Alexander Javakhishvili (admiral)
Quick Facts
Biography
Alexander Javakhishvili (Georgian: ალექსანდრე ჯავახიშვილი; Russian: Александр Давидович Джавахишвили, Aleksandr Davidovich Dzhavakhishvili; born February 18, 1932) is a retired Georgian rear-admiral and commander of the Georgian navy from 1991 to 1996. A former Soviet navy submariner, he directed efforts at building the navy of independent Georgia in the 1990s.
Biography
Javakhishvili was born in Tbilisi, the capital of then-Soviet Georgia in 1932. Educated at the Caspian Maritime College in Baku, he pursued a career in the Soviet navy, becoming Captain 1st Rank, and in 1970 commander of the Pacific Fleet Navaga-class ballistic missile submarine К-415, with which he conducted, from January to March 1972, a trans-Pacific submerged circumnavigation.
After Georgia's independence in 1991, Javakhishvili became a commander of the embryonic Georgian navy. With the outbreak of hostilities in Abkhazia, he personally led a successful rescue operation of Georgian civilians trapped in the Abkhaz-controlled resort town of Pitsunda on August 18, 1992. He was promoted to the rank of rear-admiral on July 10, 1996, becoming the first person to have been awarded with the rank of admiral by Georgia. By that time, Javakhishvili's relations with the country's defense minister Vardiko Nadibaidze soured. In November 1996, he was fired for "failing to eradicate financial irregularites and raise the combat efficiency of the service", accusations which Javakhishvili rejected. He was succeeded by Captain 1st Rank Otar Chkhartishvili, a 47-year-old officer from the Russian navy, in March 1997.
Javakhishvili has since lived in retirement. He gave an interview to the Georgian service of the RFE/RL in 2008, critical of Georgia's decision to merge the navy with the coast guard under the Ministry of Internal Affairs.