Born in Czechoslovakia, I experienced the realities of life very early. My family and I cheated death many times, from being bombed during World War II to dodging snipers in South East Asia.
To escape from communist treachery my family and I crossed borders through muddy fields, barbed wire, and armed guards.
At the age of nine I arrived in New York City. Two weeks in a new country I was immersed in the NYC school system, the best thing that could have happened to me.
I learned English quickly without forgetting Czech or German.
I immediately picked the political party that I would support, the Republican Party. That’s right; I knew where I belonged even at the age of nine.
I was a musician with my own band, worked with various promotional groups, started an out sourcing business for assembly of small manufacturing items, a computer company marketing hardware and software.
I served in South East Asia in Military Intelligence, held several positions in various fraternal organizations, worked on the U. S. Bicentennial Celebration, and now doing my best to strengthen the Republican Party.
Mr.
Karlov, who started his career as a diplomat in 1976, worked
extensively in North Korea over two decades, before moving to the region
in 2007, according to a biography on the Russian Embassy’s website. He became ambassador in July 2013.
The
attack was a rare instance of an assassination of any Russian envoy.
Historians said it might have been the first since Pyotr Voykov, a
Soviet ambassador to Poland, was shot to death in Warsaw in 1927.
For
many Russians, the assassination is likely to recall the 19th-century
killing in Tehran of Aleksandr Griboyedov, a poet and diplomat who died
after a mob stormed the Russian Embassy. That episode is remembered as
the most severe insult to Russia’s diplomatic corps in the country’s
history.
More
recently, the Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah, now allied with Russia
in Syria, kidnapped four Soviet diplomats in 1985, killing one and
releasing three a month later.
Correction: December 19, 2016
An earlier version of this article misidentified the
government that has collaborated with Russia even though it backs a
different side in the Syrian conflict. It is Turkey, not Syria.
Tim Arango reported from
Istanbul, and Rick Gladstone from New York. Reporting was contributed by
Ivan Nechepurenko, Oleg Matsnev and Andrew E. Kramer from Moscow, Safak
Timur from Istanbul and Sewell Chan from London.
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