold War to describe one of his Soviet predecessors, Andrei Gromyko.

 Alexander Zemlianichenko / AFP
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends a stamp cancellation ceremony dedicated to famous Russian diplomat Alexander Gorchakov in Moscow on July 20, 2023.

Longest-serving diplomat

Lavrov has held diplomatic posts for 31 years, making him the longest-serving government official—longer than any other Russian diplomat. Gromyko's tenure lasted 28 years, and the State Chancellor of the Russian Empire, Alexander Gorchakov, spent 26 years in diplomatic service.

In the wake of the Salisbury poisonings in the UK in 2018, when Russian agents attempted to murder former Russian spy Sergei Skripal with Novichok nerve agent, Lavrov responded furiously to accusations that Moscow was to blame.

"We will never cave in to ultimatums, you cannot talk with the Russian Federation using that kind of language," he told fellow Russian diplomats expelled over Skripal’s poisoning.

During the Syrian war, Lavrov led Moscow’s diplomatic campaign to use its power of veto at the UN to block every effort to sanction the Assad regime.

And he memorably declared, on the eve of the Ukraine conflict, that Russia would never invade Ukraine, and then, when Russian forces eventually launched their military invasion, insisted that it was Ukraine—not Russia—that launched hostilities, due to its insistence to join the NATO alliance, something Moscow views as intolerable threat on its doorstep.

Lavrov believes key qualities to being a good diplomat are being erudite, having a deep knowledge of history, and understanding the psyche of the negotiator across the table

Lengthy career

Born in Moscow in March 1950, Lavrov has spent all his working life serving in the Russian Foreign Ministry—including during the Soviet era—having graduated from the prestigious Moscow State Institute of International Relations  (MGIMO) in 1972. He received his first Soviet diplomatic posting in Sri Lanka.

He once revealed on a Russian talk show that he had wanted to study French and Arabic at university, only to find out on the first day of term that he had been put on the less popular course studying Sinhalese.

Before becoming foreign minister, he was the Permanent Representative of Russia to the United Nations from 1994 to 2004. His tenure in that role coincided with several crises, including the Kosovo War  and the US-led invasion of Iraq, during which time Lavrov gained a reputation for assertively defending Russia's foreign policy interests and was seen as one of the most influential members of the UN Security Council.

In 2004, Putin named Lavrov foreign minister, replacing Igor Ivanov, who had been appointed by Boris Yeltsin. Lavrov retained his foreign minister post in 2018 when Putin selected a government for his fourth Kremlin term.

Asked once what it takes to be a diplomat, Lavrov said the key qualities were being erudite and having a deep knowledge of history. He added it was important to be devoted to one's "motherland" and to understand the psyche of the negotiator across the table.

GRIGORY DUKOR / AFP
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (R) and Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov after signing an MOU for cooperation in Antarctica in Vladivostok on September 8, 2012.

'Uncompromising and brusque'

Throughout the course of Lavrov's long career, American politicians and diplomats have described him as off-putting. Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton once remarked that he failed to treat her with respect during negotiations, while other senior members of the Obama administration described him as uncompromising and brusque.

And some have accused him of being a mouthpiece for Putin. Rex Tillerson, who served as US Secretary of State in the first Trump administration, reportedly said in 2017: "You cannot tango with Lavrov because he is not allowed to dance," a reference to the total control Putin exerts over his foreign minister.

"Lavrov was a respected and effective Russian ambassador to the UN in the 90s," said retired diplomat Sir Kim Darroch in 2022, a close adviser to Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron. "But over his two decades as Russian foreign minister, he has become a reincarnation of Andrei Gromyko, the Soviet foreign minister of the Cold War. And his role now seems reduced to saying 'No' to foreigners, defending the indefensible, and trying to justify one of the most tragic and catastrophic decisions (the invasion of Ukraine) in history."

Russian expert and journalist Michael Binyon says: "Like Gromyko, Lavrov is an efficient functionary rather than a political strategist: decisions are made by Putin, and Lavrov is not part of the inner sanctum. His manner and tone, therefore, reflect Putin's priorities and have become harder and more anti-Western in recent years. Like Putin, he can be at the same time cold and sarcastic, quietly threatening or business-like, as Liz Truss has found."

Truss was in Russia in February 2022, the first such visit by a UK foreign secretary in more than four years, to show a "path of diplomacy" and urge the Kremlin to de-escalate amid fears of an imminent invasion of Ukraine. Lavrov said of her that it was like "talking to a deaf person" at a press conference in Moscow after talks.

Bregrudgingly respected

But at the same time, he has managed to win the begrudging respect of other diplomats—even some of Russia's Western adversaries—who have expressed respect for his professionalism.

But as the Trump administration continues with its efforts to end the Ukraine conflict, it is almost inevitable that at some point American officials will have to go head-to-head with the veteran foreign minister.

His most recent contribution to efforts to end the war was an interview this month in which he restated all of Russia's maximum demands, including full recognition of five annexed territories along with "de-militarising and de-Nazifying" Ukraine.

Both Lavrov and Putin opted not to attend the recent round of peace talks in Istanbul in May, sending a more junior delegation in their place. But with US President Donald Trump said to be planning a summit with Putin to resolve the crisis personally, it is likely that Lavrov still has a key role to play in Russia's diplomatic efforts.

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