Andrii Zahorodniuk

[3][4] Zahorodniuk studied law at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv.[6] From 2015 to 2017, Zahorodniuk headed the Reform Project Office at the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine.[8] On 9 July 2019, President Zelensky appointed Zahorodniuk to serve as a Member of the supervisory board at Ukroboronprom.[4] After his resignation as Defence Minister, Zahorodniuk became the Chairman of the “Centre for Defense Strategies”.In July 2020 the Central Election Commission of Ukraine recognised Zahorodniuk's wife Alina Sviderska [uk] as a new People's Deputy of Ukraine for Voice, after Svyatoslav Vakarchuk's mandate was prematurely terminated, but she refused to take this position so Vakarchuk in Parliament was replaced by Andriy Sharaskin.
Eastern Slavic naming customspatronymicfamily nameMinister of Defence of UkraineVolodymyr ZelenskyOleksiy HoncharukStepan PoltorakAndriy TaranUkrainian SSRSoviet UnionTaras Shevchenko National University of KyivUniversity of WarwickSaïd Business SchoolUniversity of OxfordPoliticianUkrainianMinistry of Defence of UkraineWarwick UniversityOxford UniversityMinistry of Defense of UkrainePresident of Ukraine2019 Ukrainian presidential electionUkroboronpromMinister of DefenceHoncharuk GovernmentAndrii Taranthink tankPeople's Deputy of UkraineSvyatoslav VakarchukAndriy SharaskinGovernment of UkraineRadio Free EuropePonomarenko, IlliaKyiv PostHromadske InternationalInterfax-UkraineUkrayinska PravdaC-SPANUkrainian ministers of defenceVasyl HerasymenkoKostyantyn MorozovIvan BizhanVitaliy RadetskyValeriy ShmarovOleksandr KuzmukVolodymyr ShkidchenkoYevhen MarchukAnatoliy HrytsenkoYuriy YekhanurovValeriy IvaschenkoMykhailo YezhelDmytro SalamatinPavlo LebedyevIhor TenyukhMykhailo KovalValeriy HeleteyOleksii ReznikovRustem UmierovList of ministers of defense (Ukraine)