24 January 2012

Najib Mikati


Najib Mikati has been the Prime Minister of Lebanon since June 2011. A billionaire, he made his fortune from the telecom company he founded during the Lebanese Civil War. A member of Parliament for several years, he was appointed interim Prime Minister for three months in 2005 amid the fallout from Rafik Hariri's assassination and Syria's subsequent exit from Lebanon; his cabinet was mostly technocrats, and he did not stand in the 2005 elections.

23 January 2012

Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani


From Reuters

Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani has been Prime Minister of Qatar since 2007 and its Foreign Minister since 1992. A second cousin of King Hamad bin Khalifa, he has held important positions in the government for much of his adult life, beginning in the agricultural sector. As Foreign Minister, he has sought to become a regional mediator, and he has allowed the American military to use a Qatari air base since September 11th.

20 January 2012

Dawoud Rajiha


Dawoud Rajiha has been Syria's minister of defense since August 2011, before which he was the Chief of Staff of the Army. An artillery specialist, he graduated from the Military Academy at age 20 and held several prestigious positions in the Syrian Army before becoming Chief of Staff in 2009. Rajiha is a Greek Orthodox Christian, a rarity in the upper echelons of Syrian leadership, which is dominated by members of the Alawite faith.

19 January 2012

Abdul-Malik al-Houthi


Abdul-Malik Badreddin al-Houthi has been a military leader of the Houthi band of Zaidi Shia insurgents in Yemen since his brother Hussein's death in 2004. In 1994, Hussein started a faction of Shia called the Believing Youth (Shabab al-Mu'mineen), which opposes the Yemeni government's corruption on religious grounds. A peaceful movement in its first years, it became armed in 2004, launching an insurgency against the government; Hussein was killed three months into the conflict.

18 January 2012

Necdet Özel


Necdet Özel has been the Chief of the General Staff of Turkey's armed forces since August 2011, when the top leadership resigned to protest judicial interference with the military. Prior to this appointment, he served in Cyprus before returning to Turkey, where he served in Kurdish regions and later commanded the War College. In 2010, he became commander of the Gendarmerie, which polices areas where the cost to maintain a police force would be prohibitive.

17 January 2012

Benny Gantz


Benny Gantz has been the Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces since February 2011. A former paratrooper, he fought alongside his soldiers as an officer during the 1982 Lebanon War. After assisting with Operation Shlomo, which airlifted thousands of Ethiopian Jews to Israel, he commanded the army's Judea and Samaria division during the Second Intifada and was IDF attache in the United States before assuming Israel's highest military post.

16 January 2012

Ataollah Salehi


Ataollah Salehi has been the Commander-in-chief of the Iranian Army since 2005. A career military man, he survived the purges accompanying Iran's transition from monarchy to Islamic Republic. After rising serving as an infantry officer, he became the commander of the Iranian army's main military academy before being chosen to command the country's ground forces, navy, and air force. He replaced Mohammad Salimi in this position a month after Mahmoud Ahmadinejad became President of Iran.

13 January 2012

Ramzan Kadyrov


Ramzan Kadyrov has been the President of Chechnya since 2007. Russia has many republics under its sovereignty. Ramzan is the son of Akhmat Kadyrov, the leader of a militia that changed allegiance in 1999 from the Chechen rebels to the Russians. After his father's 2004 assassination, Russian media suggested that Vladimir Putin supported Ramzan as his successor for the presidency. However, Ramzan was not yet the minimum age for the Chechen presidency.

12 January 2012

Demetris Christofias


Demetris Christofias has been the President of Cyprus since 2008. He was born in present-day North Cyprus, which declared independence in 1974 from the rest of the island but is recognized only by Turkey. A communist, he attended university in Moscow and is the first communist leader of Cyprus or any European Union member state. He led Cyprus' Progressive (Communist) Party for over twenty years. Prior to becoming President, he headed Cyprus' House of Representatives for several years.

11 January 2012

Mikheil Saakashvili


Mikheil Saakashvili has been the President of Georgia since 2004. A graduate of Columbia Law School, he practiced law in New York City for a year before returning to Georgia to enter politics after the USSR's dissolution. Once in Georgia, he quickly entered Parliament as a member of President Eduard Shevardnadze's party, eventually becoming Minister of Justice. However, he became disillusioned by the corruption in Shevardnadze's government and started a new political party.

10 January 2012

Serzh Sargsyan


Serzh Sargsyan has been the President of Armenia since 2008. He was born in Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed Armenian-majority region that in reality governs itself while technically remains a part of Azerbaijan. When Nagorno-Karabakh's independence war was breaking out as the Soviet Union was disintegrating, Sargsyan chaired the regions Self-Defense Forces committee, coordinating several battles, and for this he is considered key to the foundation of the armies of both Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

09 January 2012

Ilham Aliyev


Ilham Aliyev has been the President of Azerbaijan since his father's death in 2003. A member of the KGB, his father dominated Azerbaijani politics for nearly a half-century. When his father was in office, Ilham was vice-president of Azerbaijan's state oil company and he attained a reputation as a playboy. While Ilham was first considered to be a "transitional figure who will ensure a smooth succession", this assessment has proven false since he remains in office.

06 January 2012

Ignatius Zakka I Iwas


Ignatius Zakka I has been the Patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox Church since 1980.  Born in Mosul, Iraq, his see is Antioch but he resides in Damascus, Syria. Orphaned at an early age, he began training for ecclesiastical life at age 13. A stellar student, he was ordained as a deacon and became a monk by age 21. He rose to Archbishop before being appointed Patriarch.

05 January 2012

Aram I


Aram I has been the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church's Catholicosate of Cilicia since 1995.  As Catholicos, he oversees Armenian Orthodox believers outside Armenia.  Born in Lebanon, Aram studied in Lebanon, Switzerland, and the US.  Before becoming Catholicos, he served as Primate of Lebanon during the Lebanese Civil War. A founding member of the Middle Eastern Council of Churches, Aram has continued the inter-Christian and interfaith dialogues as Catholicos.

04 January 2012

Bechara Boutros al-Rahi


Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rahi has been the head of the Maronite Church since March 2011. Born in northern Lebanon, al-Rahi attended a prestigious Jesuit school near Beirut before becoming a priest and eventually studying at Rome's Lateran University. Before assuming the Patriarchy, he served as bishop of Byblos. As Patriarch, he controversially suggested that Bashar al-Assad should remain Syria's president; al-Assad has protected Syria's Christian minority to a large extent, which an Islamist government could discontinue.

03 January 2012

Patriarch Bartholomew


Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I has been the head of the Eastern Orthodox Church since 1991.  He is a Turkish citizen of Greek ancestry, as the Ecumenical Patriarch must be according to Turkish law because the see is Constantinople (Istanbul).  While Turkey once had many ethnic Greeks, most emigrated or were killed in genocide as the Ottoman Empire fell. As Patriarch, Bartholomew has championed inter-Christian and inter-religious dialogue and has defended the environment.

02 January 2012

Pope Shenouda


Pope Shenouda III is the head of the Coptic Orthodox Church; initially a monk and then a bishop, he has been the Patriarch of Alexandria since 1971.  Before his ascension to the highest post in the Coptic Church, he taught New Testament studies, eventually becoming Dean of the Coptic Orthodox Theological Seminary. His papacy has not been without contention, including a three-year exile to the Egyptian desert following persecution by extremists.